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Inmate who challenged lethal injection executed

A man who tried to challenge Ohio’s lethal injection method was executed Tuesday for his ex-wife’s shooting death 13 years ago.
/ Source: The Associated Press

A man who tried to challenge Ohio’s lethal injection method was executed Tuesday for his ex-wife’s shooting death 13 years ago.

James Filiaggi had stopped appealing his sentence in 2006 but reconsidered last week, asking the Ohio Supreme Court, a federal judge and federal appeal court to grant an emergency delay. All denied the request Monday.

The U.S. Supreme Court turned him down Tuesday morning.

Filiaggi had sought to join several other Ohio inmates in a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of lethal injection. The inmates contend lethal injection constitutes cruel and unusual punishment, and Filiaggi argued in court papers that it amounts to torture.

In a final statement before his death, he took a shot at the death penalty, saying many innocent inmates are on death row. “For me — it’s fine,” he said.

Legal challenges to the use of lethal injection have been filed in several states with mixed results. Last month, the U.S. Supreme Court delayed the execution of another inmate in Ohio after he joined the same lawsuit.

Filiaggi’s wife, Lisa Huff Filiaggi, had divorced him and won custody of their two daughters. On Jan. 24, 1994, James Filiaggi, who had a history of domestic violence, chased his ex-wife through her Lorain neighborhood, followed her into a neighbor’s house and shot her in the head.

Attorneys for Filiaggi entered a plea of not guilty by reason of insanity, arguing that a brain disorder made him unable to control anger-filled outbursts. Prosecutors said he knew right from wrong.

Filiaggi’s youngest daughter, now 14, wrote to the Ohio Parole Board that she had no sympathy for her father. She and her sister are being raised by Filiaggi’s younger brother.