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38 posts categorized "James Filiaggi"

Saturday, 05 May 2007

Tracy Coombs letter to the editor:  Willoughby resident Tracy Coombs has this letter to the editor in the Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Excerpt:
...James Filiaggi did not die for killing his ex-wife (Plain Dealer, April 25). He was killed by prison employees paid by Ohio taxpayers, acting in our stead.

We cannot and ought not use the passive tense to evade collective responsibility for taking a man's life.

Saturday, 28 April 2007

More on Filiaggi execution:  Brad Dicken has this article in the Elyria Chronicle-Telegram, entitled "The scene: Witnessing Filiaggi's final moments," with a more details of the execution of James Filiaggi.

Friday, 27 April 2007

More on James Filiaggi execution:  Brad Dicken has this article in the Elyria Chronicle Telegram, entitled "Log chronicles killer's last hours," with a narrative account of James Filiaggi's last hours, and an excerpt from the ORDC log itemizing activities the day before his execution.  The UK Scotsman has this article, entitled "Richey's best friend executed."

Thursday, 26 April 2007

More on James Filiaggi execution:  Andrew Welsh-Huggins has this report, entitled "Man executed for killing ex-wife had record number of visitors."
Excerpt:
A man executed for chasing down and killing his ex-wife received the highest number of death house visitors - 24 - since Ohio resumed putting inmates to death in 1999, records show.James Filiaggi met with his mother and father, sisters, a Roman Catholic priest and numerous friends, most from Ohio University where Filiaggi attended college, before he was executed on Tuesday, according to a prison log of Filiaggi's last 26 hours reviewed by The Associated Press.

The log also revealed a little known fact about post-execution procedures in Ohio: Filiaggi was the seventh inmate whose body was anointed in oil and prayed over in a short religious ceremony by the prison systems' spiritual adviser.

Filiaggi, 41, was the 25th person executed in Ohio, the nation's second-busiest death penalty state, since 1999. Another execution is scheduled for next month. ...

More on James Filiaggi execution:
  • Matt Suman has this article in the Lorain Morning Journal, entitled "Rev. says killer was remorseful."
Excerpt:
The Rev. Neil Kookoothe, James Filiaggi's spiritual adviser, said yesterday it was more trying for him to speak with his friend Monday, knowing he was going to die, than to watch the lethal injection Tuesday morning.

Filiaggi, 41, was executed for shooting to death his ex-wife, Lisa Huff Filiaggi on Jan. 24, 1994. Kookoothe along with Filiaggi's friends, Zoltan Krompecher, Danny Rocco and Cindy Hayes, witnessed the execution on his behalf.

''It was more difficult to say goodbye when he was still alive,'' Kookoothe said. ''It was surreal.''

...Ellen Jane Harris, Lisa Huff Filiaggi's mother, said Tuesday that Filiaggi has never shown remorse for killing her daughter. But Kookoothe said he wants people to know that Filiaggi was and has been sorry for killing his ex-wife.

Filiaggi thought every day about what he did, Kookoothe said. He did not apologize or mention his ex-wife in his final statement.

''To say he was never remorseful, I know personally that's not the case,'' Kookoothe said. ''He was very remorseful. He always admitted he made a mistake. Everybody has tried to paint him as a monster. I knew him as a good man.''

Harris said Tuesday that the bad things Filiaggi had done in his life overshadowed the good. Lisa Filiaggi divorced him because she did not want her daughters to grow up in an unhealthy environment, she said.

Kookoothe, who was ordained in 1995, met the FIliaggi's in 1993 during his internship at St. Jude Church, 590 Poplar St., Elyria. He got involved speaking out against the death penalty in 1996 and has protested all but four or five executions since 1999, he said.

''Somebody asked me to write to a death row inmate,'' Kookoothe said. ''That's how it all started.''

Tuesday was the first time he witnessed an execution and it solidified his position on the issue, he said.

Catholic teachings are strongly against capital punishment, he said, adding that the death penalty is evil. Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland and others who made decisions allowing Filiaggi's execution to go forward will have to answer to God, Kookoothe said.

''It solves nothing,'' he said. ''Nobody walked out of there a winner (Tuesday).''
  • Brad Dickens has this article in the Elyria Chronicle-Telegram, entitled "Client's death not a surprise," providing a view of James Filiaggi's execution from his attorneys' perspectives.
Excerpt:
Toledo attorney Spiros Cocoves said Tuesday was the worst day of his life.
Last-minute legal efforts failed to save his client, James Filiaggi, and the 41-year-old Elyria man was executed Tuesday morning at the Southern Ohio Correction Facility in Lucasville.

“We weren’t surprised,” Cocoves said about the rejection of their efforts, “but we were hopeful.”

Cocoves and American Civil Liberties Union Legal Director Jeff Gamso applied all the legal muscle they could after Filiaggi had a late change of heart and told them to try and save him. They pursued requests for mercy, or at least a stay of execution, all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court.

It wasn’t enough, and Gamso said even though he wasn’t a witness, he watched as those who did see Filiaggi die crossed the grounds of the prison to the Death House. He said when he watched the witnesses leave, he knew Filiaggi was dead. He then saw his body, covered by a white sheet, loaded into a hearse.

“We knew because we could see, not the killing, not the murder, but we could see the steps surrounding it,” he said.

For both attorneys, it was the first time a client they were still representing was executed.

...Gamso said the lethal injection drugs used in Ohio amount to torture because even though the condemned inmate is given a sedative, it might not be enough to keep him unconscious as other drugs stop his heart and breathing.

Essentially, Gamso said, even though Filiaggi appeared to have drifted off to sleep, he could have been in agony but was paralyzed and unable to cry out. A study on lethal injection released the day before Filiaggi was executed made similar claims.

“What we have learned is there’s no nice way to kill people and, whatever the technology, you can screw it up,” Gamso said.

That concern over the method is what prompted Filiaggi to try to join a federal lawsuit challenging lethal injection as cruel and unusual just days before his execution, Cocoves said.

“Jim’s primary motivation was to help other guys on death row,” Cocoves said.
Until then he had refused to fight to stay alive, at least until James Burge, his former attorney and now a Lorain County Common Pleas judge, convinced him to make the attempt.

“I tried to talk him into it, Spiros tried to talk him into it, lots of people tried to talk him into it,” Gamso said. “Burge is the one who finally succeeded.”

Despite those efforts, Filiaggi was at peace with his death and truly regretted the murder, Gamso said. Filiaggi had planned to kill himself, not his ex-wife, when he went to her house, he said.

“He regretted what he did,” Gamso said. “He never wanted to do that to his children.”

Wednesday, 25 April 2007

Dr. Jonathon Groner statement on Filiaggi execution / release of new lethal-injection study:  Full press statement, entitled "Lethal Injection - Ohio's shame" is here (1-page Word doc.).

Excerpt:
On the very same day that a scientific article critical of lethal injection was published, the State of Ohio carried a lethal injection execution on James Filiaggi.

The new study, “Lethal injection for execution:  Chemical Asphyxiation?” provides compelling evidence that lethal injection is fundamentally flawed.  The research shows that the 3 drug cocktail used in lethal injection is essentially a kitchen recipe that was never researched and never examined in any scientific way.  As a result, the authors argue, there is the possibility that inmates may look serene but actually suffer an agonizing death due to asphyxiation from paralysis of breathing muscles.  Clearly, such a death would be cruel, inhumane, and unconstitutional.

In December, when an execution team in Florida required 34 minutes and two rounds of drugs to produce death in an inmate, pro-death penalty Governor Jeb Bush ordered a moratorium and an investigation.  There have been no further executions.

But last May, when an Ohio execution team took nearly 90 minutes, two rounds of drugs, and repeated attempts at IV insertions to kill an inmate (whose moans were heard by media witnesses), then Ohio Governor Taft’s response was to do absolutely nothing.

One would think that Governor Ted Strickland, a former maximum security prison psychologist, would be willing to examine lethal injection more carefully than Governor Taft, particularly in view of the recent botched executions.  However, Governor Strickland was willing to let Mr. Filiaggi go to his death.

So, yesterday morning, Mr Filiaggi had IV lines placed in both arms.  He was strapped to the execution table, and, after a signal from the warden the lethal drugs flowed into his arms:  First thiopental, a barbiturate; then pancuronium bromide, a powerful muscle paralyzing agent; then potassium chloride, which causes cardiac arrest in large doses. 

Mr. Filiaggi, according to eyewitnesses, died peacefully.

But did he?

Note:  Dr. Groner and Fordham Univ. Law Professor Deborah Denno will be participating in a forum on execution by lethal injection tomorrow evening at the Delaware campus of the Widener Univ. School of Law.  Information on the program, entitled "Eye of the Needle: Ethical Considerations in Medicine and Law," is on the Widener website here.

Some coverage of James Filiaggi execution:  Alan Johnson had this article (with a great picture) for the Columbus Dispatch yesterday, entitled "Filiaggi executed," and this article today, entitled "Murderer dies amid lethal-injection debate."  Brad Dicken has this coverage in the Elyria Chronicle-Telegram, entitled "Victim's mother speaks out."  Mark Puente has this article in the Cleveland Plain Dealer, entitled "Filiaggi dies for killing ex-wife."  This AP report by John McCarthy was widely distributed.  Jim LeKrone had this report yesterday for Reuters, entitled "Ohio executes man who changed mind on appeals."  Kantele Franko had this report yesterday on the Athens Post website, entitled "OU grad put to death for killing ex-wife."  Jo Ingles had this audio report (4:00) for Ohio Public Radio yesterday afternoon (contains actualities w/ Cassie Davis of the Ohio ACLU on the Ohio lethal-injection litigation, and Leo Jennings of the Ohio AG's office with a fascinating statement on the possibility of the Ohio AG backing a death penalty study).  WKYC-TV in Cleveland had this video report last evening.

Tuesday, 24 April 2007

James Filiaggi executed by the State of Ohio:  Time of death: 11:23 AM

Filiaggi delay / execution now proceeding:  After a brief delay waiting for a ruling from the US Supreme Court, which has now denied an appeal to stop the execution, the execution procedure is now getting underway.  Not clear if that means the whole start-up procedure, including intubation, is just beginning. 

Filiaggi execution imminent:  Reginals Fields and Mark Puente have this article in the Cleveland Plain Dealer, entitled "Filiaggi's date with death is this morning."  Matt Leingang has this AP report.
  • Linda Martz has this article in the Bucyrus Telegraph-Forum, entitled "Protestors pray for inmate set to die."

Excerpt:
...Before embarking on the hour of silence, the group contemplated a prayer written by Sister Helen Prejean, whose ministry to Louisiana death-row inmate Patrick Sonnier was featured in the movie "Dead Man Walking."

"For there is in our land a great cry for vengeance, as we fill up death rows and kill the killers in the name of justice, in the name of peace," Prejean's prayer said. "Jesus, our brother, you suffered execution at the hands of the state but you did not let hatred overcome you."