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Wednesday
Aug112004
Wednesday, August 11, 2004 at 03:28PM
It may be very hot on Florida's Death Row, but it's not
hot enough to be unconstitutional, the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals has ruled. The ruling apparently puts an end to a class-action
lawsuit filed four years ago that claimed temperatures on Death Row
routinely top 100 degrees, forcing inmates to stand in toilets, drape
themselves in wet towels and sleep naked on concrete floors to bear or
beat the heat. But the Atlanta-based appeals court in a ruling Friday
said, 'The Constitution does not mandate comfortable prisons . . .
Generally speaking, prison conditions rise to the level of an Eighth
Amendment violation only when they `involve the wanton and unnecessary
infliction of pain.' '' Peter Siegel, an attorney with the Florida
Justice Institute in Miami, which filed the suit on behalf of Florida's
365 male inmates at Union Correctional Institution in Raiford, said the
organization has not decided whether to appeal the ruling to the
Supreme Court. [more]