👉

Did you like how we did? Rate your experience!

Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars by our customers 561

Award-winning PDF software

review-platform review-platform review-platform review-platform review-platform

Video instructions and help with filling out and completing Will Form 8655 Penalties

Instructions and Help about Will Form 8655 Penalties

Ohio's lethal injection process is on trial today in the US Court of Appeals. Specifically, the court is deciding whether the drug used to sedate prisoners during executions is powerful enough to prevent inhumane suffering. After a series of botched attempts, supplies of lethal injection drugs are running low nationwide as pharmaceutical companies refuse to sell their products to prisons. Now, some states are considering alternative forms of capital punishment. It's not exactly a new idea. In fact, back in 2010, Utah was one of two states with the firing squad as a backup method of capital punishment. This year, Alabama lawmakers have a bill to follow in their footsteps, and other southern lawmakers are believed to be weighing alternatives as legal challenges to lethal injection continue. In 2010, Cheryl Worsley, a local journalist, witnessed the execution of Ronnie Lee Gardner, who was convicted of robbery and multiple murders. Gardner was the last American to receive the death penalty by firing squad. The execution was national news, and for the 31 states where the death penalty is legal, firing squads could be a substitute for lethal injection. During Gardner's execution, it felt violent and jarring, but at the same time, it felt clinical and professional. It had a sterile atmosphere, which was strange considering the violence that was occurring. The execution involved a black hood being placed over Gardner's face, followed by four quick gunshots. The aftermath was messy, with blood and bodily materials being expelled. Gardner's brother, Randy, obtained the photo records of the execution in 2016. Seeing the brutal reality of what happened to his brother changed him and gave him a new purpose in life. Randy now copes through anti-death-penalty activism, even going as far as displaying graphic images of his brother's death at protests. Representative Paul Ray, who authored the bill...