Thank you for the adventure - Axol
Tried so hard and got so far, but in the end it doesn’t even matter - Linkin Park
Hear me, my chiefs! I am tired. My heart is sick and sad. From where the sun now stands, I will fight no more forever. - Hin-mah-too-yah-lat-kekt
I’m going to the ghost McDonalds - Garcello
Why is this broad getting a stay, but richard moore is not. She is worse than he is! Okay I am worse than totally ticked off with her, but still, she is worse than many others that were executed. Why does it seem easier for her to get her appeal? please don't say because she is a female. It is a bad nasty insult to females. I hope somebody can message Mr. Barr and say get this hag bag executed already!
Montgomery has an execution date for Tuesday January 12, 2021.
"How do you get drunk on death row?" - Werner Herzog
"When we get fruit, we get the juice and water. I ferment for a week! It tastes like chalk, it's nasty" - Blaine Keith Milam #999558 Texas Death Row
Wise move. Now Barr should pick up someone else for December (maybe Tipton or Roane).
Tipton and Roane Jr. are currently stayed. It looks likely that a future administration will see the next dozen federal death row inmates executed. A U.S. Attorney General like William Barr or of similarity would be great.
"How do you get drunk on death row?" - Werner Herzog
"When we get fruit, we get the juice and water. I ferment for a week! It tastes like chalk, it's nasty" - Blaine Keith Milam #999558 Texas Death Row
Here are the federal inmates without execution dates whose appeals have been exhausted and who don't appear to have a stay in effect:
Billie Jerome Allen - Missouri
Brandon Leon Basham - South Carolina
Anthony Battle - Georgia
Robert Bolden - Missouri
Meier Jason Brown - Georgia
Carlos David Caro - Virginia
Sherman Lamont Fields - Texas
Chadrick Evan Fulks - South Carolina
Norris G. Holder - Missouri
Richard Allen Jackson - North Carolina
Jeffery William Paul - Arkansas
Julius Omar Robinson - Texas
Because judges refuse to stay in their lane, and democratic appointees will find any excuse to stay these. The judge needed to say no more than something along the lines of "the impediments on Montgomery's clemency petition are not the government’s doing. Granting reprieves is the province of the executive not the judicial branch. Montgomery cannot take the courts hostage, and enlist them to do something that is the sole discretion of the executive branch. Injunction denied."
But thanks to this judge she now gets an extra 35 days.
Don't ask questions, just consume product and then get excited for next products.
"They will hurt you. They will hurt your grandma, these people. The root cause of this is there's no discipline in the homes, they don't go to school, you know, they live off the government, no personal accountability, and they just beat people up for no reason, and it's disgusting." - Former Hamilton County Prosecutor Joe Deters
Edited out redundant information.
Female death row inmate who killed pregnant woman and cut out her baby fights to block her transfer to all-male prison for January execution because it will 'trigger a catastrophic psychiatric breakdown'
By LUKE KENTON
Daily Mail UK
A death row inmate who would be the first woman to be executed by the federal government since 1953 is asking to be put to death where she is currently housed, rather than at an all-male prison in Indiana.
Lisa Montgomery, 52, is currently scheduled to be executed by lethal injection on January 12 at the all-male federal prison FCC Terre Haute, the only federal facility that currently conducts executions.
Montgomery is currently being housed at the all-female Federal Medical Center-Carswell in Fort Worth.
She was sentenced to death for the depraved 2004 murder of Bobbie Jo Stinnett in Missouri, after she strangled the 23-year-old and cut her baby out of her womb with a carving knife, before running off with the premature child.
The baby, Victoria Jo Stinnett, survived the attack and is now 16 years old.
Montgomery's execution had originally been slated for December 8, but was pushed back after her lawyers asked for a delay because they caught coronavirus while working her case.
While legal experts, social workers, justice groups and others urge President Trump to call off the execution, Montgomery is appealing to remain in Fort Worth for the time being.
The murderer's attorneys sued Attorney General William Barr and several federal prison officials in Washington DC last month, seeking an injunction to stop Montgomery's transfer to Terre Haute on grounds the move would cause 'immediate and serious harm.'
'Transfer to an all-male prison will inflict further gratuitous suffering on Mrs. Montgomery and will likely trigger a catastrophic psychiatric breakdown,' the lawsuit reads.
Montgomery's attorneys emphasized that Federal Medical Center-Carswell has an adjacent satellite camp for women with special health needs, and is the only medical facility for women in the Federal Bureau of Prisons.
The Terre Haute prison, however, has never housed women and is predominantly staffed by men, the lawsuit says.
Montgomery's Washington D.C. attorney Robin Nunn wrote in an updated filing that Montgomery has suffered repeated sexual and physical abuse and neglect since childhood.
The 52-year-old was reportedly raised in an abusive home where she was allegedly raped by her stepfather for a number of years, was sex trafficked, beaten and urinated on by those who assaulted her.
When her mother uncovered the abuse at 14, she reportedly responded by threatening Montgomery with a gun. She later married at 18 to escape her home life but both her first and second marriages resulted in further abuse.
Because of her apparent trauma stemming from the sexual abuse, Montgomery reportedly becomes distressed and terrified when the the presence of men, particularly those who are strangers, the suit states.
Montgomery has also attempted suicide several times between 2010 and 2012 and has been placed on suicide watch in Fort Worth, according to the suit.
Transferring her to an all-male prison for her scheduled execution without considering her gender or disabilities violates federal law, Nunn wrote.
Compounding her case, Nunn stated that Montgomery has congenital brain damage and multiple traumatic brain injuries that have resulted in 'significant psychiatric disabilities.'
'A neurologist compared her brain to a city that has been bombed in multiple areas, resulting in impaired functioning across the entire city,' the lawsuit reads, as reported by Dallas News.
Federal regulations don't specify where federal executions must be carried out, so the decision is made by the Bureau of Prisons director, according to the suit.
Nunn further argues that staff at Terre Haute lack the training needed to cater to the needs of female inmates.
As a result, the attorney argues Montgomery will be subjected to more trauma as well as 'dissociation, psychosis and further pain and humiliation.'
'The Defendants know that transferring a woman who is mentally ill — because of years of abuse at the hands of men — to an all-male maximum security prison, where she will be surrounded male prisoners and constantly surveilled by male guards without the required training or experience with respect to female prisoners, will have a foreseeable and catastrophic impact on Mrs. Montgomery,' Nunn wrote.
In response, however, the government said that Montgomery's concerns about her transfer are speculative and unfounded.
Johnny Walker and Alan Simpson, attorneys for the government, said Montgomery will only be moved to Terre Haute one or two days before the execution and will be housed alone in a separate building where executions are performed.
They argued that Montgomery is 'not entitled to micromanage the conditions of her confinement for her own comfort and convenience.'
Further, the attorneys said the Bureau of Prison’s transport team would include men and women, as well as a female psychologist and a female nurse.
'Even accepting Montgomery’s contention that a brief transfer to an all-male institution poses a risk of psychological harm, it does not shock the conscience to transfer a death-row inmate to FCC Terre Haute — the only federal prison facility that conducts executions,' Walker and Simpson wrote.
'On the other side of the ledger, 13 years after her conviction, the public interest in allowing Montgomery’s execution to proceed is overwhelming,' they continued.
'Montgomery perpetrated an astonishingly brutal crime for which the jury determined that the death penalty was warranted.'
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...-transfer.html
"There is a point in the history of a society when it becomes so pathologically soft and tender that among other things it sides even with those who harm it, criminals, and does this quite seriously and honestly. Punishing somehow seems unfair to it, and it is certain that imagining ‘punishment’ and ‘being supposed to punish’ hurts it, arouses fear in it." Friedrich Nietzsche
Female death row inmate who killed pregnant woman and cut out her baby fights to block her transfer to all-male prison for January execution because it will 'trigger a catastrophic psychiatric breakdown'
You have got to be kidding
"I am the warden! Get your warden off this gurney and shut up! You are not in America. This is the island of Barbados. People will see you doing this." Monty Delk's last words.
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