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#1
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01-26-2024, 05:33 AM
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Alabama Inmate Executed Using Nitrogen Gas
Alabama inmate Kenneth Smith was put to death Thursday night, marking the nation’s first known execution using nitrogen gas. Smith, who was sentenced to death for his role in a 1988 murder for hire and already survived a botched execution attempt by lethal injection, was at the center of a heated debate over whether the execution method constitutes cruelty. The process essentially disables the respiratory system, said Dr. Jonathan Groner, a professor of surgery at The Ohio State University College of Medicine. Some officials say that a person would likely lose consciousness shortly into the procedure, making it more humane than other execution methods. However, doctors have said that they could not pinpoint if or when a person will lose consciousness when exposed to high concentrations of nitrogen gas. On Thursday night, the execution process started at 7:53 p.m. CT, and a physician pronounced Smith dead at 8:25 p.m. CT, Alabama Department of Corrections Commissioner John Hamm said. Nitrogen flowed for about 15 minutes during that time, and “nothing … out of the ordinary” happened compared to “what we were expecting,” Hamm said. According to witnesses from the news media, Smith “appeared conscious for several minutes into the execution.” “For about two minutes following that, Kenneth Smith shook and writhed … on a gurney,” the media witnesses said in a joint report. “That was followed by several minutes of deep breaths on the gurney.” “Following that, his breath slowed until it was no longer perceptible for media witnesses,” the journalists said in their joint report. Asked whether the shaking and writhing was evidence that Smith suffered, Hamm said: “(It) appeared that, one, Smith was holding his breath has long as he could.” “And then there’s also information out there that he struggled against his restrains a little but, but there’s some involuntary movement and some agonal breathing, so that was all expected and is in the side effects that we’ve seen or researched on nitrogen hypoxia,” Hamm said. Agonal breathing is usually described as a kind of gasping seen in people who are dying. https://www.aol.com/states-cant-figu...102419054.html |
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#2
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01-26-2024, 08:30 AM
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| My Rank: PRIVATE Poster Rank:33790 Join Date: Aug 2023 Posts: 1 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 3 Post(s)
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Re: Alabama Inmate Executed Using Nitrogen Gas
Wouldn’t an intentional fentanyl OD simply do the trick?
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#3
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01-26-2024, 04:12 PM
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Re: Alabama Inmate Executed Using Nitrogen Gas
what a hassle, just use a bullet in the head.
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#4
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01-26-2024, 05:12 PM
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Re: Alabama Inmate Executed Using Nitrogen Gas
A better death would be by nitrous oxide
__________________ "Here lies the body of Mary Lee, died at the age of a hundred and three. For fifteen years she kept her virginity, not a bad record for this vicinity." |
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#6
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01-26-2024, 07:40 PM
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Re: Alabama Inmate Executed Using Nitrogen Gas
__________________ ✦ Live life to it's fullest and leave a sexy corpse ✦ |
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#7
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01-26-2024, 09:00 PM
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Re: Alabama Inmate Executed Using Nitrogen Gas
The reason people suffer during asphyxiation is due to carbon dioxide levels increasing in their blood, not because of oxygen shortage, so normal breathing of inert gases like nitrogen or argon allows c02 to be dispelled and replaced by the inert gas. The body doesn’t react to these gases so there is no suffering, no panic. You just die quietly and easily.
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#9
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01-27-2024, 01:48 AM
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Re: Alabama Inmate Executed Using Nitrogen Gas
For years I was sure that nitrogen would be the best way for anyone to go out, based on the fact that it doesn't feel like suffocation. In the Aol article it didnt sound too peaceful at all. The description in the link sounds a little scarier than the description I posted.
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#10
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01-27-2024, 06:54 AM
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Re: Alabama Inmate Executed Using Nitrogen Gas
The amount of people being sympathetic to this killer is sad to say the least.
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