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Facts: In 1998, investigative reporting team, Jane Akre and her husband Steve Wilson, brought suit against their employer WVTV, a subsidiary of Fox TV, under violation of Florida’s whistle-blower statutes. They argued that the station had terminated their employment under grounds of retaliation because the team refused to suppress and distort the contents of a story regarding the controversial Bovine Growth Hormone in Florida’s cattle. Additional claims also brought forth included declaratory relief and breach of contract. After a four-week trial, a jury found against Wilson on all of his claims. Akre decided to drop allegations concerning declaratory relief and the court allowed for continuance based on her whistle-blower claims. The jury granted a monetary award of $425,000 in damages to Akre based on retaliation claims established by whistle-blower statute.…
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“ Chronicle Of An American Execution”, written by Dan Barry, is a very powerful and descriptive writing which illustrates an cruel execution by electrocution that took place in the state of Tennessee in 2007. Third person narrative, imagery and word choice are the three techniques Dan skillfully uses throughout his essay as a result to create strong and unforgettable impressions and pictures in the reader’s minds; These rhetorical devices not only lively portray physical characteristics, but also directly present the concrete ruthless details of the execution and effectively contribute dominant impression upon the readers. Dan uniquely starts off his essay with a brief description talking about…
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The discovery of facts that demonstrate that a valid warrant was unnecessarily broad does not retroactively invalidate the warrant.…
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ANALYSIS: In general, the state’s judicial viewpoint as to how firmly the testator must comply with pertinent statutes varies. Common law required total compliance with procedures. Some states require total compliance but current trends seem to require only substantial…
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For the lethal injection that went wrong. It was said that it took Diaz longer to die and probably felt severe pain. The only thing that bothers me or would need to change is the time frame it took for Diaz to die. A medical examiner stated that none of the materials injected went to the right place. This means that the executioner had to use more than one lethal injection. This is something that needs to be improved. Tax dollars pay for pretty much everything that has to do with the government. The goal is to keep cost low and results high. I do think that a doctor should be present to oversee the execution. One fact stated that it is hard to find a doctor willing to violate their ethical code to participate. I think if enough money is presented to certain doctors they would be willing to do it. Doctors have to pull the plug on people every day that are in a coma and the family wants this. Basically they should get a stronger dose of lethal injection or use one of the newly developed chemicals to get the job done. As for the death penalty…
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This essay shows us what we would uncover if we saw where the government was being completely transparent. In “Executions Should be Televised” the question of how some people are executed comes up. In “The Death Penalty,” Bruck answers that question when he writes about a man named Joseph Carl Shaw, a former military policeman who helped murder two teenagers while suffering from a mental illness and being high off of PCP (Bruck 490). Shaw was executed by the electric chair, a contraption that was built over 100 years ago (Bruck 490). With today’s medical advancements and technologies however, there are plenty of ways to perform an execution that does not cause severe pain. By executing a man in such a barbaric way, Bruck shows the reader how their constitutional right defined by the 8th amendment, that “cruel and unusual punishments [should not be] inflicted,” is being ignored (“Bill of Rights of the United States of…
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Many people have different views on the death penalty. The view is split between for and against. Capital Punishment is a touchy subject to talk about. In the personal essay, “A Death in Texas”, Steve Earle tells of his friendship with a prisoner, Jonathan Nobles, on death row. Jonathan was sentenced because he murdered two women.…
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1. Applications for asylum may not be made against the wishes of a parent of a child that lacks the mental capacity to request asylum and a third party cannot speak on behalf of a minor because it is the right of a…
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After the brutal 40 minute long lethal injection execution of Clayton Lockett that took place on April 29, 2014 occurred, fellow death row inmates being held at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary sued because they felt that a particular drug that was used to perform the poorly lethal injection was in violation of the eighth amendment. The lethal injection method used on Lockett was a three drug lethal injection procedure and resulted in him waking up after the injection and suffered for more than forty minutes before he actually died. After this poor done execution, Oklahoma suspended all executions until the horrific incident could be fully and properly investigated. When the investigation was completed, the Oklahoma State Penitentiary adopted…
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Fantz, Dana Ford and Ashley. Controversial execution in Ohio uses new drug combination. 17 Jan 2014. 24 Jan 2014.…
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FACTS Rumarson Technologies, Inc. (RTI) sued Robert and Percy Helmer to collect from them personally $24,965 owed to it by Event Marketing, Inc. (EMI) when EMI's check to pay RTI bounced. Robert and Percy Helmer were authorized signatories on EMI's corporate account, and they signed the check. RTI argued that as signatories they could be held personally liable. The lower court agreed and ruled in favor of RTI holding the Helmers liable. The Helmers appealed. Also of note, is that check was dated 1998 although there is some non-material dispute as to whether it was August 14, 1998, or on or around July 13, 1998.…
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Although he uses many examples to expose Capital Punishment’s unethicality, this critique focuses on three; discriminatory sentencing, barbaric application, and the irrevocability of a death sentence. Bedau reasons that one of the motives of the Supreme Court’s ruling that the death penalty was unconstitutional in Furman was due to apparent racial discrimination. Between 1930 and 1976, 455 men were executed for rape. Of those executed, 405 were African American. That is a nearly 90 percent of the executions that took place. As America has become more tolerant, many claim that racial discrimination in death penalty cases is outdated. Bedau thinks it strange then how more than fifty percent of inmates sitting on death row are African American. In addition, Bedau claims that “the application of the death penalty is inhumane.”(Bedau) Hanging, firing squad, electrocution, and gassing are still options available to state executioners when executing an inmate. In recent years, lethal injection has been the method most commonly used in the majority of executions because it is deemed to be painless. However, there is no evidence of this being the case and there have been many instances where injections were botched by breaches in protocol. Bedau lists as most disturbing is the fact that death penalty cases are irrevocable. There have been cases where evidence has emerged, exonerating an inmate…
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Some examples of how drastically the use of the death penalty has changed in just the past fifty years can be seen in situations like Mayor Cermak’s murder by Giuseppe Zangara in 1993. Zangara’s bullet, intended for Franklin Roosevelt missed and hit the Mayor of Chicago, Cermak on March 3rd. Two weeks later on March 20th, after pleading guilty, Giuseppe Zangara was executed. Fast forward to 2010, murderers sit on death row for years before facing execution. In 1950 Caryl Chessman was sent to the gas chamber for kidnapping after becoming highly publicized due to appeals, books and attention from Hollywood Chessman was one of the last criminals to be executed for a crime other than murder. Through pure number reports, we can see that rates of executions have significantly dropped over the past decade alone. From example cases, we can see how executions from fifty and even ten years ago differ from executions now. Now inmates are usually on death row for years before facing lethal injection, and the offender usually must be a murder. ("This Day in…
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Imagine a man sitting in a small, whitewashed room. He is strapped tightly to a gurney, with an IV jutting out of each of his arms. While someone administers a saline solution, his mind races and his heart pounds as he anticipates the first of three drugs that will end his life. He strains to see if his family has come, but fails: the tight leather straps see to that. He can only imagine them standing there, waiting for him to be executed. This experience, although fictional, is a very real fate for people who die by lethal injection, the most common method of execution for criminals given a death sentence (“Facts”). However, lethal injection is not the only form of execution that is inhumane—rather, all forms of the death penalty are. Worldwide,…
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The electric chair, firing squad, lethal gas, hanging, and lethal injection are all methods still used in the United States as a death penalty, but frankly these procedures are brutal and very cruel. There is not a simple, non-suffering solution to end the life of death row criminals. The lethal injection was introduced as a simple, fast way to end a criminal’s life, but now there are complications. As Justin E. Smith, a professor of history and philosophy of science at the University of Paris Diderot, stated, “now lethal injection is threatened, with state-prison officials…
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