Thursday, March 5, 2015

Act of God?

Let us return, briefly, to the Peach Tree State where they keep deciding not to kill Kelly Gissendaner for reasons that have nothing to do with their urgent desire to kill Kelly Gissendaner.

You'll recall that she was to be killed Wednesday last week.  But then, drat, a couple of inches of snow. Can't have that.  It's the south, after all.  People don't know how to drive in the snow so how would they get to see.  State killing as spectator sport.  Nope. 

So they had a rain snow delay.*  Make up game killing was scheduled for Monday this week.

Gissendaner's lawyers took the chance to ask the Board of Pardons and Paroles to reconsider its decision to have her killed.  They refused.

But it turns out that the pentobarbitol they were going to kill her with, previously tested by someone somewhere 


who assured the killers that the drug gathered from someone somewhere


were good


was mysteriously cloudy.

Now, if Georgia hadn't decided, and the courts agree, that everything connected to the drug must be a deep dark secret, done in a cave (no more pictures, sorry), by He Who Must Not Be Named, they might have actually got drugs they could trust and had them vetted by someone they trusted and . . . . Nah.

Ah, fuck it.  They decided not to kill Kelly (and also not to kill Brian Terrell next week) while they tried to figure out just what mysterious force turned pure pentobarbitol into a milk shake.

I don't believe in god, which makes me resist the urge to suggest some sort of divine intervention.  

But for those who do . . . .



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*It's probably not relevant that the Braves from Atlanta lost the first game of the exhibition season to the Mets yesterday and that the Mets are from New York where it snows with some regularity.

3 comments:

  1. Lethal injection originally came from my state. And now, we're once again leading the way with new technology. Nitrogen.

    http://tinyurl.com/ntcbm3z

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You're doin' fine Oklahoma. Oklahoma, OK.

      Of course, poor Jud is dead.

      Delete
    2. Yes. Yes, he is. He'd huffed just enough nitrogen to be clumsy.

      Delete