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US top court weighs use of lethal injection drug

Published: 01 Feb 2015 - 11:00 am | Last Updated: 17 Jan 2022 - 09:56 am

 

Washington---The US Supreme Court is due to review the use of lethal injection drugs following several bungled executions that saw inmates gasping for air during prolonged killings.
The court will revisit the 2008 "Baze vs. Daze" ruling that deemed lethal injection does not violate the Eighth Amendment to the US Constitution, which prohibits "cruel and unusual punishment."
The court could ban the use of the controversial midazolam sedative, which was used in three botched executions in the United States last year and is not approved by the US Food and Drug Administration to be used as an anesthetic.
The case was brought by four Oklahoma inmates scheduled to be killed on death row, but one was killed before this week's decision to stay all executions using the disputed drug in the state.
Drug companies have refused to produce drugs to be used for executions and the 32 US states where capital punishment remains legal are facing shortages.
Some facts about the case and what it could mean for lethal injection in the United States:
Q: What has the Supreme Court agreed to consider?
Strictly speaking, the court on January 23 agreed to consider the use of midazolam in lethal injections in Oklahoma.
Last April, Oklahoma death row inmate Clayton Lockett took an agonizing 43 minutes to die and could be seen writhing in pain during the prolonged execution.
Now, the court has agreed to consider -- likely at the end of April -- whether it can authorize the use of the lethal injection cocktail.
The court will decide whether the drug fully sedates the inmate to ensure he does not feel pain from the other drugs used to paralyze and kill him.
The nine judges will also consider whether a death row inmate has to prove that a better alternative execution method is available, even if the existing lethal injection method is deemed unconstitutional.
Q: Why is midazolam used?
This sedative is used in Oklahoma and other states as an anesthetic that is meant to render the inmate completely unconscious before he is injected with lethal drugs.
But the drug is not 100 percent reliable and the US Food and Drug administration has not approved its use as an anesthetic.
Experts say that if the dosage is incorrect, the inmate can feel excruciating pain after being put into a state of paralysis, which opponents have said violates Eighth Amendment rights.
Q: What precedents exist?
Midazolam has been used in three executions in 2014 where inmates are believed to have suffered, including in Lockett's prolonged death.
On January 16, 2014, Ohio inmate Dennis McGuire took 26 minutes to die, and Arizona death row convict Joseph Wood took 117 minutes to die on July 23.
Lethal injection executions are expected to take 10 minutes, and in all three cases, the men could be seen gasping for air.
Q: What's at stake?
The US Supreme Court can at minimum ban all lethal injections using midazolam, if the court finds the drug causes pain that it deems unconstitutional.
But it could go even further by reversing the 2008 ruling that lethal injection was constitutional in a chaotic landscape where each state uses different drugs produced by compounding pharmacies.
AFP