Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Georgia Kills the Suicidal Death Row Inmate--Deterrence, and a Personal Note

Brandon Rhode (pic) was a suicidal death row inmate in Georgia.  He was convicted with a buddy of the heinous (really, is there any other type?) triple slaying of a trucking company operator and two children.  Prior to his execution scheduled for September 21st Rhode tried to slash his own throat and wrists; but, the heroic Georgia authorities saved his life.   Then they killed him last night. 

This is reporter Greg Bluestein's account for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution:

"A Georgia prisoner who tried to kill himself last week by slashing his arms and throat with a razor blade was executed Monday night amid heightened security for the 1998 murders of a trucking company owner and his two children.
Brandon Joseph Rhode, 31, was put to death by injection at the state prison in Jackson. He was pronounced dead at 10:16 p.m. Rhode declined to speak any last words or have a final prayer.  He was convicted in 2000 of killing Steven Moss, 37, his 11-year-old son Bryan and 15-year-old daughter Kristin during a burglary of their Jones County home in central Georgia. His coconspirator, Daniel Lucas, was also sentenced to death in a separate trial and remains on death row.

Rhode's execution had been set for 7 p.m. but was pushed back several hours as corrections officials waited for the U.S. Supreme Court to decide on his plea for a stay of execution. The court rejected appeals later that night.

Medics then tried for about 30 minutes to find a vein to inject the three-drug concoction.  The prisoner's eyes darted around the room before the lethal mixture began coursing through his veins. Within minutes he was staring blankly at the ceiling of the death chamber. Moments before Rhode was pronounced dead he turned his head, exposing a bandage over the part of his neck he slashed.

It took 14 minutes for the lethal dose to kill him.

Rhode had initially been scheduled to be put to death Sept. 21, but the Georgia Supreme Court postponed the execution after Rhode was rushed to the hospital that day following a suicide attempt.  Rhode was stabilized at a local hospital and placed in a restraining chair to prevent him from removing the sutures from his neck or doing any other harm to himself, state attorneys said.

Defense attorney Brian Kammer countered that Rhode was put in a 'torture chair'  and subjected to cruel and unusual punishment.  'He has been subjected to the surreal and incomprehensible: Heroic measures taken to stabilize his life by the prison staff that would then execute him,' Kammer said in one court filing.  Kammer urged the Georgia Supreme Court Monday to push back the execution again so experts could evaluate whether Rhode was mentally competent to be executed, or understood why he was being punished. He said Rhode lost half his blood Sept. 21 when he cut himself, went into shock and could have suffered brain damage.

'The threat of execution has pushed Mr. Rhode's limited coping skills to the breaking point,' spurring him to slash himself with blades he hid from guards while under a blanket, he said in the filing.

Rhode and Lucas were ransacking the Moss' home in search of valuables in April 1998 when Bryan Moss saw them through a front window, and entered through a back door armed with a baseball bat, prosecutors said. They said Moss and his son and daughter were shot to death. Lucas later shot each of the victims again to make sure they were dead, according to the records.

Rhode appealed the case several times, arguing that his trial attorneys failed to present enough evidence to persuade the jury to spare his life. Kammer argued more recently that his client should be granted clemency because doctors discovered he suffered from organic brain damage and a fetal alcohol disorder."
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Deterrence is "specific" and "general or indirect."  Punishment is intended to prevent further crimes by the offender as well as "incapacitate" the offender.  Punishment is also meant to send a message to the community of humankind about community and societal values.

The goal of specific deterrence was met in Mr. Rhode's case through his incapicitation achieved by his incarceration.  The ghastly execution of this loser sends the message of vengence. 

Recently, I was sentenced to prison for 5 months by a very wise federal judge; he expressed the need to send a general or indirect message of deterrence to other professionals who might rationalize tax offenses by looking at a "too lenient" punishment for my offense.  Mistakenly everyone in the courtroom connected to my case believed that Judge P had granted me leave to serve this sentence on house arrest with work release.  I posted about this in the Bad Lawyer Sentencing post. An alarmed email from my lawyer (who also mistakenly believed that I was given home detention in lieu of prison), late yesterday alerted me. 

I will be winding down (since most of my posts are written in advance I don't know what will still publish automatically), but the Bad Lawyer blawg for the time being is going on hiatus, in light of this clarification of my federal court sentence.  Obviously, my friends, and especially my family are in shock this morning. I can't say that I am being treated unjustly or unfairly, the mistake was mine, "wishful listening."  To the extent that I can, I'll focus any further posts on the twists and turns of this process, but effective immediately my regular trolling of local news sites and commentary ends.

Thank you for reading.  Watch this spot!

6 comments:

  1. Darn - I left an anonymous post here before suggesting that the public record of your sentence was ambiguous. I guess the ambiguity has been resolved.

    Hopefully you can find somewhere both close by and safe. Five months won't seem so bad after the first few weeks.

    Every best wish.

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  2. Thank you, Anon., you appear to have had more insight than I did. Unfortunately, this is a theme as it relates to my worldview.

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  3. Just when you think you can't take it anymore you'll be released. God doesn't give you more than you can handle.
    Check you on the other side, Bad Lawyer.

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  4. You have refered to the ones who murdered Rhode, as HEROES?
    How is it herioc to forcefully extend his life against his will, for the fate of being murdered by the 'heroes' with deadly chemicals instead?

    Then for Greg Bluestein to proudly publish a detailed description of the murder of Rhode, and casually let us all know the beautifully crafted details of how it was when the life was sucked out of Brandon

    what sort of world is this? How is that ok?

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  5. This comment has been removed by the author.

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