2006: Angel Diaz
December 13th, 2007 Headsman
On this date one year ago, Angel Diaz suffered lethal injection for the 1979 murder of a topless bar manager.
And “suffered” was the word. The procedure was botched, and Diaz took 34 minutes — and a second dose of the lethal three-drug cocktail — before dying, with chemical burns left on both arms.
The incident provoked an immediate media storm and a moratorium on executions in Florida pending the perversity of public servants molding killing procedure by committee. As a result, Diaz remains the last person executed in Florida, and 2007 will be the first year since 1982 that the Sunshine State puts nobody to death.
The debacle in Florida has been a microcosm for the nation. Lethal injection as an execution protocol was by this time last year already facing growing scrutiny. It was immediately apparent that Diaz’s execution could spell serious trouble for the American death penalty’s legal machinery.
And indeed that machinery has now ground to a halt, if only a temporary one. Facing judicial confusion, the Supreme Court is weighing a potential landmark case on the constitutionality of lethal injection, with actual executions — at least involuntary ones — under a de facto moratorium for months yet to come.
That same disquiet is setting down legislative as well as judicial milestones: New Jersey is poised to has this very day become the first American state to abolish the death penalty since 1965.
Possibly Related Executions
- 1999: Allen Lee “Tiny” Davis, the end of the road for Old Sparky
- 1992: Ricky Ray Rector, “a date which ought to live in infamy for the Democratic Party”
- 2002: Monty Allen Delk, in a Three-Pronged Failure
Entry Filed under: 21st Century, Botched Executions, Common Criminals, Florida, Lethal Injection, Murder, New Jersey, Notable Jurisprudence, Ripped from the Headlines, USA

2 Comments Add your own
1. sbl | July 1st, 2008 at 3:33 pm
Like anyone really gives a crap if this man suffered while being executed. In my opinion he got away easy. Should have crucified him and let him die in severe agony over the course of several days - now THAT’S justice.
2. ExecutedToday.com »&hellip | October 30th, 2008 at 2:28 am
[...] whether the lethal injection regime used in Mississippi and in most of the United States was cruel and unusual punishment had reached the high court at just time [...]
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