National Briefs
Coeur d'Alene Press | UPDATED 9 years, 11 months AGO
• Firing squad executions 'brutal'
By LINDSAY WHITEHURST and BRADY McCOMBS/Associated Press
SALT LAKE CITY - Randy Gardner still struggles four years later to talk about seeing his brother's bullet-riddled body at the mortuary after he was executed.
Ronnie Lee Gardner was the last person to die by firing squad in Utah - a method state lawmakers voted this week to reinstate, illustrating frustrations across the U.S. over bungled executions and shortages of lethal-injection drugs.
Randy Gardner made it clear Wednesday he did not condone what his brother did - first killing a bartender and later shooting a lawyer to death and wounding a bailiff during a courthouse escape attempt.
But he said the firing squad is brutal.
"When you take somebody and you tie them to a chair, put a hood over their head, and you shoot them from 25 feet with four rifles pointed at their heart, that's pretty barbaric."
The bill's sponsor, Republican Rep. Paul Ray, sees it differently.
Ray argues a team of trained marksmen is faster and more humane than the drawn-out deaths involved when lethal injections go awry - or even if they go as planned.
"Your body is paralyzed. You feel everything," Ray said. "Your body slowly shuts down over a period of minutes based on the drug cocktail that's given to you. Whereas a firing squad, you reach the death obviously in three to five seconds."
Some of the victims' family and friends wanted Gardner's life spared in 2010. But relatives of the slain bartender, Melvyn Otterstrom, and bailiff George "Nick" Kirk, pushed for the death sentence to stand.
"Gardner has hurt so many people. He has never shown any compassion for any of his victims, so why does he deserve compassion?" Kirk's daughter, Tami Stewart, said tearfully at the time. "The agony and toll he placed on my father deserves justice and that it be given."
Republican Gov. Gary Herbert has declined to say if he will sign the firing-squad bill. His decision is expected in a week or so.
Utah and several other states are scrambling to modify their laws on the heels of a botched Oklahoma lethal injection last year and one in Arizona in which the condemned man took nearly two hours to die. Meanwhile, Texas executed a Mexican mafia hit man Wednesday night with its second-to-last dosage of drugs.
"States are wondering which way to go, and one way is to send up a warning flag that if you don't allow us freedom in this lethal-injection area, we'll do something else," said Richard Dieter, executive director of the Washington, D.C.-based Death Penalty Information Center, which opposes capital punishment.
States have struggled to keep up their drug inventories as European manufacturers opposed to capital punishment refuse to sell the components of lethal injections to U.S. prisons. The Texas deadline is the most imminent, but other states are struggling, too.
Though Utah's next execution is probably a few years away, Ray said he wants to settle on a backup method now in case the drug shortage continues.
He's hopeful the proposal will become law, saying he thinks the governor already would have announced his intention to veto it if that was his plan.
Utah is the only state in the past 40 years to use the firing squad, with three such executions since the U.S. Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976.
Lawmakers in the state stopped offering inmates the choice of firing squad in 2004, saying the method attracted intense media interest and took attention from victims.
Ronnie Lee Gardner was put to death by five police officers with .30-caliber Winchester rifles in an event that drew international attention.
Three more death-row inmates who chose firing squad before the law changed would still have the option after their appeals are exhausted. If those executions go forward, prison authorities will choose the gunmen from a pool of volunteer officers, starting with those in the area where the crime happened, Ray said.
"We've always had a lot more volunteers than actually had spots," he said.
Under the new measure, the method would be based solely on the availability of lethal-injection drugs, not an inmate's choice.
State laws that allow methods other than lethal injection for executions are not unique to Utah. In Washington, inmates can request a hanging. In New Hampshire, hangings are the default method if lethal injection cannot be given.
Outside the U.S., 54 countries allow executions by gunshot, including China, Vietnam, Uganda and Afghanistan, according to Cornell University Law School's Death Penalty Worldwide project. Only nine countries are known to have done a firing squad execution in the past decade, the school's research has found.
• California car battery recycler to close in deal with feds
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A battery recycling plant that violated hazardous waste laws and spewed toxic emissions for decades on the outskirts of Los Angeles will close and spend $50 million to clean the site and surrounding neighborhoods, federal prosecutors announced Thursday.
Exide Technologies admitted felony violations over 20 years but avoided criminal prosecution in the agreement that achieves what residents of surrounding poor communities couldn't get state regulators to do for years despite a long history of violation notices and fines.
"Our long nightmare is over," Monsignor John Moretta of Resurrection Church said on behalf of community groups. "We have attended dozens and dozens of meetings and hearings always fighting for what we saw as something obvious: Exide was poisoning our community and had to be closed."
The 15-acre Vernon plant, 5 miles southeast of downtown Los Angeles, had been idle for a year amid legal and environmental battles, but its owners hoped to reopen.
Local, state and federal officials have for years cited Exide for emitting excessive lead and arsenic and violating hazardous material laws.
The agreement allows the Milton, Ga.-based company to emerge from bankruptcy and afford the cleanup rather than being forced to liquidate assets and close operations in more than 80 countries, where it employs about 10,000 people.
"If the company was no longer viable, we would no longer be able to achieve the immediate result of the facility's closure, and the government would be left holding the bag for the cleanup," Acting U.S. Attorney Stephanie Yonekura said. "This is the best solution for a very difficult environmental problem."
The cleanup will be overseen by the California Department of Toxic Substances Control.