they ve tried everything. this is like their last-ditch effort to proceed with executions. with less than 24 hours to go, the oklahoma supreme court agreed to hear susanna s argument and granted clayton lockett and charles warner a rare stay of execution. that decision would set off one of the biggest political firestorms in state history. these are evildoers. these are animals. you can call them demons, if you may. we want justice.
oklahoma supreme court had granted clayton lockett and charles warner a rare stay of execution in order to hear susanna gatony s argument. against secrecy laws that allowed the state to mask their source of execution drugs. political reaction was swift and forceful. i believe the death penalty is an appropriate response and punishment to those who commit heinous crimes against their fellow men and women. the very next day, governor fallon issued an executive order which essentially said she didn t believe that the oklahoma supreme court had jurisdiction to do what they did. she was trying to override, usurp what the court had done. the governor said that the
oklahoma that would change with the case of clayton lockett. clayton lockett was convicted of the murder of 18-year-old stephanie kneeman. mr. locket shot her with a shotgun, dug a grave and buried her alive. i see her coughing and the dirt coming in the air as she was coughing. mr. lockett confessed to the police. he was convicted on 19 counts. he received about 2,500 years, plus the death penalty. facing their own shortage from the european draw ban, oklahoma announced they would use midazolam on lockett. and in a rare doubleheader, inmate charles warner to be executed the same night. both of these crimes, charles warner as well as lockett s were horrific. warner raped and murdered a baby. there wasn t a lot of sympathy for either person. the question is whether the process was handled constitutionally improperly. susanna represented lockett
$11,000 in taxpayer money was spent? abide by the constitution, in the full light of day, in front of everybody like our justice system s supposed to. missouri officials were accused of buying drugs from a compounding pharmacy named the apothecary shop in tulsa, oklahoma. e-mail chains also revealed secret agreements between the apothecary shop and prison officials in georgia. where the pharmacy was also unlicensed to do business. it s almost a cloak and dagger way of trying to get drugs to use for executions. i think there are reason for the secrecy happening now is states are at the end of their ropes sort to speak. they ve tried everything. this is like their last-ditch effort to proceed with executions. with less than 24 hours to go, the oklahoma supreme court agreed to hear susanna s argument and granted clayton lockett anarles warner a
oklahoma that would change with the case of clayton lockett. clayton lockett was convicted of the murder of 18-year-old stephanie kneeman. mr. locket shot her with a shog, dug a grave and buried her alive. i see her coughing and the dirt coming in the r as she was coughing. mr. lockett confessed to the police. he was convicted on 19 counts. he received about 2,500 years, plus the death penalty. facing their own shortage from the european draw ban, oklahoma announced they would use midazolam on lockett. and in a rare doubleheader, inmate charles warner to be executed the same night. both of these crimes, charles warner s as well as lockett s were horrific. warner raped and murdered a baby. there wasn t a lot of sympathy for either person. the question is whether the process was handled constitutionally improperly. susanna represented lockett and warner. a law had been passed in