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Guardian Mag - Inventions Gone Bad 20 images Created 1 Nov 2010

Portraits of inventors whose inventions are currently used not as originally intended. This was an assignment for the Guardian of London Sunday Magazine.
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  • Jay Chapman, a retired medical pathologist, goes through his file of when the lethal injection was signed into law in the state of .Oklahoma in 1977, in his home in Santa Rosa, Ca., on Friday, Oct. 29, 2010. Mr. Chapman, who supported the death penalty, was the chief medical examiner in Oklahoma back then. The cocktail basically involves uses an overdose of an anesthetic..
    20101029inventors006.jpg
  • Jay Chapman, a retired medical pathologist, goes through his file of when the lethal injection was signed into law in the state of .Oklahoma in 1977, in his home in Santa Rosa, Ca., on Friday, Oct. 29, 2010. Mr. Chapman, who supported the death penalty, was the chief medical examiner in Oklahoma back then. The cocktail basically involves uses an overdose of an anesthetic..
    20101029inventors009.jpg
  • Jay Chapman, a retired medical pathologist, goes through his file of when the lethal injection was signed into law in the state of .Oklahoma in 1977, in his home in Santa Rosa, Ca., on Friday, Oct. 29, 2010. Mr. Chapman, who supported the death penalty, was the chief medical examiner in Oklahoma back then. The cocktail basically involves uses an overdose of an anesthetic..
    20101029inventors016.jpg
  • Jay Chapman, a retired medical pathologist, goes through his file of when the lethal injection was signed into law in the state of .Oklahoma in 1977, in his home in Santa Rosa, Ca., on Friday, Oct. 29, 2010. Mr. Chapman, who supported the death penalty, was the chief medical examiner in Oklahoma back then. The cocktail basically involves uses an overdose of an anesthetic..
    20101029inventors017.jpg
  • Jay Chapman, a retired medical pathologist, sits in his office of his Santa Rosa home, in California., on Friday, Oct. 29, 2010. Mr. Chapman, who supported the death penalty and was then the chief medical examiner in Oklahoma,  recalls when the lethal injection was signed into law in the state of Oklahoma in 1977. The cocktail basically involves uses an overdose of an anesthetic..
    20101029inventors030.jpg
  • Jay Chapman, a retired medical pathologist, sits in his office of his Santa Rosa home, in California., on Friday, Oct. 29, 2010. Mr. Chapman, who supported the death penalty and was then the chief medical examiner in Oklahoma,  recalls when the lethal injection was signed into law in the state of Oklahoma in 1977. The cocktail basically involves uses an overdose of an anesthetic..
    20101029inventors031.jpg
  • Jay Chapman, a retired medical pathologist, at his Santa Rosa home, in California., on Friday, Oct. 29, 2010. Mr. Chapman, who supported the death penalty and was then the chief medical examiner in Oklahoma,  recalls when the lethal injection was signed into law in the state of Oklahoma in 1977. The cocktail basically involves uses an overdose of an anesthetic..
    20101029inventors034.jpg
  • Jay Chapman, a retired medical pathologist, sits in his living room of his Santa Rosa home, in California., on Friday, Oct. 29, 2010. Mr. Chapman, who supported the death penalty and was then the chief medical examiner in Oklahoma,  recalls when the lethal injection was signed into law in the state of Oklahoma in 1977. The cocktail basically involves uses an overdose of an anesthetic..
    20101029inventors052.jpg
  • Jay Chapman, a retired medical pathologist and instructor, holds a skull used in his medical classes, his Santa Rosa home, in California., on Friday, Oct. 29, 2010. Mr. Chapman, who supported the death penalty and was then the chief medical examiner in Oklahoma,  recalls when the lethal injection was signed into law in the state of Oklahoma in 1977. The cocktail basically involves uses an overdose of an anesthetic..
    20101029inventors070.jpg
  • Jay Chapman, a retired medical pathologist and instructor, in the office of his Santa Rosa home, in California., on Friday, Oct. 29, 2010. Mr. Chapman, who supported the death penalty and was then the chief medical examiner in Oklahoma,  recalls when the lethal injection was signed into law in the state of Oklahoma in 1977. The cocktail basically involves uses an overdose of an anesthetic..
    20101029inventors081.jpg
  • Jay Chapman, a retired medical pathologist and instructor, in the office of his Santa Rosa home, in California., on Friday, Oct. 29, 2010. Mr. Chapman, who supported the death penalty and was then the chief medical examiner in Oklahoma,  recalls when the lethal injection was signed into law in the state of Oklahoma in 1977. The cocktail basically involves uses an overdose of an anesthetic..
    20101029inventors086.jpg
  • Robert Gable, a retired psychologist, shows an electonic monitoring device for offenders used in the mid 1960s, in the studio of his home in Berkeley, Ca., on Friday, Oct. 29, 2010. Mr. Gable and his twin brother, Kirk, not pictured, invented the belt as graduate students at Harvard University. The invention was intended for positive re-enforcement that monitored and, and later rewarded, the offender for attending classes, sessions or a job. As technology improved, the belt was then used more as a tool for punishment.
    20101029inventors105.jpg
  • Robert Gable, a retired psychologist, shows an electonic monitoring device for offenders used in the mid 1960s, in the studio of his home in Berkeley, Ca., on Friday, Oct. 29, 2010. Mr. Gable and his twin brother, Kirk, not pictured, invented the belt as graduate students at Harvard University. The invention was intended for positive re-enforcement that monitored and, and later rewarded, the offender for attending classes, sessions or a job. As technology improved, the belt was then used more as a tool for punishment.
    20101029inventors125.jpg
  • Robert Gable, a retired psychologist, shows an electonic monitoring device for offenders used in the mid 1960s, in the studio of his home in Berkeley, Ca., on Friday, Oct. 29, 2010. Mr. Gable and his twin brother, Kirk, not pictured, invented the belt as graduate students at Harvard University. The invention was intended for positive re-enforcement that monitored and, and later rewarded, the offender for attending classes, sessions or a job. As technology improved, the belt was then used more as a tool for punishment.
    20101029inventors140.jpg
  • Robert Gable, a retired psychologist, in the garden of his home in Berkeley, Ca., on Friday, Oct. 29, 2010. Mr. Gable and his twin brother, Kirk, not pictured, invented the electronic monitoring device as graduate students at Harvard University. The invention was intended for positive re-enforcement that monitored and, and later rewarded, the offender for attending classes, sessions or a job. As technology improved, the belt was then used more as a tool for punishment.
    20101029inventors165.jpg
  • Robert Gable, a retired psychologist, in the garden of his home in Berkeley, Ca., on Friday, Oct. 29, 2010. Mr. Gable and his twin brother, Kirk, not pictured, invented the electronic monitoring device as graduate students at Harvard University. The invention was intended for positive re-enforcement that monitored and, and later rewarded, the offender for attending classes, sessions or a job. As technology improved, the belt was then used more as a tool for punishment.
    20101029inventors171.jpg
  • Robert Gable, a retired psychologist, in the garden of his home in Berkeley, Ca., on Friday, Oct. 29, 2010. Mr. Gable and his twin brother, Kirk, not pictured, invented the electronic monitoring device as graduate students at Harvard University. The invention was intended for positive re-enforcement that monitored and, and later rewarded, the offender for attending classes, sessions or a job. As technology improved, the belt was then used more as a tool for punishment.
    20101029inventors178.jpg
  • Robert Gable, a retired psychologist, in the garden of his home in Berkeley, Ca., on Friday, Oct. 29, 2010. Mr. Gable and his twin brother, Kirk, not pictured, invented the electronic monitoring device as graduate students at Harvard University. The invention was intended for positive re-enforcement that monitored and, and later rewarded, the offender for attending classes, sessions or a job. As technology improved, the belt was then used more as a tool for punishment.
    20101029inventors184.jpg
  • Robert Gable, a retired psychologist, shows an electonic monitoring device for offenders used in the mid 1960s, in the studio of his home in Berkeley, Ca., on Friday, Oct. 29, 2010. Mr. Gable and his twin brother, Kirk, not pictured, invented the belt as graduate students at Harvard University. The invention was intended for positive re-enforcement that monitored and, and later rewarded, the offender for attending classes, sessions or a job. As technology improved, the belt was then used more as a tool for punishment.
    20101029inventors196.jpg
  • Robert Gable, a retired psychologist, shows the buttons used to send off coded messages and for the offender to send signals back to their monitor, in the studio of his home in Berkeley, Ca., on Friday, Oct. 29, 2010. Mr. Gable and his twin brother, Kirk, not pictured, invented the belt as graduate students at Harvard University. The invention was intended for positive re-enforcement that monitored and, and later rewarded, the offender for attending classes, sessions or a job. As technology improved, the belt was then used more as a tool for punishment.
    20101029inventors202.jpg