Alabama
Planned Alabama execution latest example of barbarism in America
In 1996, Kenneth Eugene Smith was convicted of committing a murder for hire in 1988, stabbing Elizabeth Sennett to death on behalf of her husband. The husband died by suicide when he became a suspect in his wife’s murder. Smith and John Forrest Parker were sentenced to death for their role in the barbaric murder.
Tomorrow, Jan. 25, it seems likely the state of Alabama will outdo Smith on the barbarism scale, executing Smith with a new method, nitrogen hypoxia. If it works as planned, Smith would become unconscious, and then it “would cause death by forcing the inmate to breathe pure nitrogen, depriving him or her of the oxygen needed to maintain bodily functions.” That is a big “if” because the method has never been tried before.
At least not on humans. A team of veterinarian researchers analyzed various means of euthanizing animals and concluded in 2020 that nitrogen hypoxia was suitable for birds and for pigs under certain circumstances but is “unacceptable for other mammals.”
Smith is entitled to some doubts about Alabama’s track record on performing humane executions. In November 2022, he was punctured with intravenous needles for nearly four hours as doctors searched for veins capable of handling the execution cocktail for a lethal injection.
“I was strapped down, couldn’t catch my breath,” Smith told NPR’s Chiara Eisner recently. “I was shaking like a leaf. I was absolutely alone in a room full of people, and not one of them tried to help me at all, and I was crying out for help. It was a month or so before I really started to come back to myself.”
Smith’s case, as is typical of such situations, is not as cut and dried from a legal perspective. His “initial conviction was overturned by the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals. In his second trial, the jury recommended 11-1 that Kenny receive a life sentence without the possibility of parole,” according to the Catholic Mobilizing Network, the nation’s leading anti-death penalty organization. “But the judge overrode this verdict and sentenced Kenny to death, once again.”
What is more, according to Catholic Mobilizing Network: “Alabama has since amended its sentencing laws to say that the jury, not the judge, makes the final decision on sentencing in a capital trial.” If Smith’s second trial happened today, and the jury reached the same conclusion, he would not be on death row at all.
There are so many reasons to stop the execution that are particular to this case, it is remarkable that we are even discussing it. Still, the most important reason to stop the execution is not because of what it does to Smith but what it does to us. It turns us into barbarians.
Alas, America in 2024 is not allergic to barbarism and our culture has long since stopped evidencing any particular concern for human life.
When asked earlier this month in a radio interview about his fight with the Biden administration over how to handle migration, Texas Gov. Greg Abbot said, “The only thing that we’re not doing is we’re not shooting people who come across the border, because of course, the Biden administration would charge us with murder.”
The violence in our cities and in our schools has not caused a single prominent Republican politician in the pro-gun caucus to reevaluate their stance.
Pro-choice Democrats vie with each other for who can craft and adopt the most extreme laws, eliminating any restrictions on abortion.
Assisted suicide laws stalled in the U.S. last year but our neighbors to the north are planning to extend their law to allow people with mental illness to sign up for state-sponsored, doctor-administered, death.
Rome had its gladiators and America has professional wrestling and mixed martial arts.
The internet is littered with videos of school kids beating up other kids, people getting beaten up on the street by thieves.
Last Sunday, at Mass, the first reading told of the prophet Jonah warning the city of Nineveh to turn away from its sins: “Jonah began his journey through the city, and had gone but a single day’s walk announcing, ‘Forty days more and Nineveh shall be destroyed,’ when the people of Nineveh believed God; they proclaimed a fast and all of them, great and small, put on sackcloth.”
Americans are not likely to start fasting anytime soon. We have no sackcloth. We cherish our indifference to human life and we enjoy our barbarism. Smith is the most obvious and immediate victim, but it is the rest of us who will be judged too, and judged by what we do to him.
Alabama
Alabama football 2027 commit shuts down recruitment
An Alabama football commitment from the class of 2027 has shut down his recruitment.
Three-star defensive end Avrian (AJ) Pauley out of McGill-Toolen Catholic High School in Mobile revealed his decision to 247Sports on Saturday. Pauley committed to Alabama while in Tuscaloosa for the annual A-Day event in April.
He’s a 6-foot-5, 265 pound lineman that chose the Crimson Tide over a list of finalists including Michigan, Florida State and Ole Miss. Two of those schools were pushing to get Pauley on or back on campus.
Per Brett Greenberg of 247Sports:
“Florida State was set to receive a trip the following weekend (June 5-7) and Michigan was pushing hard to get Pauley on campus the next two weeks (June 12-14, June 19-21). None of those trips took place and now Alabama will be the only program receiving visits before the Early Signing Period in December.”
Pauley is one of three defensive line prospects in Alabama’s 2027 recruiting class, along with three-star EDGE rushers Tyler Younger (Norcross, Georgia) and Jeremiah Beverly (Hillcrest High School, Tuscaloosa), both of whom committed to the Tide this past week. Rivals lists Pauley as the nation’s 69th best defensive end.
Alabama landed its fifth recruit in the past week on Saturday when four-star wide receiver Osani Gayles committed to the Tide over Washington and Stanford. The Crimson Tide now has 13 total commitments in their 2027 recruiting class.
Gayles was the ninth commitment for coach Kalen DeBoer and staff since May 31. Alabama’s 2027 class is No. 34 in Rivals’ updated Industry Football Team Recruiting Rankings. 247Sports ranks the Tide’s class No. 49.
Follow us at @RollTideWire on X, and like our page on Facebook, for ongoing coverage of Alabama Crimson Tide news, notes and opinions.
Alabama
83-year-old man killed in Alabama boat crash | WKRG.com
ST. CLAIR COUNTY, Ala. (WIAT) — A Pell City man was killed in a two-vessel crash that occurred Thursday on Lake Logan Martin, according to the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency.
ALEA stated that the crash occurred near the Interstate 20 bridge at around 9:31 a.m. Gary M. Kendrick, 83, was injured when the 1993 Ranger Bass boar he was operating collided head-on with a 2005 Hurricane Pontoon boat.
Kendrick was taken to the UAB St. Vincent’s St. Clair Hospital, where he died from his injuries. The operator of the Hurricane Pontoon boat was not injured.
The Pell City Police Department and the Lincoln Fire Department both responded to the scene, assisting troopers with ALEA’s Marine Patrol Division.
Alabama
Two ejected after boat crash on Alabama lake
A crash between two vessels on Lake Mitchell ejected two and injured one on Friday night, authorities have confirmed.
Around 7:15 p.m. on June 26, a 17-foot Bumblebee Bass boat collided with a 17-foot Nova Bass boat in Hatchet Creek on Lake Mitchell in Coosa County.
The collision caused the operator of the Bumblebee and a passenger to be ejected into the water. The passenger — 38-year-old Natasha L. Holt of Munford — was recovered from the water and transported to Baptist Medical Center East in Montgomery for treatment.
The others involved in the crash — 24-year-old Duncan Davis of Deatsville and 30-year-old Trevor Howell of Munford, the operators of the Nova and Bumblebee respectively — were not injured in the crash.
ALEA’s investigation into the incident is ongoing.
Sarah Clifton covers business for the Montgomery Advertiser. You can reach her at sclifton@montgome.gannett.com or follow her on X @sarahgclifton and TikTok @sarahgclifton. To support her work, please subscribe to the Montgomery Advertiser.
-
Lifestyle27 minutes ago‘House of the Dragon,’ Season 3, Episode 2: Honey, I’m home!
-
Technology38 minutes agoChina’s Z.ai claims it can match Mythos on cybersecurity
-
World42 minutes agoShipping giant warns Strait of Hormuz chaos is ‘new normal’ as Tehran shifts 4M barrels
-
Politics50 minutes agoJacob Frey praises Somali community as Minnesota faces renewed scrutiny over fraud investigations
-
Sports58 minutes agoJ.T. Poston posts a 12 on a single hole at Travelers Championship in stunning meltdown
-
Technology1 hour agoMidjourney’s wild body scanner scans you in water
-
Business1 hour agoWhy tech stocks are getting hammered
-
Entertainment1 hour ago
Sigh. Again? ‘Love Island USA’ confirms another contestant fired over apparent use of racial slur