Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Good News For Death-Row Canadian Ronald Smith: Judge Rejects Execution Drug

The Canadian Press, 07 Oct, 2015 11:05 AM
  • Good News For Death-Row Canadian Ronald Smith: Judge Rejects Execution Drug
CALGARY — A U.S. judge has rejected a request from the state of Montana to change one of the drugs used to execute prisoners on death row.
 
The decision by District Court Judge Jeffrey Sherlock could be good news for Ronald Smith of Red Deer, Alta., who is one of two inmates condemned to die in that state.
 
Sherlock presided over a hearing last month on whether the sedative pentobarbital, which was being proposed by the state, complies with language in Montana's execution protocol requiring an "ultra-fast-acting barbiturate.''
 
Lawyers from the American Civil Liberties Union argued that the sedative could lead to an "excruciating and terrifying'' death.
 
"This case is not about whether the use of pentobarbital in a lethal injection setting is cruel and unusual or if pentobarbital in the doses contemplated by the State of Montana would produce a painless death," wrote Sherlock in his decision.
 
"This case is only about whether the drug selected ... meets the legislatively required classification of being an ultra-fast-acting barbiturate.
 
"The court rules that pentobarbital is not."
 
Sherlock's decision means it's back to the drawing board for Montana officials, who are now prevented from going ahead with any executions.
 
"The State of Montana will either need to select a barbiturate that is ultra-fast-acting ... or it will need to modify its statute."
 
Lethal injection has been the sole method of execution in Montana since 1997. It is the only state that specifies the death penalty must be accomplished by an "ultra-fast-acting" barbiturate.
 
Ron Waterman, a senior counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union, was happy with the ruling and said the issue will have to go back to the state legislature.
 
"It would have to be a bill that is introduced at the next legislative session, which is 2017. It would then have to be passed by both houses of the legislature and then signed by the governor," he said.
 
Waterman said getting both the legislature and the senate to pass a new law would be challenging for the state of Montana and bodes well for his clients.
 
"It's very good news," Waterman said. "I believe this is a very good outcome and we're very pleased."
 
Smith, 57, was convicted in 1983 for shooting Harvey Madman Jr. and Thomas Running Rabbit while he was high on drugs and alcohol near East Glacier, Mont.
 
He had been taking 30 to 40 hits of LSD and consuming between 12 and 18 beers a day at the time. He refused a plea deal that would have seen him avoid death row and spend the rest of his life in prison.
 
Three weeks later, he pleaded guilty. He asked for and was given a death sentence. Smith later had a change of heart and has been fighting for his life ever since. He has had a number of execution dates set and overturned.

MORE National ARTICLES

Richard Oland Crime Scene Was Among Bloodiest Officer Had Seen: Court Hears

Richard Oland Crime Scene Was Among Bloodiest Officer Had Seen: Court Hears
Sgt. Mark Smith is facing cross-examination today in the second-degree murder trial of Dennis Oland in New Brunswick's Court of Queen's Bench.

Richard Oland Crime Scene Was Among Bloodiest Officer Had Seen: Court Hears

Conservatives Dump Jagdish Grewal Who Supported Therapies To Turn Gay Youth Straight

Conservatives Dump Jagdish Grewal Who Supported Therapies To Turn Gay Youth Straight
Jagdish Grewal, who is running in Mississauga-Malton, wrote an editorial entitled "Is it wrong for a homosexual to become a normal person?" that referred to homosexuality as "unnatural behaviour" and heterosexuals as "normal."

Conservatives Dump Jagdish Grewal Who Supported Therapies To Turn Gay Youth Straight

CBC TV Show Gets Man New Crack At Lawsuit Against Job-promising Agency

CBC TV Show Gets Man New Crack At Lawsuit Against Job-promising Agency
In what the Appeal Court called "most unusual" circumstances, the justices said a lower court was wrong to deny Golam Mehedi a chance to reopen his case given the post-trial broadcast.

CBC TV Show Gets Man New Crack At Lawsuit Against Job-promising Agency

Crash Complicates Canadian Tour Of Country Singer Jason Aldean

Crash Complicates Canadian Tour Of Country Singer Jason Aldean
Aldean's 2015 Burn It Down tour played in Kamloops, B.C., on Monday night and was headed to a Tuesday performance in Prince George, when all those cliches about trucks, dirt roads and disaster played out.

Crash Complicates Canadian Tour Of Country Singer Jason Aldean

Underground Lab In Nickel Mine In Sudbury, Ont., Probes Mysterious Neutrinos

Underground Lab In Nickel Mine In Sudbury, Ont., Probes Mysterious Neutrinos
It's called SNOLAB, a cavernous "clean" lab that was able to detect minuscule particles known as neutrinos. 

Underground Lab In Nickel Mine In Sudbury, Ont., Probes Mysterious Neutrinos

Four Indo-Canadians In Top Civic Firm's Fellowship

Four Indo-Canadians In Top Civic Firm's Fellowship
The four Indians are Anita Abraham, Ritesh Kotak, Mrinalini Menon and Pam Sethi.

Four Indo-Canadians In Top Civic Firm's Fellowship