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February 14, 2020
Five years after problematic executions led to halt, Oklahoma plans to restart its machinery of death
As reported in this press piece, headlined "Oklahoma to resume injection executions, 5 years after drug mix-ups, national ridicule," the Sooner State is talking about getting back to carrying out death sentences. Here are the basics:
Oklahoma will resume executions by the lethal injection method, officials said Thursday. The surprise announcement came at a news conference by Gov. Kevin Stitt, Attorney General Mike Hunter and Corrections Department Director Scott Crow.
Efforts will continue to develop a way to carry out the punishment with nitrogen gas, officials said. However, the law allowing the state to develop a method using nitrogen gas only allows nitrogen to be used if the drugs for lethal injection are unavailable.
It has been more than five years since the last execution in the state. The death penalty still has widespread support in Oklahoma despite the national ridicule that followed an injection mistake in 2014 and drug mix-ups in 2015.
"It is important that the state is implementing our death penalty law with a procedure that is humane and swift for those convicted of the most heinous of crimes," Gov. Stitt said. "Director Crow and Attorney General Mike Hunter have worked diligently and thoroughly to create a path forward to resume the death penalty in Oklahoma, and the time has come to deliver accountability and justice to the victims who have suffered unthinkable loss and pain."
More than 40 murderers are awaiting execution in the state. Almost 30 have exhausted their appeals and are eligible to have execution dates set. The last scheduled execution, on Sept. 30, 2015, was called off after a doctor discovered the wrong deadly drug had been supplied. Executions have been on hold in Oklahoma because of that mix-up. Officials acknowledged afterward that the same mistake had been made in the execution carried out in January 2015....
The three drugs used for executions will continue to be midazolam, vecuronium bromide and potassium chloride. Two years ago, officials announced Oklahoma would switch to using nitrogen gas because of the problems associated with the lethal injection method. The Corrections Department director at the time complained that it was increasingly difficult to find a reliable supplier of the drugs. "I was calling all around the world, to the back streets of the Indian subcontinent, to procure drugs," Director Joe Allbaugh said.
Since that announcement, officials have been working on a way to carry out executions with nitrogen gas, a method never used in the United States for the death penalty. Allbaugh said a year ago he had yet to find a manufacturer of a gas delivery device willing to sell it for use in executions. Officials have discussed building a device on their own.
February 14, 2020 at 10:58 AM | Permalink
Comments
Love the biased headline "MACHINERY" of death How about just using facts ...and saying its about time. You should PRAISE them for taking their time and getting it right. Anti-DP aholes have forced states to start manufacturing there own chemicals via secret thrid parties. OHIO under Mike Dewine deserves scorn and such treatment because he is truly incompetent. It will take 3 - 5 years for them to get it right as well. Start thinking of that headline now.
Posted by: DeanO | Feb 15, 2020 9:04:39 AM