A CONDEMNED US inmate who weighs at least 218kg
wants his upcoming execution delayed, saying his weight could lead to a
"torturous and lingering death."
Ronald
Post, who shot and killed a hotel clerk in northern Ohio almost 30 years ago,
said his weight, vein access, scar tissue and other medical problems raise the
likelihood his executioners would encounter severe problems.
He's also
so big that the execution gurney might not hold him, lawyers for Post said in
court papers filed on Friday.
"Indeed,
given his unique physical and medical condition there is a substantial risk
that any attempt to execute him will result in serious physical and
psychological pain to him, as well as an execution involving a torturous and
lingering death," the filing said.
Post, 53,
is scheduled to die on January 16 for the 1983 shooting death of Helen Vantz in
Elyria, Ohio.
The
prisons department was not aware of the filing and could not immediately
comment.
Inmates'
weight has come up previously in death penalty cases in Ohio and elsewhere.
In 2008,
federal courts rejected arguments by condemned double-killer Richard Cooey that
he was too obese to die by injection.
Cooey's
attorneys had argued that prison food and limited opportunities to exercise
contributed to a weight problem that would make it difficult for the execution
team to find a viable vein for lethal injection.
Cooey,
who was 5-foot-7 and weighed 121kg, was executed on October 14, 2008.
In 2007,
it took Ohio executioners about two hours to insert IVs into the veins of
condemned inmate Christopher Newton, who weighed about 120kg. A prison
spokeswoman at the time said his size was an issue.
In 1994
in Washington state, a federal judge upheld the conviction of Mitchell Rupe,
but agreed with Rupe's contention that at more than 180kg, he was too heavy to
hang because of the risk of decapitation. Rupe argued that hanging would
constitute cruel and unusual punishment.
After
numerous court rulings and a third trial, Rupe was eventually sentenced to life
in prison, where he died in 2006.
Ohio
executes inmates with a single dose of phenobarbital, usually injected through
the arms.
Medical
personnel have had a hard time inserting IVs into Post's arms, according to the
court filing. Four years ago, an Ohio State University medical centre nurse
needed three attempts to insert an IV into Post's left arm, the lawyers wrote.
Post has
tried losing weight, but knee and back problems have made it difficult to
exercise, according to his court filing.
While at
the Mansfield Correctional Institution, Post "used that prison's exercise
bike until it broke under his weight," according to the filing.
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