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U.S. | I'm a Death Row Pastor. They're Just Ordinary Folks

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In the early 1970s I was a North Carolinian, white boy from the South attending Union Theological Seminary in New York City, and working in East Harlem as part of a program. In my senior year, I visited men at the Bronx House of Detention. I had never been in a prison or jail, but people in East Harlem were dealing with these places and the police all the time. This experience truly turned my life around.

Execution date set for Missouri inmate with rare condition

Missouri's death chamber
The Missouri Supreme Court on Tuesday set a March execution date for Russell Bucklew, a convicted killer who narrowly escaped execution 3 years ago because of a rare medical condition that raised the possibility that the lethal drug could cause him to suffer.

Bucklew, 49, is scheduled to die by injection March 20 for killing a man in 1996 during a violent crime spree.

He was moments away from execution in May 2014 when the U.S. Supreme Court halted it and sent the case back to a lower federal court amid concerns about Bucklew's medical condition.

Bucklew suffers from cavernous hemangioma, a rare ailment that causes weakened and malformed blood vessels, as well as tumors in his nose and throat.

His attorney, Cheryl Pilate, said Missouri's execution method could cause Bucklew's death to rise to the level of unconstitutionally cruel and unusual punishment.

"We believe that the setting of the date at this time is premature," Pilate said in a statement.

Loree Anne Paradise, spokeswoman for Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley, said the execution date is "the subject of litigation" and declined comment on the merits of the case.

The Missouri attorney general's office did not immediately return an email message seeking comment.

In April 2014, Oklahoma inmate Clayton Lockett's vein collapsed, and he writhed on the gurney before dying of a heart attack more than 40 minutes after the start of the procedure.

Adding to the uncertainty in Missouri is the secretive process the state uses to obtain its execution drug. Big drug manufacturers prohibit use of their drugs in executions, so it is believed that Missouri and other states have turned to compound pharmacies. Missouri refuses to say how or where it gets the pentobarbital used in executions.

None of the 20 inmates executed since Missouri switched form a 3-drug protocol to pentobarbital in 2013 have shown obvious signs of pain or suffering.

Still, death penalty opponents say the secrecy makes it impossible to ensure the drugs couldn't cause an inmate to endure an agonizing death.

In March 1996, Bucklew was angry at his girlfriend, Stephanie Pruitt, for leaving him and moving in with Michael Sanders of Cape Girardeau. Bucklew tracked Pruitt down at Sanders' home and killed Sanders in front of Pruitt, her 2 daughters and Sanders' 2 sons. He handcuffed and beat Pruitt, drove her to a secluded area and raped her.

After a state trooper spotted the car, Bucklew shot at the trooper but missed. Bucklew later escaped from jail, hid in the home of Pruitt's mother and beat her with a hammer.

Source: triblive.com, November 22, 2017


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"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed,
but by the punishments that the good have inflicted." -- Oscar Wilde

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