In 1999, the state of Florida heard a petition from
Thomas Harrison Provenzano, another
death row inmate, that argued that the electric chair was a "
cruel and unusual punishment". The petition cited the executions of Medina,
Jesse Tafero and
Allen Lee Davis to show a pattern of inhumane deaths in the electric chair. During the proceedings, Rev. Glen Dickson, Medina's pastor, testified he saw the flames rising out of Medina's head, smelled an acrid smell and saw Medina take three labored breaths after the electric current to the chair had been turned off and the strap holding him in it had been loosened. Patricia McCusker, Assistant Superintendent of the Work Camp at Florida State Prison, also testified. She said she saw Medina's left hand tighten as the current was being applied. She corroborated Dickson's observation of smoke and flames coming from Medina's head and a smell, which she said was a burning smell. McCusker claimed she also saw movements in Medina's chest after the current had been turned off, but claimed they were contractions of the chest muscle which did not imply breathing. An autopsy found that Medina's death was instantaneous due to massive depolarization of the brain and brain stem when the first jolt of electricity surged through Medina's body. A doctor described it as like "turning the lights off". A neurologist testified that the apparent breathing movements were likely caused by the last vestiges of survival in the brain stem after the brain itself had died. Belle Almojera, a medical examiner working for the prison, also signed an affidavit stating that he had seen "no evidence of pain and suffering" and that Medina "died a very quick, humane death". A circuit court judge ruled that the flaws in the execution had been from "unintentional human error" rather than any faults in the electric chair's "apparatus, equipment, and electrical circuitry," though he did recommend that the lead legpiece be replaced with a more conductive brass electrode. ==See also==