Lonecowboy
Well-known member
WOW!!
I sure didn't see this coming did you??
After all the supremes are A-political, Oldtimer said so just yesterday.
and now today it comes out in her first vote Elena Kagan stands with the libtards and votes against capitol punishment.
and then wonder of all wonders-- so does sotomayer!
barrys girls are voting 100% for him, it's the libtard way.
oh, and did this with no evidence, just speculation, kinda like oh--- global warming and so many of the other libtard causes.
oh and the man they wanted to let live:
I sure didn't see this coming did you??
After all the supremes are A-political, Oldtimer said so just yesterday.
and now today it comes out in her first vote Elena Kagan stands with the libtards and votes against capitol punishment.
and then wonder of all wonders-- so does sotomayer!
barrys girls are voting 100% for him, it's the libtard way.
Justice Elena Kagan cast her first vote on the Supreme Court late Tuesday, joining the liberals in dissent when the high court cleared the way for the execution of an Arizona murderer.
The 5-4 ruling overturned orders by a federal judge in Phoenix and the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco that had stopped the execution by lethal injection of Jeffrey Landrigan.
Tuesday's night's one-paragraph order was unsigned, but it spoke for Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and Justices Anthony M. Kennedy, Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas and Samuel A. Alito Jr.
Four others said they disagreed and said would have preserved the stay. They were Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen G. Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Kagan.
oh, and did this with no evidence, just speculation, kinda like oh--- global warming and so many of the other libtard causes.
"There is no evidence in the record to suggest that the drug obtained from a foreign source is unsafe," the justices said, and "speculation cannot substitute for evidence that the use of the drug is 'sure or very likely to cause serious illness and needless suffering'."
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/sc-dc-1028-court-execution-20101027,0,6859358.story
oh and the man they wanted to let live:
In 1989, Landrigan escaped from an Oklahoma prison, where he was serving time for second-degree murder. He was convicted of strangling Chester Dean Dyer in Arizona a year later during an armed burglary, and a trial judge sentenced him to death.