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  • 17
    Dec
    2012
    5:23pm, EST

    Ohio governor grants clemency for 'too obese to be executed' killer

    AP Photo/Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections, file

    This undated file photo provided by the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections shows inmate Ronald Post. Ohio Gov. John Kasich commuted Post's death sentence on Monday.

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    Ohio's governor on Monday commuted the death sentence of convicted murderer Ronald Post, but not because of the obese inmate's claim that he was too large to be executed.

    Republican Gov. John Kasich said in a statement that Post's legal representation "did not rise to the level that society has come to expect in death penalty cases." Post will instead spend life in prison with no chance of parole, The Associated Press reported. On Friday, a parole board had recommended that Post's death sentence be commuted to a life term, according to Reuters.

    Post, 53, had been scheduled to die Jan. 16 for the 1983 shooting death of Helen Vantz in northern Ohio. The woman worked in an Elyria, Ohio motel Post was robbing, and died after the man shot her twice in the back of the head.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    In September of this year, Post's lawyers argued their 480-pound client had difficulty losing weight and claimed he would face a "torturous and lingering death" if executed in January. Post also claimed his weight, vein access, scar tissue, depression and other medical problems could pose severe problems for executioners. However in November, a federal judge dismissed this attempt to stop the lethal injection, The Plain Dealer in Cleveland reported.


    Related: Execution halted in Pennsylvania over suppressed evidence

    "Governor Kasich made the right decision by granting clemency to Ronald Post," Kevin Werner, executive director of Ohioans to Stop Executions, said in a statement. "The governor carefully examined the totality of mistakes in Mr. Post's case and acted accordingly. Our thoughts remain with the Vantz family."

    Kasich told Reuters the clemency "should not be viewed by anyone as diminishing this awful crime or the pain it has caused."

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    262 comments

    You must be f-ing kidding me. Our society is so messed up.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: ohio, execution, death-penalty, crime, obese, ronald-post
  • 18
    Sep
    2012
    9:32am, EDT

    Convicted Ohio killer: I'm too obese to be executed

    Ohio Dept. of Rehabilitation and Corrections via AP

    Undated photo of death row inmate Ronald Post

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    A condemned Ohio inmate who weighs 480 pounds and has a history of difficulty losing weight argues he would face a "torturous and lingering death" if executed in January.

    Ronald Post, who shot and killed a hotel clerk in northern Ohio almost 30 years ago, said his weight, vein access, scar tissue, depression 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 federal court papers filed 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.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Post, 53, is scheduled to die Jan. 16 for the 1983 shooting death of Helen Vantz in Elyria. The woman worked in a motel Post was robbing, and died after the man shot her twice in the back of the head.

    According to The Cleveland Plain Dealer, Vantz's son, William, laughed when he first heard about the request, but immediately turned serious.

    "I don't care if they have to wheel him in on a tractor-trailer; 30 years is too long," he said, according to The Plain Dealer. "Enough is enough. This is just an excuse to get out of the execution."

    A spokeswoman for the prisons department had no comment on the pending litigation.

    Post's attorneys also want more time to pursue arguments that claims of a full confession by the inmate to several people have been falsely exaggerated.

    If you think we're fat now, wait until 2030

    "Post's case is about more than his weight, and his life should be spared for reasons wholly unrelated to his obesity," his federal public defender, Joseph Wilhelm, said in a statement.

    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 267 pounds, was executed Oct. 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 265 pounds. 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 400 pounds, 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 pentobarbital, 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 center 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.

    Post's request for gastric bypass surgery has been denied, he's been encouraged not to walk because he's at risk for falling, and severe depression has contributed to his inability to limit how much he eats, his filing said.

    According to The Plain Dealer, Post's attorneys said his weight has yo-yoed for years. At one point, the paper reported, the 6-foot-3 convict lost 150 pounds. While at the Mansfield Correctional Institution, Post "used that prison's exercise bike until it broke under his weight," according to the filing.

    Post currently uses a wheelchair at the Franklin Medical Center in Columbus, The Plain Dealer reported.

    In an open letter last year, William Vantz said that he’s still waiting for justice to be served for his mother.

    “Some have said that since it’s been so long just let [Post] stay in prison for the remainder of his natural life. No!” William Vantz wrote for  the Morning Journal.

    "I am as committed to this as the day he took her life. I will never forgive or forget what he took from us. We all have recourse to the law and it’s time he paid his debt to society. It’s way overdue!"

    Post's case is unusual, as the man pleaded no contest to the murder charges, The Plain Dealer reported. That means he did not admit to having committed the crime, but chose instead not to challenge the facts presented by the prosecution.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    1071 comments

    How about a couple bullets to the head, just like the woman he killed? That seems fair to me.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: ohio, execution, crime, obese, ronald-post
  • 27
    Nov
    2011
    11:11am, EST

    Ohio puts 200-pound third-grader in foster care

    Cuyahoga County Officials took an eight-year-old boy, weighing over 200 pounds from his mother, and now a court will begin the process of deciding what's best for the child next month. Prof. Arthur Caplan discusses.

    By Associated Press and msnbc.com staff

    An Ohio third-grader weighing more than 200 pounds has been taken from his family and placed into foster care when county social workers said his mother wasn't doing enough to control his weight.

    The Plain Dealer reports  that the 8-year-old is considered severely obese and at risk for diseases such as diabetes and hypertension.

    The Ohio Health Department estimates more than 12 percent of third-graders statewide are severely obese. The removal of the Cleveland child is the first state officials can recall of a child being put in foster care for a strictly weight-related issue.

    Lawyers for the mother say the county is overreaching in taking the child. They say the medical problems the boy is at risk for do not yet pose an imminent danger to his health.

    Cuyahoga County does not have a specific policy on dealing with obese children, the Plain Dealer reported. A spokeswoman for the Department of Children and Family Services told the newspaper that the agency removed the boy because case workers considered this mother's inability to get her son's weight down a form of medical neglect.

    Authorities claim the child's weight gain was caused by his environment and that the mother wasn't following doctor's orders -- an allegation the mother disputes. 

    "This child's problem was so severe that we had to take custody," Mary Louise Madigan told the Plain Dealer. The agency worked with the mother for more than a year before asking Juvenile Court for custody of the child, she said.

     

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    345 comments

    Stop feeding Him!!!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: cleveland, obese, foster-care, cuyahoga

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