Idaho Keeps Scheduling This Inmate's Execution Even Though It Lacks the Means To Kill Him
A federal judge ruled in favor of an Idaho death-row inmate who says that the state is "psychologically torturing" him.

Earlier this month, an Idaho federal judge ruled in favor of a death-row inmate who claims the state is violating his Eighth Amendment rights by continuing to schedule his execution while knowing it lacks the means to actually kill him.
According to the Idaho Statesman, Idaho has scheduled the execution of Gerald Pizzuto five times since his conviction in 1986 for the murders of Berta and Del Herndon. The state has even obtained three separate death warrants since 2021, despite lacking the lethal injection drugs required to kill him. As a result, Pizzuto says he has experienced "psychological torture."
"With each new death warrant, Pizzuto explains, he must repeat the preparatory steps of designating who will witness his execution and to whom his property and remains will be left," Judge B. Lynn Winmill wrote in his ruling. "Additionally, each time a new death warrant issues, he is moved from his cell block to the Execution Unit located 'in a separate building that provides for complete isolation…from other inmates.'"
Idaho hasn't carried out an execution since 2012 due to an inability to obtain lethal injection drugs, though a new law that recently took effect makes death by firing squad the state's backup execution method. However, the exact procedures for firing squad executions are still in development.
Despite the fact that Pizzuto has terminal bladder cancer—and, as a result, has been in hospice for the past three years—this hasn't kept the state from continually obtaining death warrants for his execution.
"Idaho law is clear, those who commit the most egregious crimes deserve the ultimate punishment," Idaho Attorney General Raúl Labrador said in a press release in February. "Pizzuto was sentenced to death. We followed the law and obtained a new death warrant."
Pizzuto sued to stop this pattern, asking for a stay of execution on the grounds that the state is violating his Eighth and 14th Amendment rights by repeatedly making plans to execute him knowing the death warrants cannot be carried out. The state swiftly responded with an attempt to dismiss Pizzuto's legal action.
While Judge Winmill dismissed Pizzuto's claims that the practice violated his 14th Amendment due process rights, he agreed that his claims of cruel and unusual punishment were "plausible," allowing the attempt to stay his execution to go forward.
"As Pizzuto describes it, Defendants' repeated rescheduling of his execution is like dry firing in a mock execution or a game of Russian roulette. With each new death warrant comes another spin of the revolver's cylinder, restarting the thirty-day countdown until the trigger pulls," Winmill wrote. "Not knowing whether a round is chambered, Pizzuto must re-live his last days in a delirium of uncertainty until the click sounds and the cylinder spins again."
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Fuck off you evil pro-criminal cunt. You assholes make the process impossible then point to your actions as why the State is cruel to this king of filth. Volunteer to house him and the rest of those you advocate for or STFU.
Seems like a .50 BMG round to the back of the head would be pretty humane, if a bit messy.
Prosecutors said he approached their cabin armed with a .22 caliber rifle in July 1985, tied their wrists behind their backs and bound their legs to steal their money before he bludgeoned them both.
22 LR behind the ear sounds appropriate.
I would say bludgeoning him to death would actually be fair and appropriate. In any event, there are certainly several ways to end his life more “humanely”. I only wish courts would remember the pain and trauma he caused his victims during their murders, instead of worrying about every little discomfort this POS experiences in his execution.
What a lovely idea! Let the state employ people sadistic or sociopathic enough to beat someone to death. Nothing bad can possibly come of that.
Or maybe we could just get the state out of the business of killing people. If killing this guy would magically bring his victims back then I'd pull the trigger myself. Give me two round of .45 ACP and I'll even bring my own gun. But that's not how it works. Execution isn't much of a deterrent either, and not just because it's uncommon. Back in the day, people could be executed for petty theft but that didn't stop pickpockets from working the crowds at public hangings.
It's really weird to me how the death penalty laws all seem to require these weirdly complicated means of execution. There are so many simple ways to kill someone that are still quick and relatively painless. How about nitrogen asphyxiation? Or just drop a 16 ton weight on them. You won't feel anything when you are crushed to a pancake in a fraction of a second.
Or perhaps we could just borrow some of the stuff from veterinarians. Funny how it's the safest and most humane method of ending suffering for animals, but cruel and unusual, little better than torture or crucifixion, for humans.
If you use a simple and quick method of execution, death penalty opponents will take you to court claiming the method is cruel, no matter what it is or how painless it is. The only methods not subject to that kind of lawfare are methods that have been ruled as okay in previous court cases. This makes it very hard to change methods.
Fuck off, you shameless state-sucker. The point is that the state shouldn't be allowed to gratuitously jerk people around. The fact that the person in question isn't very sympathetic should be utterly beside the point. Defending freedom of speech means defending the speech of Westboro assholes, Kluckers, socialists and Reason commenters. Defending people from abuse and torture means defending icky people including accused and even convicted criminals. Any time you're tempted to justify and excuse abuse because the target is an asshole just remember one thing: somebody somewhere thinks you're an asshole.
The guy has terminal cancer. All you have to do is wait.
That's true for everyone on death row. Not the cancer part necessarily, but the fact that they'll die eventually.
I am curious about that part. Is he being given any sort of medical care to fight the cancer and prolong his life? Can we just...stop doing that?
These articles annoy me. Make it difficult to kill someone who has earned death and then complain about how unfair things are for the shitbag. This guy should have been killed 30 years ago. While this means of execution thing is an issue (created by people like Emma) the court motions and ridiculous number of legal maneuvers that keep these people alive for this long is a problem for me.
I'd prefer the death penalty were abolished, or reserved only for politicians and agents of the state. But if you're going to do it, just fucking do it. How hard is it to organize a firing squad?
Perfectly said. My sentiments exactly.
Agreed. I don't like it, but this runaround half-ban stuff is really getting on my nerves.
Harder than you might think. Even soldiers who have actually served in combat often balk or miss their mark. Blazing away in a firefight against people actively trying to kill you is hard enough. Firing at a helpless, clearly human target is much harder no matter how unsympathetic the target. As for the tradition of loading one rifle with a blank, that's also pretty useless. Any rifleman qualified to serve on a firing squad can easily tell the difference between firing a live round vs a blank. So, do you want to be the one standing by for the coup de grace in case the target doesn't receive an immediately fatal wound? Could you do that? Unless you've actually been there, the only honest answer is "I don't know", so spare me any tough guy posturing.
"Not knowing whether a round is chambered, Pizzuto must re-live his last days in a delirium of uncertainty until the click sounds and the cylinder spins again."
Good. Continue till he dies.
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Amazing.
There is not a single piece of rope in all of Idaho?
Not a single firearm?
No edged weapons of any kind?
All the baseball bats have disappeared?
No buildings over three stories?
Not a single heavy truck in the state?
I call bullshit.
No hungry hogs?
I’m a merciful man, just bludgeon him to death like he did his victims.
Woodchipper?
No, they just seem to be suffering from a reassuring shortage of assholes sadistic enough to actually do any of that. Less reassuring is that they clearly do have plenty of people sadistic enough to repeatedly administer otherwise pointless mindfucks.
I’ve only visited Idaho a few times, but I’m fairly certain they don’t lack the means to kill him. All it takes is 4 rifles and 3 bullets. I saw at least that many in the first 5 pickup trucks I passed.
So... the plaintiff is arguing for specific performance of his sentence?
Seems like a simple judgement from the bench. Bailiff, shoot this man!
On July 25, 1985, Berta Herndon and her adult nephew Delbert Herndon were robbed and murdered and their property was stolen while they were camping in the Ruby Meadows area, a remote campsite near McCall, Idaho. The police discovered their bodies in shallow graves that had been dug near their cabin. The victims’ hands were bound behind their backs with shoelaces and heavy wire, and Berta’s and Delbert’s jeans were pulled below their knees. The murders occurred in the Herndon cabin.
Both the Idaho Supreme Court and the district court’s order denying Pizzuto’s petition for writ of habeas corpus describe the facts in detail. In sum, testimony at trial showed that Pizzuto, James Rice, and William and Lene Odom knew each other from Orland, California. They (along with the Odoms’ two children) traveled to Idaho in the Odoms’ vehicle, and were camping together that day in a cabin in the Ruby Meadows area. William Odom and Pizzuto discussed robbing two fishermen, Stephen Crawford and Jack Roberts. While they were at the pond, the Herndons drove by in their pickup truck. Pizzuto and Odom abandoned their plan to rob the fishermen, and returned to their cabin. Shortly thereafter, Pizzuto left the others and walked off in the direction the Herndons had driven. He picked up a .22 caliber rifle and said he was going “hunting.”
Twenty to thirty minutes later, Rice and Odom drove up the road in Odom’s truck looking for Pizzuto. As they drove past the Herndon cabin, they saw Pizzuto standing in the doorway, holding a revolver. Pizzuto came up to Rice and Odom and told them to “give me half an hour and then come back up.” Rice and Odom drove back to their cabin, left their truck, and walked back to the Herndon cabin.
Approaching the Herndon cabin, Rice and Odom heard “bashing hollow sounds” like a watermelon being thumped. Pizzuto emerged with a hammer, the rifle, a revolver, and a pair of cowboy boots. He also had a “wad of hundred dollar bills” that he gave to Odom; Rice took the rifle. Pizzuto told them that he had “put those people to sleep, permanently.” He also said that he told the Herndons that he was a “highwayman” and that, when Delbert Herndon didn’t believe him, Pizzuto put a gun up to Delbert’s face, “made him drop his pants and crawl around the cabin,” and asked Delbert: “Does this look like a cannon from where you are standing at?”
Rice then heard some snoring sounds coming from the cabin and went inside. There, he found Berta and Delbert lying on the ground, with blood on their heads. Both bodies were still, except for Delbert Herndon’s legs which were shaking. Rice shot Delbert Herndon in the head because he “didn’t want him to suffer.”
Clarence Thomas has the habit of reciting the appellant's crime in full when he is unable to make the legal case to reject an appeal. Clearly you're following in his footsteps.
Whether someone deserves to be executed, and how US states carry out a DP or otherwise inflict punishment, are two distinct issues. This man deserves execution, but that doesn't mean that the way he is being treated is constitutionally acceptable or legitimate.
It is of course ironic that the state is unable to execute a guilty person when all too often other states are able to execute an innocent one.
Because these articles are designed to evoke pity. This is not a man who deserves any pity at all. The circumstances which have been entirely contrived to make it impossible to execute him are wound around the idea that disposing of him in any other way is barbaric or cruel or some other nonsense that he does not deserve. Reciting his crimes is a way of saying "the lady doth protest too much, methinks", or in simpler words "a needle is too good for this man". The argument about where to get a painless cocktail of drugs to kill him with is objectively silly when every hardware store sells a perfectly fitting hammer they could use to cave in his skull.
Addendum because I'm too late to edit it on:
I think my biggest beef with it how absurdly silly it is that Mr. Pizzuto would beg for his civil rights. He has no civil rights. He deserves no civil rights. The law has taken his central and most critical civil right to continue living and breathing and firmly abrogated it as punishment for his crimes. He should legally be nothing more than a dog. Shoot him and be done with it, or behead him, or gas him, electrocute him, whatever it may be just get it over with. No right thinking person should care about whether he feels "psychologically tortured" by the state trying to carry out the lawful punishment for his crimes. He does not deserve peace of mind. He doesn't deserve humanity or to be treated to a fake medical procedure in a clean white room. He is a cold blooded murderer (or a "highwayman" as he would describe it in his own words). He deserves death.
You continue to confuse what he deserves with what we should do, particularly constitutionally.
The original article, by describing his situation sympathetically, is already doing that. It's just doing it positively, while the above response is doing it negatively.
It’s extremely weird to for random people to be fixated on this. Do you think he’s innocent? If not, he probably deserves it.
There are a very tiny number of executions. There are tens of thousands of suicides and drug overdose deaths. Get some perspective.
You’re not helping anyone and you’re making life worse for yourself and the people around you.
(For the record, I think we should probably get rid of the death penalty because it’s not carried out enough to do any good. And it’s too expensive. And so the opponents of it can stop wasting their lives and everyone else’s time on a non-issue. It’s just not worth it — let’s stop it so these people STFU about it and do something worthwhile with their time.)
Even if executions were more frequent there's no reason to believe they'd be an effective deterrent. Back in the day people could be executed for petty theft which did nothing to stop pickpockets from working the crowds at public hangings.
STATES RANKED BY EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
(includes territories; 52 jurisdictions ranked)
COLLEGE DEGREE
Idaho 38 (half as educated as D.C.)
ADVANCED DEGREE
Idaho 41 (half as educated as Massachusetts or Maryland)
DISAFFECTED CLINGERS
Idaho 6
BACKWATER SLACK-JAWS
Idaho 4
This is how one gets an attorney general like Raul Labrador.
You never fail to make me smirk.
Your supercilious attitude is precisely why conservatives hate lefties. The only ameliorating factor in the defense of lefties is that your attitude is a stereotype, which leaves the hope that some of your lot are not complete assholes, hence some of you are redeemable.
I used a bunch of big words to stroke your sense of superiority. I hope it made you feel secure.
The recent NYT editorial, which asked, "Maybe we are the bad guys" comes to mind.
COLLEGE DEGREE
Idaho 38 (half as educated as D.C.)
Considering D.C. is where the vast majority of bad laws and bad bureaucrats come from, being that "educated" is nothing to boast of.
Y'all need to understand the scope of th' idiocy yer dealin' with here.
Ol' Artie, in a post where he's tryin' to look smart, let's everyone know that he thinks DC is a state.
Artie's an inbred addicted hermaphrodite that woke up after a night of getting passed around by his relatives in a sewer near a school so he thinks he got a education. And not just another night of lickin' his dadsister's syphilitic meth dusted cloaca.
I'm cool with calling out people who say stupid shit, but I try to stick to stupid shit they actually said. On the rare occasions when I succumb to the temptation to argue with the voices in my head I'm usually drunk. (And yet I still manage to use proper spelling and punctuation.) What's your excuse?
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I felt a twinge of pity for this guy, so I looked up what he did. Holy shit, I'll volunteer to strangle him myself, on the house.
-jcr
Idaho Keeps Scheduling This Inmate’s Execution Even Though It Lacks the Means To Kill Him
Idaho doesn’t have a rope or gun and bullet?
According to the Idaho Statesman, Idaho has scheduled the execution of Gerald Pizzuto five times since his conviction in 1986 for the murders of Berta and Del Herndon.
“As Pizzuto describes it, Defendants’ repeated rescheduling of his execution is like dry firing in a mock execution or a game of Russian roulette. What was his regard for his victims rights? Imagine the terror of seeing your spouse murdered and knowing you were next. Hard to feel sorry for the guy.
So the state should stoop to the same level as the criminal? What a lovely idea. Good thing the state would never abuse such power against against the less deserving.
Judge should have said this should be the blue print for all executions. Russian Roulette also comes to mind. '...Look at that. An empty chamber....Oh well, let's try again tomorrow shall we?...'
Should I be shocked that all of the conservatarians here who talk about respect for the Constitution and limited government somehow skip this limit on government power?
It seems like a reasonable claim that scheduling and then canceling his execution at the last minute is both cruel and unusual.
Cruel and unusual punishments are not being inflicted.
The only reason this vile creature is still breathing is because of cruel and unusual mercy that is being demanded by those who care more that they get their way than justice be served.
Like you.
Disgusted? Yeah. Shocked or even surprised? No. They've made it clear they're willing to throw the rules out the window when they dislike the target (justified or not), only to resume bleating when it's their ox being gored. I'm not quite sure if they're hopelessly oblivious or just shameless hypocrites.