Columbus, Dec 14: At about 450 pounds, Ohio death row inmate Ronald Post is so fat
that his executioners won't be able to find veins in his arms or legs for the
lethal injection, and he might even break the death chamber gurney, his lawyers
say.
If the state is forced to use a backup method that involves
injecting the drugs directly into muscle, the process could require multiple
doses over several hours or even days and result in a grueling and painful end,
they say.
Post, who gained close to 200 pounds on death row, is trying to
stave off execution Jan. 16 for the 1983 killing of a motel clerk during a
robbery, arguing that because of his obesity, an attempt to put him to death
would amount to cruel and unusual punishment.
State officials say Post,
53, can be humanely executed under both Ohio's usual method and the untested
backup procedure. The warden at the prison where the death chamber is situated
even tested the gurney by piling 540 pounds of weights on it for two
hours.
Post has not presented "sufficient evidence demonstrating that his
obesity or other physical conditions will present a substantial risk that his
execution cannot be conducted in a humane and dignified manner," Assistant
Attorney General Charles Wille said in court papers.
A federal judge in
Columbus will hold a hearing on Post's claim later this month.
Post's
case is not without precedent: In 1994, a federal judge in Washington state
ruled that convicted killer Mitchell Rupe, at more than 400 pounds, was too
heavy to be hanged because he might be decapitated. After numerous court rulings
and a third trial, Rupe was sentenced to life in prison, where he died in
2006.
If Post manages to stop his execution because of his weight, the
legal precedent may not be far-reaching, because of the very small number of
death row inmates who are that obese, said Deborah Denno, a Fordham University
law professor and expert on lethal injection. And she said it is unlikely
prisoners would begin stuffing themselves to try to fend off
execution.
Richard Dieter, executive director of the Washington-based
Death Penalty Information Center, which opposes capital punishment, predicted
states will find a way around obesity claims by adjusting their execution
procedures, perhaps by changing the drug or the dosage.
"Inmates probably
will recognize that that's a thin straw to hang your hopes on," he
said.
In 2007, it took Ohio executioners about two hours to insert IVs
into the veins of condemned killer Christopher Newton, who weighed about 265
pounds.
At 6-foot-2½, Post weighed 260 pounds around the time he was
moved to death row in 1985. His weight has gone up and down behind bars, and at
one time he lost 150 pounds through dieting, his lawyers say.
But knee
and back problems have made it difficult to exercise, his lawyers say. They also
say Post's request for gastric bypass surgery was denied, he has been told not
to walk because he might fall, and severe depression has contributed to his
inability to control how much he eats.
The Ohio prison system would not
comment on how Post gained so much weight behind bars. They said meals are
served in reasonable portions and seconds are not allowed, and they provided
copies of prison menus that list healthier options such as low-fat milk,
vegetarian patties and mixed vegetables.
Inmates can buy sweet and salty
snacks from the commissary.
A doctor who examined Post for the defense
said Post does not have accessible veins in his arms, hands or
legs.
"Given his unique physical and medical condition there is a
substantial risk that any attempt to execute him will result in serious physical
and psychological pain to him, as well as an execution involving a torturous and
lingering death," Post's attorneys argue in court papers.
His lawyers
have indicated they would fight any attempt by the state to employ a third
possible procedure: the "cut-down" method, in which executioners cut into the
condemned man's arms to find a vein. Ohio's execution policies don't call for
such an approach, and it is unclear if the state can go ahead with such a
procedure without court approval.
Ends
SA/EN
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