Executions Halted In Mississippi

Posted by | August 26, 2015 07:34 | Filed under: Politics


A federal judge has ruled lethal injections to be cruel and unusual punishment.

U.S. District Court Judge Henry Wingate gave the order verbally on Tuesday in response to a suit brought by death row inmates challenging Mississippi’s lethal injection methods as cruel and unusual. There was no further written explanation, but Jim Craig, an attorney for one of the inmates on death row, said the judge is expected to give a longer explanation in the coming days.

Mississippi had hoped to execute inmate Richard Jordan on Thursday for a murder as part of a kidnapping in 1976. The state’s execution protocol calls for three drugs — a sedative, followed by a paralytic and then a drug to cause cardiac arrest. The protocol is similar to the one approved by the U.S. Supreme Court this year, but inmates counter that the state is lacking safeguards that other states have — such as an EKG to verify the inmate is actually unconscious.

The inmates also say Mississippi is further constrained by state law that mandates executions be performed with an “ultra short-acting barbiturate or other similar drug.” In the middle of litigation, the state switched its anesthetic to midazolam, the drug the Supreme Court recently approved. However, it is not a barbiturate.

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Copyright 2015 Liberaland
By: Alan

Alan Colmes is the publisher of Liberaland.

2 responses to Executions Halted In Mississippi

  1. jasperjava August 26th, 2015 at 07:48

    It’s about time that the United States joined the civilized world and ban this barbaric practice. The death penalty is cruel and unusual punishment, period, and cannot be made otherwise.

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