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Tag: Alabama

  • Alabama’s Supreme Court declared embryos are children. It could happen in NC | Opinion

    Alabama’s Supreme Court declared embryos are children. It could happen in NC | Opinion

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    OPINION AND COMMENTARY

    Editorials and other Opinion content offer perspectives on issues important to our community and are independent from the work of our newsroom reporters.

    Nancy DeSisto, right, and Karin Sisk talk during the national “STOP THE BANS” day of action at the South Carolina Statehouse, Tuesday, May 21, 2019, in Columbia, S.C. The rally was one many held in all fifty states on Tuesday in response top recent state bans on abortion.

    Nancy DeSisto, right, and Karin Sisk talk during the national “STOP THE BANS” day of action at the South Carolina Statehouse, Tuesday, May 21, 2019, in Columbia, S.C. The rally was one many held in all fifty states on Tuesday in response top recent state bans on abortion.


    Sean Rayford

    online@thestate.com

    The Alabama Supreme Court made an unprecedented and potentially pivotal decision last week when it declared that frozen embryos are children in the eyes of the law.

    It raises concerns about the future of infertility treatment in Alabama and possibly across the country, as other state courts could use the Alabama case as precedent in similar decisions. Already, hospitals and clinics across Alabama have begun pausing IVF treatments, citing new legal risks to providers due to the decision.

    But the consequences of the ruling could extend beyond IVF, beginning a new front in the fight over reproductive rights and freedom.

    The ruling gives credence to the concept of “fetal personhood,” which has been a goal of the anti-abortion movement in the United States for decades. So-called fetal personhood laws would grant fetuses the same rights and protections of any born person. Under such laws, abortion could then be considered murder, and therefore outlawed entirely.

    What is the likelihood of something like that happening in, say, North Carolina? Maxine Eichner, Graham Kenan Distinguished Professor of Law at the UNC School of Law, said it’s not entirely out of the question, especially with a state Supreme Court that acts increasingly political.

    While experts like Eichner believe that the end goal of the fetal personhood movement is to ultimately outlaw abortion, it’s being done gradually, in cases that have nothing to do with abortion at all. In Alabama, the decision stemmed from wrongful death lawsuits brought by couples whose frozen embryos were destroyed in an accident at a fertility clinic. Alabama has a law that allows parents to sue over the death of a minor child, and the court ruled that “minor child” includes unborn children, even embryos.

    “Given the politics and the tremendous amount of resistance that surrounded removing the right to choose abortion folks who are seeking to restrict abortion are being a little more cautious, and you get a more gradual movement towards restricting abortion based on the idea of fetal personhood,” Eichner said.

    Sympathy for the idea of “fetal personhood” already exists in North Carolina. Eichner pointed to a North Carolina Court of Appeals ruling from October that declared that “life begins at conception.” The case in question terminated a mother’s parental rights for conduct during her pregnancy. The ruling was later withdrawn, but Eichner says it still represents a disturbing attempt to insert fetal personhood into the law.

    As with the Alabama ruling, what makes it particularly concerning is that it’s not the legislature injecting fetal personhood into the law, Eichner said. Rather, judges are moving out in front of the legislature and expanding the definition of a “child” themselves.

    In South Carolina, the idea of fetal personhood is already somewhat present in the law. South Carolina is one of several states — including Alabama — where the actions of pregnant people are criminalized. An investigation published last year by The Marshall Project and The Post & Courier found that hundreds of South Carolina women have been charged unlawful neglect of a child or homicide by child abuse for alleged drug use during pregnancy, because the state Supreme Court has ruled that child abuse laws extend to a viable fetus. South Carolina legislators have tried in recent years to officially enshrine fetal personhood in the law, effectively banning all abortions in the state, but haven’t been successful.

    Of course, these gradual steps toward fetal personhood are still receiving political pushback, so it’s hard to say whether the anti-abortion movement will ever find success in taking it further. The Alabama decision has even received criticism from Republicans, not least because restricting IVF is even more politically unpopular than restricting abortions. Former President Donald Trump said he “strongly supports” IVF and called on Alabama lawmakers to find a solution to preserve the availability of IVF in the state. Meanwhile, U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace of South Carolina suggested that some House Republicans are looking at federal legislation to protect access to IVF.

    “I tell my students Dobbs is like the Wild West,” Eichner said. “We’ve removed this settled law and now it’s very difficult to know what issues are gonna come up next, because things are changing by the minute.”

    Paige Masten is the deputy opinion editor for The Charlotte Observer. She covers stories that impact people in Charlotte and across the state. A lifelong North Carolinian, she grew up in Raleigh and graduated from UNC-Chapel Hill in 2021.
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    Paige Masten

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    February 25, 2024
  • The Jim Crow Era of Reproductive Freedom, Plus Tiffany Haddish’s Israel Trip

    The Jim Crow Era of Reproductive Freedom, Plus Tiffany Haddish’s Israel Trip

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    Van Lathan and Rachel Lindsay discuss the Alabama Supreme Court ruling that’s resulted in the halting of IVF treatments (5:18), before reacting to Tiffany Haddish’s trip to Israel (20:41). Then they break down a viral TikTok account called Biracial Lounge (38:16) before welcoming the founder of the X for Boys Life Preparatory School, King Randall I, to discuss a recent post on safety during police interactions (47:33).

    Hosts: Van Lathan and Rachel Lindsay
    Guest: King Randall I
    Producers: Donnie Beacham Jr. and Ashleigh Smith

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher

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    Rachel Lindsay

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    February 23, 2024
  • 2/21: CBS Evening News

    2/21: CBS Evening News

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    2/21: CBS Evening News – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Alabama hospital pauses IVF treatment after embryo ruling; Insulin still unaffordable to some after price caps

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    February 21, 2024
  • 1965 Selma to Montgomery March Fast Facts | CNN

    1965 Selma to Montgomery March Fast Facts | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    Here’s a look at the 1965 Selma to Montgomery march in Alabama.

    Throughout March of 1965, a group of demonstrators faced violence as they attempted to march from Selma, Alabama, to Montgomery, Alabama, to demand the right to vote for black people.

    One of the pivotal days was March 7, when 17 people were hospitalized and dozens more injured by police, including future Congressman John Lewis who suffered a fractured skull. Since that time, March 7 has been known as “Bloody Sunday.”

    The march has been reenacted many times on its anniversary. In 2015, President Barack Obama marked the 50th anniversary of the march by delivering a speech at the foot of the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma.

    It is about 50 miles (80 kilometers) from Selma to Montgomery.

    February 1965 – Marches and demonstrations over voter registration prompt Alabama Governor George C. Wallace to ban nighttime demonstrations in Selma and Marion, Alabama.

    February 18, 1965 – During a march in Marion, state troopers attack the demonstrators. State trooper James Bonard Fowler shoots and kills Jimmie Lee Jackson. Fowler was charged with murder in 2007 and pleaded guilty to manslaughter in 2010.

    March 7, 1965 – About 600 people begin a march from Selma, Alabama, to Montgomery, Alabama, led by Lewis and Hosea Williams. Marchers demand an end to discrimination in voter registration. At the Edmund Pettus Bridge, state and local lawmen attack the marchers with billy clubs and tear gas, driving them back to Selma.

    Read More: Selma priest remembers Bloody Sunday.

    March 9, 1965 – Martin Luther King Jr. leads another march to the Edmund Pettus Bridge. The march is largely symbolic; as arranged previously, the crowd turns back at a barricade of state troopers. Demonstrations are held in cities across the United States to show solidarity with the Selma marchers.

    March 9, 1965 – President Lyndon Johnson speaks out against the violence in Selma and urges both sides to respect the law.

    March 9, 1965 – Unitarian Universalist minister James Reeb, in Selma to join marchers, is attacked by a group of white men and beaten. He dies of his injuries two days later.

    March 10, 1965 – The US Justice Department files suit in Montgomery, Alabama, asking for an order to prevent the state from punishing any person involved in a demonstration for civil rights.

    March 17, 1965 – Federal District Court Judge Frank M. Johnson Jr. rules in favor of the marchers. “The law is clear that the right to petition one’s government for the redress of grievances may be exercised in large groups.”

    March 18, 1965 – Governor Wallace goes before the state legislature to condemn Johnson’s ruling. He states that Alabama cannot provide the security measures needed, blames the federal government, and says he will call on the federal government for help.

    March 19, 1965 – Wallace sends a telegram to President Johnson asking for help, saying that the state does not have enough troops and cannot bear the financial burden of calling up the Alabama National Guard.

    March 20, 1965 – President Johnson issues an executive order federalizing the Alabama National Guard and authorizes whatever federal forces the Defense Secretary deems necessary.

    March 21, 1965 – About 3,200 people march out of Selma for Montgomery under the protection of federal troops. They walk about 12 miles a day and sleep in fields at night.

    March 25, 1965 – The marchers reach the state capitol in Montgomery. The number of marchers grows to about 25,000.

    August 6, 1965 – President Johnson signs the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

    June 4, 2015 – After a state resolution to rename the Edmund Pettus Bridge is not acted upon, Lewis and Rep. Terri Sewell (D-Alabama), publish an article in the Selma Times-Journal in favor of keeping the name. “Keeping the name of the bridge is not an endorsement of the man who bares its name but rather an acknowledgment that the name of the bridge today is synonymous with the Voting Rights Movement which changed the face of this nation and the world.”

    February 24, 2016 – The marchers receive a Congressional Gold Medal, Congress’ highest civilian honor.

    June 3, 2021 – The National Trust for Historic Preservation includes the campsites used by the marchers in its annual list of the most endangered historic places in the United States.

    Beaten, bloodied and murdered – Selma 50 years later

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    February 21, 2024
  • 4 men killed in shooting at neighborhood car wash in Birmingham, Alabama

    4 men killed in shooting at neighborhood car wash in Birmingham, Alabama

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    Police are investigating a quadruple homicide in Birmingham, Alabama. On Friday afternoon, officers were dispatched to a report of multiple shots fired and found four victims lying unresponsive on the ground near an open lot, the Birmingham Police Department said in a news release. All four had apparent gunshot wounds.

    The four men were identified as Terrell Edwards, 38; Kevin McGhee, 38; Cortez Ray, 32; and Talton Tate, 36. Edwards, Ray and Tate were pronounced dead on the scene. McGhee was transported to UAB Hospital with what police described as life-threatening injuries and was pronounced dead there.

    The police said they believe one or more of the victims were targeted. The four men were at a neighborhood car wash when an unknown suspect opened fire on them, police said. 

    No one was in custody, police said, but anyone with information about the shooting is urged to contact the Birmingham Police Department.

    “It’s really disgusting that these things continue to happen in our city over and over again and people have got to learn other ways to resolve their conflicts or come to some kind of resolution other than resorting to gunfire,” Birmingham Police Chief Scott Thurmond told CBS affiliate WIAT-TV. “It disturbs the whole entire neighborhood over here. It’s just very disturbing for us as law enforcement officers trying to provide a safer city for all the citizens of Birmingham.” 

    The shooting has increased the number of murder investigations in Birmingham to 12 so far this year, police said.

    Kerry Breen


    Kerry Breen

    Kerry Breen is a reporter and news editor at CBSNews.com. A graduate of New York University’s Arthur L. Carter School of Journalism, she previously worked at NBC News’ TODAY Digital. She covers current events, breaking news and issues including substance use.

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    February 17, 2024
  • Alabama cops ‘violently’ arrested two elderly women for taking care of feral cats

    Alabama cops ‘violently’ arrested two elderly women for taking care of feral cats

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    In 2022, Wetumpka, Alabama, police violently arrested two elderly women and charged them with a litany of criminal offenses. Their crime? Taking care of stray cats. The pair has now sued the officers, arguing that their arrest and the resulting charges against them were unconstitutional and caused “significant physical and emotional injuries.”

    According to the complaint, Mary Alston, who was 60 at the time, often worked with Beverly Roberts who was then 84, to “trap-neuter-return” (TNR) feral cats. TNR is a common strategy of limiting stray cat populations by safely capturing cats, having them spayed or neutered by a veterinary clinic, and releasing or putting them up for adoption. According to their complaint, Roberts and Alston took up this practice because “neither the Humane Society nor any other animal rights organization had the resources to conduct TNR in or around the City of Wetumpka.”

    On June 25, 2022, Alston was setting up a trap for a feral cat on local public property when she saw Wetumpka Mayor Jerry Willis drive past, followed by police vehicles. However, within minutes the three police officers who had been trailing Willis turned around and approached Alston. 

    According to the complaint, Willis later admitted that after observing Alston, he ordered the police to approach her. Further, the lawsuit alleges that “Willis was angry that Ms. Roberts and Ms. Alston frequently complained, both publicly and to officials at Wetumpka City Hall, that. Willis was failing to enforce laws and ordinances prohibiting the ‘chaining’ of dogs.”

    Body camera footage shows one officer telling Alston that someone called about a person feeding feral cats.

    “Ya’ll got three cop cars because I’m feeding cats?” Alston said to the officer. “Wow, it’s unbelievable.”

    The officers demanded that Alston leave the public property, and then left the scene. However, Shortly after this encounter, Roberts joined Alston. The pair were on public property, and sitting calmly, waiting for a cat they were hoping to trap to arrive. However, the three officers soon returned. This time, the complaint states that they informed Roberts that she would be arrested. When the officers handcuffed Roberts, Alston got out of her car and attempted to speak with the officers.

    “The officers ordered Ms. Alston to quit talking and to get in her vehicle. Ms. Alston complied with the officers’ demand to get back into her vehicle but continued to try to speak to the officers,” the complaint states. In response, one of the officers, Brenden Foster responded by grabbing Ms. Alston, jerking her out of her vehicle by force, and then handcuffing her.”

    The pair were then taken to a local jail, where they were mistreated further. While in jail, Roberts lost consciousness and hit her head. However, the complaint alleges that an officer who witnessed this did nothing, and she was not given any medical help. When Roberts later asked to make a phone call, she was allegedly told that a call is a “privilege, not a right,” which is in violation of Alabama law.

    Ultimately, the pair was charged with “criminal trespass, obstructing governmental operations and disorderly conduct,” according to the complaint. In December 2022, a municipal Judge found the pair guilty and sentenced them to “10 days in jail, suspended, two years supervised probation, and a $50 fine on each charge,” though the charges were later dismissed on appeal.

    While their charges were ultimately dismissed, the pair is still suing, arguing that the officers and mayor “directed the unlawful arrest and malicious prosecution of Ms. Roberts and Ms. Alston to retaliate against them for exercising their First Amendment rights to peaceably assemble on public property, engage in expressive conduct…and engage in peaceful political speech.”

    However, it’s unclear whether the pair’s suit will be successful. Generous qualified immunity protections prevent police officers from being sued in civil court under most circumstances—meaning that police can count on being able to engage in gross misconduct with little risk of actually facing consequences.

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    Emma Camp

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    February 7, 2024
  • Dog’s pups were adopted — but not her. Longest resident at shelter needs a home

    Dog’s pups were adopted — but not her. Longest resident at shelter needs a home

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    Khaleesi is the longest resident at an Alabama animal shelter, having spent more than 175 days there. She’s looking for a forever home.

    Khaleesi is the longest resident at an Alabama animal shelter, having spent more than 175 days there. She’s looking for a forever home.

    Screengrab from the Tuscaloosa Metro Animal Shelter’s Facebook post

    A “resilient” dog is the longest resident of an Alabama animal shelter after she gave birth to a litter of puppies — and watched them get adopted as she was “left behind.”

    Khaleesi, who is about 2 years old, has been at the Tuscaloosa Metro Animal Shelter for more than 175 days, “despite her gentle nature and popularity among staff,” the shelter posted on social media Feb. 3.

    She arrived “very pregnant” at the shelter in August before giving birth to “adorable pups.” But her babies were all adopted, and she wasn’t.

    Staff members describe Khaleesi as an “absolute doll” who gets along with other dogs and greets everyone who walks by her kennel. She’s a gray lab mix and weighs just over 60 pounds.

    “She has been such a perfect girl, we just don’t get it,” the shelter said.

    She gets along well with staff members, who describe her as one of their “ultimate staff favorites.”

    The shelter has recently seen an influx of dogs coming in but not as many adoptions, so her caretakers stressed the importance of getting Khaleesi out of the shelter to a loving home.

    Khaleesi needs a “freedom ride out of here” this Valentine’s Day, the shelter said. She shares her name with a popular “Game of Thrones” character.

    Tuscaloosa is in western Alabama, about 60 miles southwest of Birmingham.



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    Olivia Lloyd

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    February 5, 2024
  • From bizarre jokes to predictions – the final words of Death Row killers

    From bizarre jokes to predictions – the final words of Death Row killers

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    KILLER Kenneth Smith used his final words on Death Row this week as a powerful protest – but not everyone has something profound to say.

    As the murderer became the first American to be executed by nitrogen asphyxia, he told the world: “Tonight, Alabama caused humanity to take a step backwards . . .  I’m leaving with love, peace and light.”

    10

    Not everyone has something profound to say when they’re moments from deathCredit: Getty
    This week, Kenneth Smith used his final words on Death Row for a powerful protest

    10

    This week, Kenneth Smith used his final words on Death Row for a powerful protestCredit: Alamy

    But while his message was poignant, others facing the death penalty in the States have cracked jokes, predicted sport results and even mentioned vegetables in their final moments.

    Here, we reveal some of the famous last words spoken by inmates before they met their maker.

    Jimmy Glass, 25, who was executed by electrocution in Louisiana in 1987 after a ­robbery and murder, joked in his final moments: “I’d rather be fishing.”

    Jimmy Glass, who was executed in Louisiana in 1987 after a double robbery and murder, joked in his final moments: 'I’d rather be fishing'

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    Jimmy Glass, who was executed in Louisiana in 1987 after a double robbery and murder, joked in his final moments: ‘I’d rather be fishing’

    Harrison Gibson, who was hanged in 1917 in Montana after being convicted of murder, said: “They can’t kill a smile.”

    Serial killer Frederick Wood, 51, who was executed by electric chair in New York in 1963, parted with the wisecrack: “Gents, this is an ­educational project. You are about to witness the damaging effect electricity has on Wood.”

    Murderer Robert Charles Towery, 47, who died by lethal injection in Arizona in 2012, said bizarrely: “I love my ­family. Potato, potato, potato.”

    Robert Charles Towery bizarrely said 'I love my ­family. Potato, potato, potato' before his 2012 execution

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    Robert Charles Towery bizarrely said ‘I love my ­family. Potato, potato, potato’ before his 2012 executionCredit: Clark Country Prosecutor

    Cop killer George Appel, 41, became infamous for his last words uttered at the electric chair in New York in 1928: “Gentlemen, you are about to see a baked Appel.”

    John George Appel's last words were 'Gentlemen, you are about to see a baked Appel'

    10

    John George Appel’s last words were ‘Gentlemen, you are about to see a baked Appel’Credit: Alamy

    Robert Alton Harris, a 39-year-old murderer who was executed in a California gas chamber in ­1992 for killing two teenage boys, said: “You can be a king or a street sweeper, but everybody dances with the Grim Reaper.”

    Robert Alton Harris' last words were 'I’m ready to roll. Time to get this party started'

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    Robert Alton Harris’ last words were ‘I’m ready to roll. Time to get this party started’Credit: Alamy

    James Lewis Jackson, 47, who was ­executed by lethal injection in Texas in 2007 for murdering his wife and two stepdaughters, said: “I’m ready to roll. Time to get this party started.”

    Murderer Robert Atworth, 31, executed by lethal injection in Texas in 1999, said: “Kiss my proud white Irish ass. I’m ready, warden – send me home.”

    Murderer Robert Atworth's last words were 'Kiss my proud white Irish ass. I’m ready, warden – send me home'

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    Murderer Robert Atworth’s last words were ‘Kiss my proud white Irish ass. I’m ready, warden – send me home’

    Bobby Ramdass, 29, who died by lethal injection in ­Virginia in 2000 after he murdered a shop worker, gave a sporting prediction: “Redskins are going to the Super Bowl.” (They didn’t).

    Bobby Ramdass claimed the Redskins would go to the Superbowl, before he was executed

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    Bobby Ramdass claimed the Redskins would go to the Superbowl, before he was executed

    George Bernard Harris, 41 – executed by lethal injection in Missouri in 2000 after shooting a man dead – joked: “Somebody needs to kill my trial ­attorney.”

    George Bernard Harris said 'someone should kill my attorney' as his last words

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    George Bernard Harris said ‘someone should kill my attorney’ as his last words

    Sex worker Aileen Wuornos, 46, ­executed by lethal injection in Florida in 2002 after being convicted of ­murdering six of her male clients, said: “I’d just like to say I’m sailing with the rock, and I’ll be back, like Independence Day with Jesus, June 6. Like the movie, big mothership and all. I’ll be back.”

    Aileen Wuornos made a religiously charged speech before her execution

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    Aileen Wuornos made a religiously charged speech before her executionCredit: Handout – Getty



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    Matt Rayson

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    January 27, 2024
  • Don’t have a college education and want to make bank and take half the year off? Oil rig work is the hot job for many Americans

    Don’t have a college education and want to make bank and take half the year off? Oil rig work is the hot job for many Americans

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    Not many on-the-ground jobs  that offer a salary over $55,000 for just half a year’s work. But that’s the money for those who opt for the rigor of an oil rig,  a hot topic on people’s tongues this week. 

    According to Google, interest in oil rig jobs is having a moment. Searches for oil rig work reached a five-year high, surging particularly especially in the southern states of Mississippi, Alabama, Texas and Arkansas, which abut the Gulf of Mexico and its 6,000-plus oil and gas structures, or rigs. A few reasons help explain why more people want in on the job despite deadly on-the-clock risks and increased environmental pollution. 

    Good money; no college required

    According to research on the impact of oil and gas job opportunities, most jobs in the industry pay well, especially for those who don’t have college degrees. Entry-level oil work only requires a high school diploma or equivalent, which could be tempting for more than half of all Americans over age 25 who don’t have a college degree. Starting salaries average $55,000 per year, according to ZipRecruiter, while those in management positions could pocket well over $100,000 per year, according to oil industry law firm Arnold & Itkin.

    According to Amanda Chuan, a professor in labor relations at Michigan State University, the attractive starting pay especially entices college-aged young men, who account for about 20% of the workforce, and are increasingly facing decisions between enrolling in school and risking years of debt and taking a high starting salary that they could pocket much sooner.  

    “These are jobs that don’t require a lot of cognizant skill, but you’re paid a lot for the long shifts, living in a camp, being away from home, chemical exposure and high risk of injury,” she said. “It’s extremely exhausting, mentally draining and a lot of people are not willing to do it—so if you are, you’ll make a lot.” It’s a concept called compensating wage differentials, Chuan explained—essentially, paying more for less-desirable work. 

    Oil rig workers also face pollution hazards, according to the U.S Department of Labor,  due to spending a lot of time in confined spaces. Petroleum storage tanks, mud pits, reserve pits and other spaces around an oil wellhead can all come with more exposure to chemicals, flammable vapors or gasses that could cause workers to suffocate. 

    The cost-of-living crisis, though, is making more people willing to take on the back-breaking work (and fatal risks) of rigs. 

    According to a report by the nonprofit National Low Income Housing Coalition, renters nationwide are struggling to afford housing, with the lowest-income residents in states like Arizona, Texas and Florida most worried about affording housing. 

    Boom-bust nature of the industry

    Another reason for more labor interest in rigs is just the “boom-bust” nature of the oil industry. During booms, periods of high demand for oil, investors pour in and trigger overproduction, according to the Colorado School of Mines. Busts follow the overproduction, which see lower prices for oil and under-investment by the industry. The bust period of lower prices then triggers more demand for cheap oil, which shifts the price higher again and the cycle continues. 

    The current boom that finds oil rig workers in hot demand right now is in part due to global wars, like the invasion of Ukraine and the siege on Gaza, which means the country can’t rely on as much oil coming in. “Because our usual supplies for energy are being cut short right now,” Chuan said, “the country is turning more to domestic production of oil.” 

    The boom-bust nature of the industry also affects changes in labor demand, she said, as “during booms, newspapers report thousands of new high-paying jobs,” but “during busts, many jobs vanish, potentially leaving thousands unemployed.” Several such layoffs have occurred as the industry cycles through its high and lower value periods, with 2014 and 2020 as some of the biggest years for bust-fueled layoffs.

    Chuan explained that the high starting pays and long vacations are meant to compensate for the risks people assume on the job. For younger workers, the particular risk is that “it leads you away from investing in your human capital, or education and transferable skills, that could help you find future employment that does not depend on the boom-bust cycle.”  

    Half a year of PTO—but 12-hour days 

    According to Arnold & Itkin’s blog post, many workers face shifts of 14 days on the clock, 21 days off. That  means they work for full-day shifts, which can be up to 12 hours long and include night shifts, for two straight weeks. Then they are rewarded with three weeks off. For those who work on offshore rig sites, “two straight weeks at sea can be a harrowing experience for many, although some rigs are equipped with impressive living quarters for the crew.” 

    Living quarters can include “an onsite gym, theater, indoor sports facilities, computers, and more to occupy the time,” the blog says. That can be essential, as many people are not able to return home on their off time due to travel expenses and logistics and end up staying “on the rig the entire time.” 

    What would you do on the oil rigs, and what do you risk? 

    According to Indeed, an oil rig worker’s main responsibility is to extract, store and process oil—relying on lots of equipment. They find themselves at the helms of drills, cranes, forklifts and more to guide pipes into drilling wells. They gain an understanding of chemical levels to prevent the pipes from corroding and track environmental changes that could affect drilling productivity. 

    On risks, Arnold & Itkin states that oil rig crews experience some of the highest rates of injuries and fatalities in the country. 2008 was a particularly deadly year, with 120 oil and gas workers killed on the job. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 470 oil workers died between 2014 and 2019, over 400 of them on the job and 69 of them from cardiac complications. The death rate has also been increasing: In 2019, the rate of oil worker fatalities was about 12%, compared to about 6% in 2017.  

    The most common causes of injuries include fires, falls, fatigue, machinery malfunctions, and lack of safety culture on rigs, according to Arnold & Itkin. In one Reddit thread, nearly 100 users shared their most terrifying experiences on oil rigs—describing brutal burns, equipment that maimed people, and witnessing entire coastlines degrade quickly. 

    According to several studies, marine ecosystems and communities who live near waters with rigs face threats from water contamination and dying sea animals. Especially dangerous are seismic airguns, which are towed behind ships and used to shoot blasts of compressed air which are 100,000 times more intense than jet engines, to find oil trapped deep underneath the ocean floor. According to Oceana, an international organization that researches oceans, these blasts are repeated about 6 times a minute almost all day at oil rigs for weeks at a time, and can kill marine animals like sea turtles and fish. 

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    Sunny Nagpaul

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    January 27, 2024
  • Nitrogen gas execution was

    Nitrogen gas execution was

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    The execution of convicted murderer Kenneth Eugene Smith using nitrogen hypoxia was “textbook,” Alabama’s attorney general Steve Marshall said in a news conference on Friday. 

    The execution was carried out on Thursday night and marked the first time nitrogen hypoxia, a process that aims to cause asphyxiation by forcing an individual to inhale pure nitrogen or lethally high concentrations of it through a gas mask, was used to execute someone. 

    “What occurred last night was textbook,” Marshall said. “As of last night, nitrogen hypoxia as a means of execution is no longer an untested method. It is a proven one.” 

    Smith had requested the method of death after surviving a botched lethal injection in 2022, but his attorneys argued that he was being used as a “test subject,” and human rights activists criticized the untried new method.

    Multiple legal challenges were levied against the use of nitrogen hypoxia before the execution. On Wednesday, the Supreme Court ruled that Alabama was within its constitutional rights to carry out the execution, and on Thursday the court allowed the execution to proceed as planned. 

    Marshall said Friday morning that he could hardly call the execution “justice” for the family of Elizabeth Sennett, whom Smith was convicted of killing in 1989, because of how long it took for the sentence to be carried out. Smith was one of two men who received $1,000 from Sennett’s husband to kill her. Sennett’s husband committed suicide a week after the killing. His accomplice Parker was executed in June 2010 for his part in the killings, according to the Alabama Department of Corrections.

    Marshall apologized to the couple’s sons on Friday. 

    “I want to tell the family, especially the victim’s sons, Mike and Chuck, how genuinely sorry I am for the horrific manner in which their mother lost her life, but I also want to apologize to them for how long it took for this sentence to be carried out,” Marshall said. 

    Marshall said that 43 other inmates sentenced to death in Alabama have requested execution by nitrogen hypoxia. He said that he also believes other states will begin using the method. 

    “Alabama has done it, and now so can you,” Marshall said. “We stand ready to assist you in implementing this method in your states.” 

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    Kerry Breen


    Kerry Breen

    Kerry Breen is a reporter and news editor at CBSNews.com. A graduate of New York University’s Arthur L. Carter School of Journalism, she previously worked at NBC News’ TODAY Digital. She covers current events, breaking news and issues including substance use.

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    January 26, 2024
  • Alabama fields heavy criticism for nitrogen gas execution

    Alabama fields heavy criticism for nitrogen gas execution

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    Alabama fields heavy criticism for nitrogen gas execution – CBS News


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    The state of Alabama was criticized by several groups, including the United Nations and the European Union, after it executed a death row inmate Thursday night using the controversial method of nitrogen hypoxia. Kenneth Smith’s spiritual adviser said the nitrogen method amounted to torture, but Alabama officials disagree. Manuel Bojorquez has more.

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    January 26, 2024
  • Alabama inmate put to death in first U.S. nitrogen gas execution

    Alabama inmate put to death in first U.S. nitrogen gas execution

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    Alabama inmate put to death in first U.S. nitrogen gas execution – CBS News


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    In a groundbreaking and controversial move, Alabama executed an inmate using nitrogen gas, a method never before tested or used in the United States. CBS News’ Lilia Luciano reports.

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    January 26, 2024
  • Kenneth Eugene Smith executed by nitrogen hypoxia in Alabama, marking a first for the death penalty

    Kenneth Eugene Smith executed by nitrogen hypoxia in Alabama, marking a first for the death penalty

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    Alabama carried out its planned execution of the condemned inmate Kenneth Eugene Smith on Thursday night using nitrogen hypoxia, a controversial and widely-contested death penalty method used for the first time in the United States. The execution took place at the William C. Holman Correctional Facility in Atmore at 8:25 p.m. local time, officials said. 

    In a news briefing, Alabama Department of Corrections Commissioner John Q. Hamm said that the execution began at 7:53 p.m., and the nitrogen mask was kept on Smith for about five minutes after he flatlined. 

    A reporter stated that Smith “appeared to shake and writhe on the gurney for at least two minutes at the start of the execution,” asking Hamm whether that was “expected” or an indication of “suffering.”

    “It appeared that, one, Smith was holding his breath for as long as he could,” Hamm responded. “And then there’s also information out there that he struggled against his restraints a little bit, but there’s some involuntary movement and some angled breathing. So that was all expected and is in the side effects that we’ve seen, researched, with nitrogen hypoxia.”

    In explaining an approximately 45-minute delay from the time that the Supreme Court allowed the execution to proceed to when witnesses were taken into the chamber, Hamm said that “there was a little hiccup on the EKG lines providing a good reading.”

    In a statement provided to CBS News following the execution, Smith’s legal team wrote, “We are deeply saddened that the state of Alabama and the Alabama Department of Corrections have executed Kenneth Eugene Smith.”

    “Kenny was subject to the death penalty only because his trial judge applied a since-repealed Alabama statute to override the jury’s 11 to 1 determination that his life should be spared – a practice that not only is unavailable under current Alabama law but also has since been declared unconstitutional by the United States Supreme Court,” the statement went on. “There currently are efforts in the Alabama legislature to ensure that inmates like Kenny, who are on death row only because a judge overrode a jury’s measured determination to spare their lives, won’t suffer the same fate that he did today. Unfortunately, those efforts, if successful, will be too late for Kenny.”

    In a separate statement, Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey said that she made the decision not to grant Smith clemency.

    “The execution was lawfully carried out by nitrogen hypoxia, the method previously requested by Mr. Smith as an alternative to lethal injection,” Ivey wrote. “At long last, Mr. Smith got what he asked for, and this case can finally be put to rest.”

    Smith and his spiritual adviser, the Rev. Jeff Hood, said in a statement Thursday afternoon prior to the execution that “the eyes of the world are on this impending moral apocalypse.”

    “Our prayer is that people will not turn their heads. We simply cannot normalize the suffocation of each other,” statement said.

    Smith’s legal team had challenged Alabama’s plan to use nitrogen in the death chamber without documented evidence of its repercussions and called on the state to halt the execution altogether. His attorneys accused the state of using Smith as a “test subject” for an experimental execution in one request to stop it that was ultimately rejected.

    Nitrogen hypoxia is a process that aims to cause asphyxiation by forcing an individual to inhale pure nitrogen or lethally high concentrations of it through a gas mask. 

    U.S. courts across multiple levels of government rejected stay requests. The Supreme Court on Wednesday ruled that Alabama was within its constitutional rights to carry out the execution. On Thursday, the Supreme Court allowed the execution to proceed as planned, over the public dissent of the court’s three liberal members.

    Smith’s execution came after he had already survived a botched lethal injection in November 2022.   

    “Having failed to kill Smith on its first attempt, Alabama has selected him as its ‘guinea pig’ to test a method of execution never attempted before,” Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote. 

    Besides the legal challenges, the execution took place in the face of mounting criticism from human rights experts – including the top human rights official at the United Nations, who said earlier this month that “putting an inmate to death with nitrogen gas could possibly amount to torture under international treaties.” 

    What is nitrogen hypoxia?

    Alabama is one of three U.S. states that technically allows nitrogen hypoxia as an alternative to lethal injection and other, more traditional capital punishment methods. Oklahoma and Mississippi are the only other states that have authorized executions by nitrogen hypoxia, which is relatively new as a form of capital punishment. Before Thursday, no states had used the method to conduct an execution.  

    Its application inside the execution chamber in Alabama had been criticized as experimental and, potentially, unnecessarily painful and dangerous for the condemned person and others in the room. UN experts cited concerns about the possibility of grave suffering that execution by pure nitrogen inhalation may cause. They said there was no scientific evidence to prove otherwise.

    The consequences of too much nitrogen inhalation —usually accidentally in industrial settings— are well-documented. A colorless and odorless gas, nitrogen is only safe to inhale when it is mixed with an appropriate concentration of oxygen; otherwise, breathing it is toxic. Veterinarians have refused to use nitrogen asphyxiation to euthanize animals because of its “distressing” effects and potential risks to people around.

    What did Kenneth Eugene Smith do?

    Smith was accused of being a hitman and was sentenced to death following his conviction in the 1989 murder of Elizabeth Dorlene Sennett, a preacher’s wife, in northwestern Alabama’s Colbert County. 

    Prosecutors said in 1988 that Smith and John Forrest Parker each received $1,000 to carry out the slaying on behalf of Elizabeth’s husband, Rev. Charles Sennett, Sr., the pastor of the Westside Church of Christ in the city of Sheffield. 

    The pastor had been having an affair and found himself in significant debt before taking out a large life insurance policy on his wife, authorities said. Sennett then sought to collect the money by having his wife killed. Sennett committed suicide one week after his wife’s murder, once the investigation got underway and authorities began to consider him as a suspect, according to court documents.

    The prosecution alleged that Rev. Sennett originally hired another man, Billy Williams, for the job, and Williams in turn recruited Smith and Parker. All three men were promised equal compensation, a ruling filed in 2021 by the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said in response to one of the legal challenges Smith brought.

    Smith and his accomplices planned to kill Elizabeth Dorlene Sennett in the home she and her husband shared and tried to make the crime look like a burglary. On March 18, 1988, Elizabeth was murdered. Smith took a video cassette recorder from the Sennett residence, which investigators later found in Smith’s home and played a role in the state’s case against him. 

    Smith argued in subsequent appeals authorities did not have a legitimate search warrant to enter the home where the cassette was found. Court records show that Smith confessed to his role in Elizabeth’s murder in interviews with police – and that was the piece that ultimately led to his conviction.

    Smith was convicted of capital murder in an initial verdict and sentenced to death. That was overturned by the Alabama Court of Appeals, and convicted again of capital murder during a second trial that took place in the 90s. Still, the jury in that trial voted to recommend a sentence of life imprisonment without parole instead of the death penalty. A judge overruled the jury’s recommendation and again sentenced Smith to be executed by the state. His accomplice Parker was executed in June 2010 for his part in the killings, according to the Alabama Department of Corrections.

    His execution on Thursday would not be possible if Smith’s trial happened today: in 2017 Alabama became the last U.S. state to strike its law allowing judges to override jury recommendations when it comes to capital punishment.

    More from CBS News

    Emily Mae Czachor

    Emily Mae Czachor is a reporter and news editor at CBSNews.com. She covers breaking news, often focusing on crime and extreme weather. Emily Mae has previously written for outlets including the Los Angeles Times, BuzzFeed and Newsweek.

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    January 25, 2024
  • First U.S. execution by nitrogen gas set for Thursday

    First U.S. execution by nitrogen gas set for Thursday

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    First U.S. execution by nitrogen gas set for Thursday – CBS News


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    Kenneth Eugene Smith, a death row inmate in Alabama, is expected to become the first person in the U.S. executed with nitrogen gas. Manuel Bojorquez reports.

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    January 25, 2024
  • Alabama prepares to carry out first execution by nitrogen asphyxiation

    Alabama prepares to carry out first execution by nitrogen asphyxiation

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    Alabama prepares to carry out first execution by nitrogen asphyxiation – CBS News


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    An Alabama inmate is due to be put to death today after a federal appeals court allowed the state to carry out a first-of-its-kind execution using nitrogen gas. The condemned man faces this untested method after a botched attempt to execute him in 2022 by lethal injection. CBS News’ Lilia Luciano reports.

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    January 25, 2024
  • Alabama Middle Schooler Jailed After Taking Basketball Back Out From Under Her Shirt

    Alabama Middle Schooler Jailed After Taking Basketball Back Out From Under Her Shirt

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    January 22, 2024
  • Hangout Festival Announces Lineup for 2024 Edition Featuring ODESZA, the Chainsmokers, Alison Wonderland, Dom Dolla and More | Your EDM

    Hangout Festival Announces Lineup for 2024 Edition Featuring ODESZA, the Chainsmokers, Alison Wonderland, Dom Dolla and More | Your EDM

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    The Gulf Coast’s premiere music festival is back. Hangout festival has just announced the lineup for its 13th edition taking place on Alabama’s southern coast, a prime spring break destination, May 17-19.

    This year’s lineup showcases the festival’s commitment to diversity as Zach Bryan, Lana Del Rey and ODESZA will be the headliners. The Chainsmokers will be the main dance headliner; other dance acts featured on the lineup include Alison Wonderland, Dom Dolla, Subtronics, a Chromeo DJ set, Daily Bread and a couple of sick b2bs from Odd Mob x OMNOM and VNSSA b2b Nala.

    Again, Hangout features more than dance music. Up and coming young pop artists like Dominic Fike and Reneé Rapp are also among the second line artists. Both old and new vanguards of hip-hop are represented with Nelly and NLE Choppa on the lineup. If you’re more inclined toward guitar-based rock, Cage the Elephant, A Day to Remember and All Time Low also round out the lineup.

    Get your tickets to Hangout Festival here. Check out the 2022 after movie to get an idea of what Hangout Festival has to offer. Full lineup below as well.

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    Mark Fabrick

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    January 19, 2024
  • It's official: Alabama hires Washington's Kalen DeBoer to replace Nick Saban

    It's official: Alabama hires Washington's Kalen DeBoer to replace Nick Saban

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    It’s official: Alabama hires Washington’s Kalen DeBoer to replace Nick Saban

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