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TexasTowelie

(112,056 posts)
Thu Mar 23, 2017, 11:20 PM Mar 2017

Arkansas plans to put eight inmates to death over a 10-day period

LITTLE ROCK—After nearly a dozen years without an execution, Arkansas is racing to put eight men to death next month over a 10-day period — an unprecedented timetable the state says is necessary because one of the three ingredients in the lethal injection will soon expire.

If carried out, the executions beginning April 17 would make Arkansas the first state to execute that many inmates in such a short time since the death penalty was reinstated by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1976.

The accelerated schedule calls for prison staff to conduct four double executions, with only a few days in between. It poses a number of risks, experts say, and the state's preparations are shrouded in secrecy.

Some attorneys and anti-death penalty groups question whether the quick turnarounds will intensify pressure on the prison staff and cause problems, as happened in Oklahoma in 2014, when an inmate writhed and moaned on a gurney for 43 minutes after his injection, or in Arizona, where the fatal dose took nearly two hours to work.

Read more: http://www.texarkanagazette.com/news/arkansas/story/2017/mar/22/accelerated-executions-arkansas-plans-put-eight-inmates-death-over-10-day-period/666426/

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Arkansas plans to put eight inmates to death over a 10-day period (Original Post) TexasTowelie Mar 2017 OP
What is it? MFM008 Mar 2017 #1
How dare they let one of the ingredients expire in the lethal cocktail expire. TexasTowelie Mar 2017 #2
I know MFM008 Mar 2017 #3
Expired drugs lose potency Warpy Mar 2017 #4
I saw a tv show that advocated hypoxia as an execution method. forgotmylogin Mar 2017 #6
Yeah, you're right. forgotmylogin Mar 2017 #5

TexasTowelie

(112,056 posts)
2. How dare they let one of the ingredients expire in the lethal cocktail expire.
Thu Mar 23, 2017, 11:23 PM
Mar 2017

Yes, that is sarcasm.

Warpy

(111,222 posts)
4. Expired drugs lose potency
Thu Mar 23, 2017, 11:50 PM
Mar 2017

They don't turn into poison, they just don't work any more.

I don't know shy they don't just OD them on fentanyl if they want executions that are easier on jailers and observers who believe in murdering their fellow citizens as punishment for murder.

I just hope they're not still trying to use versed, it's a really bad drug to use for an execution, it doesn't even work that well for short medical procedures.

forgotmylogin

(7,522 posts)
6. I saw a tv show that advocated hypoxia as an execution method.
Thu Mar 23, 2017, 11:55 PM
Mar 2017

A presenter actually tried it - of course they stopped before death - hypoxia being removing all the oxygen from the environment.

But they simulated for him what pilots experience when they don't have oxygen.

He said he didn't have any pain, but was just inattentive and slightly euphoric. They said he would have passed out and died peacefully if they hadn't removed him from the oxygen-free environment.

Pro or con death penalty, wouldn't this be a drug-free and error-free method of carrying it out?

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