Thank you to those of you who have sent letters to the
Parole Board on behalf of Roy Blankenship. If you’ve yet to send in a letter,
please do so today.
Download
a sample letter to Board of Pardons and Paroles and edit to include
your name and address at the bottom, then print, sign, and fax to:
The State Board of Pardons and Paroles
Floyd Veterans Memorial
Building
2 Martin Luther King, Jr. Drive,
S.E.
Atlanta, GA
30334-4909
Fax: 404-651-6670
In
addition to letters to the Board of Pardons and Paroles, please take a moment to
send a letter to Dr. Carlo Musso at Rainbow Medical Associates and ask that
he refuse to participate in the execution of Roy Blankenship.
Dr.
Carlo Musso, President, and Employees
CorrectHealth
9020 Peridot Parkway
Stockbridge, GA 30281
Fax: 770-692-4754
I’ve also included an article below about Lundbeck, the Danish pharmaceutical company that has said
that its drug, Nembutal (pentobarbital), which replaced sodium thiopental in Georgia’s
three-drug execution protocol, is unsafe for use in lethal injections.
The
Lethal-Drug Maker That's Helping End Lethal Injections
By Raymond
Bonner
The Atlantic
Denmark's Lundbeck is the
sole remaining supplier of pentobarbital used on death row in the U.S.
LONDON -- In a major victory for opponents of capital punishment, the only
company still supplying a drug used in executions in the United States has said
that it will take steps to stop states from using it for that purpose. And the
Danish Government has issued a similar call in a letter to governors of
death penalty states.
Reversing its previous position, the company, Lundbeck, based in Denmark, will
send letters to American prison authorities stating that it is not safe to use
the drug pentobarbital for lethal injections, according to a
report in the Financial Times that I confirmed by email with the
company. Lundbeck will also take measures to control the distribution of its
drug in the future so that it will not be used in executions, a representative
of the company told me by email. The drug, whose trade name is Nembutal, is
also used as a treatment for epilepsy.
Lundbeck will send letters to prison authorities and
governors in these eleven states advising that it is not safe to use the drug
in lethal injections.
"This is an important step," Maya Foa, a
researcher at Reprieve, the human rights
organization that has led a campaign to block foreign companies from supplying
lethal injection drugs to the United States, told me. She was quick to add,
however, "This is not the end of the story." Lundbeck does not
sell directly to end-users, but distributes through three American
wholesalers. It remains to be seen what action Lundbeck will take to stop its
wholesalers from selling the drug to death penalty states, says Foa, who told
me that she met with the Lundbeck CEO last week. "That will be the measure
of their commitment."
In a related development, the government of Denmark has called on American
states not to use Lundbeck's pentobarbital in executions. The letter, which was
sent to eight states in April but has not previously been made public, was made
available to the Atlantic today
by Reprieve. "The Government of Denmark -- and the European Union --
is working actively to restrict the use of capital punishment worldwide with a
view to its universal abolition," the Danish Ambassador in Washington,
Peter Taksoe-Jensen, wrote to Texas Gov. Rick Perry. "We consider this
punishment cruel and inhuman, and this appeal is based strictly on humanitarian
grounds."
Seven men are scheduled to be executed with pentobarbital made by Lundbeck in
the next three weeks, according to Reprieve. Three are in Texas,
and one each in Alabama, Arizona,
Ohio, and Virginia. The company has also sold the drug
to Florida, Georgia,
Louisiana, Mississippi,
and Oklahoma,
a company spokesman, Anders Schroll, said in an email sent Wednesday.
"Within a few days," Schroll notes, Lundbeck will send letters to
prison authorities and governors in these eleven states advising that it is not
safe to use the drug in lethal injections.
Lawyers are certain to use any letter from Lundbeck in legal efforts to block
the executions. Medical questions about the use of pentobarbital in executions
were recently raised in a
report by law students at Northwestern
University. As I noted
at the time, the report found that state and federal agencies
carefully regulated the drug when it was used in the euthanasia of animals, but
that it was unregulated when applied for the execution of humans.
Lundbeck's actions are another victory for Reprieve, whose founder and
director, Clive Stafford Smith, once worked as a death penalty lawyer in the United States.
Last year, Reprieve persuaded the British Government to ban the export to the United States
of another drug used in executions, sodium thiopental.
Sodium thiopental, an anesthetic, had long been the drug of choice by executioners.
Last year, the American company, Hospira, stopped making it. When death penalty
states began looking abroad for the drug, they ran into Reprieve and other
anti-death penalty organizations, including Amnesty International. Without
sodium thiopental, prison authorities turned to pentobarbital. The only foreign
company licensed to sell the drug in the United States was Lundbeck.
Reprieve mounted an unrelenting campaign against the Danish company. Each time
another person was executed with Lundbeck's pentobarbital, Reprieve issued a
press release. While adamantly declaring that it was opposed to pentobarbital
being used in executions, Lundbeck was equally unequivocal that there was
nothing it could do to prevent it. The company now appears to have
changed its policies. The looming question is what states will do without
pentobarbital.
http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2011/06/the-lethal-drug-maker-thats-helping-end-lethal-injections/240117/