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Click to See Complete Forum and Search --> : Indiana nixes transplant from death row inmate


j.m@talk
05-23-2005, 11:19 PM
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Indiana officials recommended on Friday that a man facing execution next week should not get clemency, a decision that could end his attempt to donate part of his liver to his sister.

Gregory Johnson, 40, had asked for clemency for legal reasons, or a delay in his May 25 execution date so the transplant could take place.

A spokeswoman for the Indiana Parole Board said the panel's four members voted unanimously to recommend that Johnson be denied clemency. There was no separate vote on a stay, she said.

The final decision on clemency or a stay will be up to Gov. Mitch Daniels who has given the go-ahead to two other executions in the state since taking office earlier this year.

Johnson was sentenced to death for killing an 82-year-old woman during a home break-in in 1985. His 48-year-old sister, Deborah Otis, has said she would like a partial liver transplant from her brother.

Her organ is afflicted with nonalcoholic cirrhosis, though she is not currently on a transplant waiting list because of a temporary medical complication.

During a hearing before the parole board, Johnson's lawyer said blood tests found his liver would be compatible with his sister.

Johnson contended the lethal injection of chemicals used for executions would poison the organ, making a post-execution transplant impossible. There was disagreement among medical experts on whether that would be the case.

If Johnson donates part of his liver, it could take up to two months for him to recover enough to return to death row.

Transplant requests from death row prisoners in the United States have occurred before, though they are unusual, according to Richard Dieter, executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center.

In 1995, a condemned Delaware man donated a kidney to his mother, and returned to death row. In Alabama, a prisoner awaiting execution won permission for an organ donation, but he was not a correct match, Dieter said.

In a Florida case, an inmate was denied a request to donate a kidney to his brother. The condemned man was later exonerated and released from jail, but his brother died waiting for a transplant, Dieter said.

They gotta whip his bits out & then bump him off I recon ............. 2 months my arm :rolleyes:

Use his gonads fer dawg food whilst they got the spoons out too :-@

BadDriver
05-24-2005, 12:40 AM
They could string him up. That wouldn't hurt his gizard at all. His sister could have it then.

I mean why not just do the transplant and then put him under? That way he wouldn't have to suffer back to health just to get killed anyway.

Laws make no sense. you have to be in perfect health to be put to death. :rolleyes:

ukulele
05-24-2005, 04:39 AM
Well I don't know. I'd have to have a look at his sister before deciding his fate. :p