Learning English - Words in the News 22 February, 2006 - Published 13:03 GMT US execution delayed again | ||||||||||||
California's policy of executing prisoners on Death Row by deadly injection is in question after prison officials twice failed to find medical staff who are willing to inject a prisoner. Doctors are worried about being forced to treat him if he survives. This report from Duncan Kennedy: It is the second time in twenty-four hours that the condemned man, Michael Morales, has been spared, not by the actions of the courts or by the governor, but by doctors. Morales, convicted of killing a seventeen-year-old girl twenty-five years ago, had been due to be executed by lethal injection on Monday night. Two anaesthetists were on hand after lawyers for Morales successfully argued that the cocktail of drugs involved might cause him cruel or unusual punishment - something banned by the American Constitution. But when it came to it, the two experts backed out, arguing that if Morales came round or suffered pain, they'd be legally forced to intervene, something that was ethically unacceptable for them. Then on Tuesday night, it was decided to press ahead with the execution using a massive dose of barbiturates that didn't require the presence of the two experts. The prison authorities say they couldn't find a doctor or a nurse to administer the drug, so it was cancelled. Morales is now back on Death Row whilst a review of lethal injections takes place. lethal injection on hand the cocktail of drugs backed out came round ethically unacceptable to press ahead a massive dose The prison authorities Death Row | LATEST STORIES 23 December, 2009 New taxis to reduce pollution in Cairo 21 December, 2009 Auschwitz sign recovered 15 December, 2009 Original Eiffel Tower steps for sale 11 December, 2009 China's economy is growing 09 December, 2009 Transgender teenager sues McDonald's Other Stories | |||||||||||
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