Alabama Execution Called Off Because Officials Couldn't Insert Needle
For the second time in three months, the state struggles and fails to execute a death row inmate.

For the second time in three months, Alabama officials halted an execution because corrections officials couldn't find a vein into which they could inject the lethal drugs.
The prisoner, Kenneth Eugene Smith, 57, was scheduled to be executed Thursday night after his appeals to the Supreme Court were rejected. As the Associated Press notes, part of Smith's appeals involved Alabama's recent problems actually executing prisoners with intravenous drugs. In September, the execution of Alan Miller, also 57, was halted for the same reason—the Alabama Department of Corrections' execution team was not able to secure IV access in time by the midnight deadline.
Those two incidents come on the heels of the troubling execution of Joe Nathan James in July, where it appeared that officials had similar troubles finding veins. Emma Camp took note of the private autopsy performed on James, which appeared to show bruises all over his wrists and knuckles and even a deep cut, possibly from officials struggling to find a usable vein.
At the time, Alabama officials insisted "nothing out of the ordinary" had happened during James' execution. But since then, after Miller's execution stalled, a federal judge ordered the state to preserve medical supplies and records from that failed attempt for Miller's lawyer's review.
Smith was convicted for participating in a murder-for-hire of Elizabeth Dorlene Sennett in 1988. Sennett's husband, Charles Sennett Sr., killed himself when he became a suspect in the murder investigation. Ultimately, Smith and another man, John Forrest Parker, were convicted of being paid $1,000 each to kill her. Parker was executed in 2010.
The jury in Alabama actually voted 11–1 to spare Smith and sentence him to life in prison. But at the time, Alabama law actually allowed the judge to override the jury's recommendation and sentence him to death anyway. That law was eliminated in 2017, but as is the case with most changes in sentencing guidelines, it wasn't retroactively applied. Alabama is still insistent on putting Smith to death.
Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey essentially laid the blame on Smith for fighting his execution, saying, "Although that justice could not be carried out tonight because of last minute legal attempts to delay or cancel the execution, attempting it was the right thing to do." In reality, prison staff tried for more than an hour to establish the two lines necessary for the lethal injections and failed.
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Really need a heroin to execution needle handler pipeline set up.
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Was he Kryptonian or something? Get a bigger needle or a stronger nurse.
The same compassion and skill that makes a nurse great at saving lives also makes them shitty as executioners.
Executions aren’t medical procedures, so we shouldn’t be putting medical professionals in this kind of position. It’s not natural for them to do this stuff.
Canada is doing compassionate, assisted suicide on an industrial scale. It came be that hard.
I suppose that nurses and doctors could believe that ending a life of someone suffering is an act of compassion.
But I can’t see how they would view an execution in the same manner.
I never even suggested that healthcare providers would look at an execution and call it "compassionate". You aggressively missed my point. The fact that we can do it safely and compassionately and *checks assisted suicide brochure* completely painlessly and peacefully, it would seem reasonable that we could send a criminal into that good night the same way from a purely procedural, technical standpoint.
Being a leftist means simultaneously accepting two opposite premises.
I was not missing your point. But the day is short and you can have your win.
You absolutely missed my point. The fact that you focussed on whether or not execution would be considered "compassionate" by medical professionals was... the platonic ideal of missing the point.
The point, which I'll state again, is that regardless of what ones personal moral position is on execution, the idea that it simply can't be handled painlessly and without being fraught with ghoulish error and incompetence can't possibly be true. Because we have assisted suicide in this country, and the people enthusiastically supporting and performing it will tell you that it's completely without suffering and totally painless.
If you're going to argue against the death penalty, stick the moral opposition, don't try to gaslight people by telling them (or suggesting-- which this magazine has done for years) that lethal injection is a hellish experience, full of pain and suffering. And if it IS a hellish experience full of pain and suffering, then why don't they just use the same techniques Canada does to kill mentally ill people?
The same compassion and skill that makes a nurse great at saving lives also makes them shitty as executioners.
Executions aren’t medical procedures, so we shouldn’t be putting medical professionals in this kind of position.
Bullshit! I'll buy that there are some conscientious objectors, but for most it would be the same kind of leftist virtue signalling (not) compassion and skill that would "prevent" them from doing it. They will, of course, in real life turn around and weld your 80 yr.-old grandma in a room to die alone, threaten to take your (born) kids away if you don’t participate in their medical experiments, and forego parental reporting laws in order to perform abortions on 10-yr.-old girls.
Good to see the memory-holing of 2019-2020 is proceeding apace and the medical community as a whole is, once again, despite changing definitions, fabricating "evidence" to feed into Fauci/Walensky's machine, and acting as rubber-meets-the road DPH enforcement arms (to say nothing of troon nonsense), unblemished and untarnished.
Or a smaller needle and a sober nurse.
Did anyone have a gun nearby? Or a rope?
Couldn't they have fired up old sparky?
Agree. I live in Alabama and don’t remember a single instance of ol’ Sparky failing.
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Well I get using the rope to tie off arm circulation, but how the hell's the gun going to help them find a vein?
If the gun finds the aorta, you're done.
I know a number of people who would have driven to Alabama and shot the guy in the back of the head for gas and hotel money. Back of the head is quick and painless.
There are a whole load of them, but, like you, they're locked away for the public good. Watch out, cell inspection, better hide the phone you're posting from.
It might require more than one shot.
Plenty of people have survived gunshots to the head. 42%, according to this:
https://medicine.yale.edu/news-article/gunshot-wound-to-the-head-not-a-death-sentence-1/
Too bad your link doesn't actually have the study.
But I would note that two to the back of the head is effective. Shots to the front or side of the head tend to have greater chances of survival, which is what the article you almost linked to said.
Or a sledgehammer.
guess thats one less candidate for you now
ctrl+f ‘botched’: 0/0 results.
Godfuckingdamnit!
Build a gallows.
Hanging is rayciss
Build a guillotine.
That's "build your own gallows".
no state should have the power.
Just like free speech. If the state doesn't have the power, someone else will wield it. Someone else not necessarily beholden to the notions of presumption of innocence, juries of peers, and equality before the law. Admittedly it's not perfect and could be better, but it tends to be pretty objective and leave the fewest number of bodies in the streets for neighbors, reporters, and relatives to find.
Agree. When, in the eyes of the public at large, the punishment repeatedly ceases to fit the crime, vigilante groups tend to form.
fine. Hillbillies can have the power. West Virginia cannot.
Speaking of shutting down WV... Go Cats!
emaw! one more W and I get a local big12 championship game.
Hillbillies can have the power.
What's the Seattle equivalent of a hillbilly?
good question. Diane might know
No society can be truly civilized without a well thought out death penalty.
Victims and their kin will inevitably seek out vengeance. Having some sort of process to it, overseen by the public, is the lesser of the evils.
The power of life is inherent to the state. After all. What is the army but the power to have death penalty over outsiders or entire countries?
You can make the argument to practicality, that there have been too many mistakes on every level (botched executions and certainly botched convictions). However, claiming that the state should never have the power to take life is ignoring one of the primary purposes of the state.
TL;DR. Just saw off his head already, slowly, with a dull knife. Or spoon.
Why does an execution have to resemble an anesthetic?
And why do you need two I V’s?.
As I said on this blog before why can’t we just shoot them, hang them, or expose them to a hypoxic environment.
Having a breeze 100% nitrogen would be an entirely painless method of execution
I get that some people are against actual execution. So put the condemned in a row boat, point them offshore, and only shoot them if them come back.
Only one vein is needed, but veins can spasm and close as the medication goes in.
Having a backup IV line reduces the chance that one bad vein will delay the execution. You don’t want the inmate waking up halfway through, unnerving the staff and causing errors or further legal issues.
Guillotine on the 50 yard line of the Alabama vs Auburn game halftime show.
JK- I am against this and all executions but if you’re gonna have them-give the supporters what they want.
Yeah, but even the French had bad days, and needed to drop the blade more than once sometimes.
Have a waiter come to the condemned cell and have the guy order from among hanging, electrocution, firing squad, lethal injection, or guillotine.
If they refuse to make a selection, give them the house special - hanging.
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Execution of Alabama prisoner called off because of lethal injection problems. Alabama's execution of a man convicted in the 1988 murder-for-hire slaying of a preacher's wife was called off on
5 by 10 storage unit Thursday just before the midnight deadline because state officials could not find a suitable vein to inject the lethal drugs.
Why do we consistently pick out really unsympathetic pieces of shit to do our death penalty articles about?
Could we instead do some BLM-type stuff where we at least pretend that the guy wasn't a raging asshole who deserved to die?
It's pretty hard to get sentenced to death in this country if you're not a raging asshole who deserves to die.
Not hard enough. Innocents still get sentenced to death and on occasion executed.
You can be innocent of the crime you were convicted of and still be a raging asshole who deserves to die.
Or be guilty and deserving of death and not get caught. Until you do.
Right Shrike?
In some debased neighborhoods in the US, the clearance rate for murders is so low that you have very good odds of getting away with it.
My neighborhood hasn't cleared a murder in a decade, but we've only had 2 in that time.
In places around St. Louis where the murder rate is a lot higher, I believe it's still under 50%. With the new Soros-funded prosecutor in place, it's actually gone down.
Prosecuting criminals is white supremacy.
Rarely. If you read their appeals, they rarely proclaim innocence. Instead they appeal the conviction process.
That's because the apeals process by its very nature is procedural, not evidentiary. The idea is if you were innocent you wouldn't have been convicted in the first trial, so there's no point in brining it up during an appeal because weighing the evendence of your guilt just isn't what appeals trials are for.
Yup - and this is not well appreciated by the American public in general and juries in particular.
The system is heavily stacked against showing innocence after the initial trial.
Sympathetic versus unsympathetic doesn't really matter. For 50 years I’ve opposed the death penalty in all circumstances, based neither on compassion, nor a belief in the sanctity of human life. I don’t shed a tear for those executed with provably just cause, and I’m glad they’re dead.
My rationale is that capital punishment as applied in America isn’t about justice. It isn’t even about punishment. In America today, it is almost solely about revenge, with no true purpose beyond emotional satisfaction. It causes a continuing, corrosive, long-term damage to our society, to all of us as a whole.
Simply, we can’t implement it in a just way; it has no societal benefit; and we don’t have to do it.
Most may agree it may always be necessary to ensure that at times, some people live out the rest of their lives—as long or short as that may be—segregated from society. Effectively, to make certain they die in prison. But, as a society, we don’t need to purposefully kill already incarcerated people to do that.
And as long as we do, life is cheapened. And all of society is coarsened, worsened, with an impact reaching far beyond the legal system.
Civilization progresses over millennia with lots of starts and stops and considerable backsliding. The advancement of justice over revenge through ending societal capital punishment—even if only because we don’t have to do this—will be evidence of our society’s slow but continuing progress.
How is it not justice? A life for a life balances the scales.
Ah, so you are one of those who want to legislate that life should be fair, and think revenge makes it so.
No, fair would be a crime victim being made whole, perhaps by transferring equivalent resources from the perpetrator. But a murder victim is dead. Justice would reverse that but even if the government kills the murderer, it doesn't bring the victim back to life. Those scales can never be balanced. That is not fair.
Because, indeed, many good people who deserve to live, die too soon. Many who deserve to die, walk the Earth alive. No government can solve that, can balance the scales, can solve the problem of life's basic unfairness.
Again, we can’t implement capital punishment it in a just way. What's the justice in that? Government execution not only has no societal benefit; it is corrosive to society. And we don’t have to do it. We don't have to damage ourselves in a never ending, impossible to achieve, quest for revengefully balanced scales.
How is execution any different than the victim killing the attacker at the time of the offense? Do you have a problem with self defense?
Some situations are debatable, but I can’t think of a single reason to keep a serial killer alive.
You long for a perfect world. In a perfect world, I’d agree. But in our imperfect world, we have proven ourselves incapable of limiting government execution to only those provably deserving it.
I'm not a big fan of the death penalty either, or the prison system in general - at least how it's run currently.
But, I do still think capital punishment is appropriate in rare and limited circumstances.
It's just not currently rare enough or limited enough.
...and human nature means it can never be.
Probably true.
Give him a fentanyl pill those seem to work really well.
Give him COVID. I've heard that's as deadly as anything.
So what's wrong with a bullet to the back of the head?
Far cheaper.
It's aesthetically distressing.
"Smith was convicted for participating in a murder-for-hire of Elizabeth Dorlene Sennett in 1988....Ultimately, Smith and another man, John Forrest Parker, were convicted of being paid $1,000 each to kill her. Parker was executed in 2010."
If they were convicted around the same time, they really greased the skids to speed up Parker's death. I mean, two decades is hardly any time at all in these sorts of cases.
"This is so cruel...I really thought they'd be able to kill me this time!"
This is sooo reminiscent of the scene in Cryptonomicon where the lawyer explains how the death sentence "works" in the Philippine Islands...
Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey essentially laid the blame on Smith for fighting his execution, saying, "Although that justice could not be carried out tonight because of last minute legal attempts to delay or cancel the execution, attempting it was the right thing to do."
Maybe Kay Ivey should up her game and do the execution herself. She can even convince him to stop his legal attempts while she is executing him - Give up…you have no chance…let us finish this…it will be easier for you, much easier…you’ll see, it will be over quickly.
Can't they choke him to death for resisting execution?
They should have encapsulated the needle in a 7.62 NATO round. I bet it would have inserted fine, then!
If the guy were Black, then there's be no end of Alabama cops willing to go in there and beat him to death. That's what cops down south do.
Oh look, a bunch of reptile brained morons saying that the government should have the power to execute on a libertarian site!
The death penalty should be abolished.
The death penalty should be used more often.
Joe Biden's America!
How does the death penalty in Alabama have anything to do with POTUS? See if you can stop drooling long enough to pick your knuckles off the ground and respond
We are not barbarians so the State should use best efforts to minimize pain and suffering. But if medical personal on the scene agree that this is not possible in a particular case, put one behind each ear and be done with it.
Just use nitrogen. Cheap, fast, efficient and painless.
Alabama’s execution of a man convicted in the 1988 murder-for-hire slaying of a preacher’s wife was called off on best longboards