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See also: America, for the infliction of the See also: death See also: penalty on criminals (see CAPITAL PUNISHMENT) by passing through the See also: body of the condemned a sufficient current of See also: electricity to cause death
.
The method was first adopted by the See also: state of New See also: York, a See also: law making this method obligatory having been passed and approved by the governor on the 4th of See also: June 1888
.
The law provides that there shall be See also: present, in addition to the See also: warden, two physicians, twelve reputable citizens of full age, seven deputy sheriffs, and such ministers, priests or clergymen, not exceeding two, as the criminal may See also: request
.
A See also: post-mortem examination of the body of the convict is required, and the body, unless claimed by relatives, is interred in the prison cemetery with a sufficient quantity of quicklime to consume it
.
The law became effective in New York on the 1st of See also: January 1889
.
The first criminal to be executed by electricity was See also: William Kemmler, on the 6th of
See also: August 189o, at Auburn prison
.
The validity of the New York law had previously been attacked in regard to this See also: case (Re Keminler, 1889; 136 U.S
.
436), as providing " a cruel and unusual punishment " and therefore being contrary to the Constitution; but it was sustained in the state courts and finally in the Federal courts
.
By 1906 about one See also: hundred and fifteen murderers had been successfully executed by electricity in New York state in Sing Sing, Auburn and Dannemora prisons
.
The method has also been adopted by the states of See also: Ohio (1896), Massachusetts (1898), New See also: Jersey (1906), Virginia (igo8) and See also: North Carolina (191o)
.
The apparatus consists of a stationary See also: engine, an alternating dynamo capable of generating a current at a pressure of 2000 volts, a " death-chair " with adjustable See also: head-rest, binding straps and adjustable electrodes devised by E
.
F
.
See also: Davis, the state electrician of New York
.
The See also: voltmeter, ammeter andswitch-See also: board controlling the current are located in the execution-See also: room; the dynamo-room is communicated with by electric signals
.
Before each execution the entire apparatus is thoroughly tested
.
When everything is in readiness the criminal is brought in and seats himself in the death-chair
.
His head, chest, arms and legs are secured by broad straps; one electrode thoroughly moistened with See also: salt-solution is affixed to the head, and another to the See also: calf of one See also: leg, both electrodes being moulded so as to secure See also: good contact
.
The application of the current is usually as follows: the contact is made with a high voltage (1700-1800 volts) for 5 to 7 seconds, reduced to 200 volts until a See also: half-minute has elapsed; raised to high voltage for 3 to 5 seconds, again reduced to low voltage for 3 to 5 seconds, again reduced to a low voltage until one minute has elapsed, when it is again raised to the high voltage for a few seconds and the contact broken
.
The ammeter usually shows that from 7 to 10 amperes pass through the criminal's body
.
A second or even a third brief contact is sometimes made, partly as a precautionary measure, but rather the more completely to abolish reflexes in the dead body
.
Calculations have shown that by this method of execution from 7 to ro h. p. of energy are liberated in the criminal's body
.
The See also: time consumed by the strapping-in See also: process is usually about 45 seconds, and the first contact is made about 70 seconds after the criminal has entered the death-chamber
.
When properly performed the effect is painless and instantaneous death
.
The mechanism of See also: life, circulation and respiration cease with the first contact
.
Consciousness is blotted out instantly, and the prolonged application of the current ensures permanent derangement of the vital functions beyond recovery . Occasionally the drying of the See also: sponges through undue generation of heat causes desquamation or superficial blistering of the skin at the site of the electrodes
.
Post-mortem discoloration, or post-mortem lividity, often appears during the first contact
.
The pupils of the eyes dilate instantly and remain dilated after death
.
The post-mortem examination of " electrocuted " criminals reveals a number of interesting phenomena
.
The temperature of the body rises promptly after death to a very high point
.
At the site of the leg electrode a temperature of over 128° F. was registered within fifteen minutes in many cases
.
After the removal of the See also: brain the temperature recorded in the See also: spinal canal was often over 120° F
.
The development of this high temperature is to be regarded as resulting from the active metabolism of tissues not (somatically) dead within a body where all vital mechanisms have been abolished, there being no circulation to carry off the generated heat
.
The See also: heart, at first flaccid when exposed soon after death, gradually contracts and assumes a tetanized condition; it empties itself of all See also: blood and takes the See also: form of a heart in systole
.
The lungs are usually devoid of blood and weigh only 7 or 8 ounces (avoird.) each
.
The blood is profoundly altered biochemically; it is of a very dark colour and it rarely coagulates
.
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