2022 Was a Year of Bad, Botched Death Row Executions
Fortunately, government kills fewer prisoners each year.

The good news for opponents of the death penalty is that its use in the United States continued to decline in 2022. The bad news is that many of the executions that did take place appear to have been botched by officials who subjected prisoners to cruel torment.
Those are the main takeaways from the Death Penalty Information Center's (DPIC) annual year-end report. It shows that American states are increasingly turning away from executions, but that in those states where capital punishment still happens, there's been a turn toward cruelty and secrecy in the relevant government agencies.
Six states—Oklahoma, Alabama, Texas, Missouri, Arizona, and Mississippi—executed 18 people in 2022. That's an increase over the 11 people executed in 2021, but both numbers are low relative to the last decade. For eight consecutive years, states have performed fewer than 30 executions annually and issued fewer than 50 new death penalty sentences annually. Federal executions were halted entirely when President Joe Biden took office.
The downturn may not be permanent. Oklahoma halted executions in 2015 temporarily after a series of problems with the drugs that led to one man groaning and struggling as the drugs took hold in 2014 and a case in 2015 where they received the wrong drug entirely. In 2020, Republican Gov. Kevin Stitt announced Oklahoma would restart executions using those very same drugs. In 2021, Oklahoma executed its first two inmates in years. During the first of those executions, John Marion Grant reportedly convulsed and vomited before he died. In 2022, Oklahoma executed five inmates, making the state responsible for nearly a third of all executions.
And if the state gets its way, there will be many more to come in 2023. In June, Oklahoma Attorney General John O'Connor started planning 25 executions over the next few years. According to DPIC, the state has 11 planned for next year and 10 in 2024.
Richard Glossip is among those inmates, currently scheduled for execution in February. Glossip has become something of a national cause because he's on death row for a murder he personally did not commit. He is accused of allegedly masterminding the 1997 murder of Barry Van Treese by convincing Justin Sneed to do it with a promise of splitting Van Treese's money. Sneed confessed and pointed the finger at Glossip and avoided death row. Glossip has been fighting for his innocence and has managed to draw several Republican lawmakers on board who support the death penalty but are concerned that Glossip may be innocent. Stitt has permitted stays of execution to allow Glossip to pursue appeals.
But in November, Oklahoma's criminal appeals court denied motions by Glossip's attorneys to get a new evidentiary hearing. Stitt could ultimately decide to commute Glossip's sentence. In 2021 he commuted the sentence of Julius Jones, who, like Glossip, convinced several Republicans and the state's Pardon and Parole Board that there was enough doubt about his guilt to stay the executioner's hand.
In Texas, mercy came in 2022 to Melissa Lucio, convicted in 2007 and sentenced to death for allegedly killing her 2-year-old child. She has insisted that the child's death was from an accidental fall and not abuse. Just days before her scheduled execution she was given a reprieve by the state's Court of Criminal Appeals to analyze the evidence and see if there were enough problems with her conviction to justify a new trial.
Elsewhere, the continued use of lethal injections cause continued problems. The DPIC notes that seven of the attempted executions showed problems with the process itself in safely injecting the prisoners. In Alabama, the execution of Joe Nathan James in July was delayed by three hours. When it was over, it appeared as though it took many efforts by the prison team to find a vein, leading to many puncture wounds and a cut on his arm. The state insisted that nothing out of the ordinary happened.
But then, in September and November, two other Alabama executions were called off because corrections officials couldn't find the proper veins in time to inject the lethal drugs. Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey called for a "top-to-bottom review" of the execution process. Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall insisted this was not a moratorium. Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee ordered a moratorium on executions this year and halted a pending execution after discovering that officials had failed to properly test the drugs they were using for impurities or contamination.
"After 40 years, the states have proven themselves unable to carry out lethal injections without the risk that it will be botched. The families of victims and prisoners, other execution witnesses, and corrections personnel should not be subjected to the trauma of an execution gone bad," said Robert Dunham, DPIC's Executive Director, in a summary of the DPIC year-end report.
On the positive side of the ledger, outgoing term-limited Oregon Gov. Kate Brown announced in December that she was commuting the sentences of the 17 people on death row to life in prison. The state has had a governor-ordered moratorium on the death penalty for years, but the penalty is enshrined in the state's constitution for certain crimes. Brown's replacement, Gov. Elect Tina Kotek, has promised to extend the moratorium.
"As the systemic flaws of the death penalty have become clearer and more pronounced, it is being regularly employed by just a handful of outlier jurisdictions that pursue death sentences and executions with little regard for human rights concerns, transparency, fairness, or even their own ability to successfully carry it out," the DPIC warns.
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The next article regarding botched cashless bail will be priceless.
You expect the guy who demands the government protect him from his own actions to highlight government failures of things he supports?
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Canada is doing it quietly and peacefully on an industrial scale. Why can't we just be more like Canada?
Wonderfully efficient. You don't even have to kill someone to qualify. Just show up at any hospital looking old, retarded or emotionally defective.
Or young and *checks notes* confused.
kid from Glee?
Public healthcare system FTW!
Coming to the US soon!
It's funny because the drugs they use to euthanize people in Canada are the very same ones that used to be used for lethal injection in the United States until the anti-death penalty zealots like Scott the pedophile groomer got them banned. Now they use less effective drugs or veterinary drugs from compounding pharmacies and you get the situation where - GASP - convicted mass-murderers and rapists actually have to suffer while they die - SHOCK HORROR!!!!!!!! And then faggot pedophile groomers like Scott use that as further "evidence" that the death penalty should be abolished. It will be fucking hilarious and awesome if Scott gets convicted of his rampant kiddie fucking one day and ends up on death row having to be put to death by tylenol overdose because he and his fellow faggot pedophile groomers got all the effective death penalty drugs banned.
Richard Speck the man who butchered eight student nurses in 1966. Speck had been sentenced to die for the July 14, 1966, murders, but he escaped the electric chair after the U.S. Supreme Court decided in 1972 that the death penalty constituted cruel and unusual punishment.
They released a video of Speck's prison escapades, snorting coke, flashing his boobs, wearing women's underwear, showing off his boyfriend.
Quote Speck
``If they only knew how much fun I was having in here, they would turn me loose,″
https://apnews.com/article/caa5b94ca71e5b3edd129a46de1da7c5
Just provide free, unlimited fentanyl to all death row inmates and the problem takes care of itself.
I was going to say.
Had a friend who overdosed and died on fentanyl. Sounds like the perfect execution drug.
That's said I choose to be on the side of anti-capital punishment. There are some for moral and ethical grounds for opposing it.
Problem is addicts develop tolerance, you'd use up 1/2 the fentanyl in Amurica with someone like Hunter B.
There's a perfect "Euthanasia" drug in most medicine cabinets,
Acetaminophen (Native Amuricans call it "Tylenol") 10gm is fatal in most cases, or if you want to be safe 200mg/kg (100 count bottle of Extra strength Tylenol contains 50gm)
Not the most pleasant way to go, but it works.
Frank "and there is this invention called a "Gun"
For some years, I've been bitching about all the 'cruel and inhumane' crap about lethal injection executions.
Many 'alternatives' are not 100% "effective," such as the 'electric chair' where sometimes the chair has to be energized multiple times before the prisoner finally succumbs to the jolts.
Fentanyl sounds like a viable alternative, but if anyone protests that "it hurts to die that way," I would like to propose an alternative that eliminates virtually ALL complaints...
An overdose of heroin, morphine, propofol or any narcotic that's well-known to be lethal in large doses. As the injection continues, the condemned first fades into blissful unconsciousness and then, a bit later, their heart stops.
Until capital punishment is ended, the very idea of it is basically little more than society's anger and revenge on the criminal, as some kind of "payback" of pain for what they've done. Little more.
And that's why the multiple cocktail injection will probably never be replaced by the simple 'drug overdose' method, even though a lack of supply of the 'required materials' would never be an issue.
Just sayin'....
Glossip is absolutely guilty. He had two trials (and appeals) and was found guilty both times. He was embezzling from the Motel and was about to be caught and so he hired Sneed to kill the manager and split the day's proceeds (about $4,000). Sneed has NEVER recanted. They both had around 1/2 of the motel receipts in their possession and couldn't explain how they accumulated that much money. Glossip admits he repaired the window of the room that was broken during the murder, while the body was still present in the room, but told police he didn't see the body laying there (in a small motel room?!!) That makes no sense because Glossip also told the cleaning lady not to clean the downstairs rooms (she would then find the body) - and told her HE and Sneed would clean the room after he repaired the window that was broken by two drunks. (But the room was not rented so no tenants, no drunks). Glossips girlfriend said Sneed showed up at their room at 3am and Glossip went outside and then came back andn told her some drunks broke a window (lie - Sneed told him the murder was done and was told to drive the manager's car to another location and was given half the money). Every time he talked to police his story changed or made no sense. After cops spoke to everyone, they knew the story, and arrested Sneed. Glossip 'suddenly' sold all of his possessions and tried to make a run for it.
Just make them say "fentanyl" three times while looking into a mirror.
It is so fundamentally easy to take life that only a government institution could fuck it up this bad.
They never had any problem with it at all until faggot pedophile groomers like Scott got rid of firing squads, then hanging, then electric chairs, then gas chambers, then eliminated all of the effective lethal injection drugs. If you faggot pedophile groomers actually gave a shit about the poor picked upon mass murdering psychopaths on death row you wouldn't have made all the easy execution methods illegal. It's almost like you don't give a single fuck about those people and want to use their well-deserved miserable deaths as propaganda to further your pro-criminal agenda.
no state should have the power to execute.
^ This
There's a lot of evil fucks who deserve to be ripped apart by wild animals, but Western governments have become so inept, incompetent, evil and corrupt, that giving the state the power to kill is insane.
Paul gives a good example with Canada's euthanasia program above. It was sold as benevolence to the terminally ill with untreatable pain, but quickly moved to the retarded, depressed teens, people with minor disabilities, unwanted babies and inconvenient but physically healthy seniors.
It's now the second leading cause of death in Canada.
Never ever, ever, give the government the ability to kill people.
How about we privatize euthanasia and capital punishment then? Oh what's that? That doesn't work for you either? Because you're actually just a pro-criminal piece of shit and your feigned concern for the suffering of mass murderers, rapists and pedophiles is just propaganda for your real agenda to eliminate criminal prosecution? Well, how about fuck you then? Come fuck around, I'll show you how to save the state a lot of time and money.
I'm fine with privatizing capital punishment.
unless it's an unborn child, thanks for the set up Alphonse.
Sure. You'd go with "people shouldn't have the power to thieve or murder", but then you'd be an authoritarian and couldn't claim the libertarian moral high ground by standing atop the pile of bodies, right?
The state's power to execute is not a choice, never has been, and the idea that it is or was is utter retardation. The choice is whether 12 jurists get to sit in judgement or not. If the people won't sit in judgement, the cops or soldiers will. If the cops and soldiers won't sit in judgement, citizens will. If citizens won't sit in judgement, criminals will.
No one ever sitting in judgement of another's life is not how reality works.
sentencing juries are agents of the state mho. and I'm fine with privatizing capital punishment just not with Oklahoma fucking it up again.
no state should have the power to execute.
The jury, not the state, decides whether someone convicted of a death penalty offense gets executed.
I was just reading something about Walter Collins, a nine-year old boy who went missing in LA back in the '20's. If you've ever seen the Clint Eastwood-directed movie The Changeling starring Angelina Jolie, you may know that 5 months later the boy was located in Illinois and returned to his mother, who promptly proclaimed the boy was not her son. The LAPD, which had been under intense pressure to solve this case due to an earlier botched kidnapping case, insisted the child was hers and even went so far as to having her committed to a psychiatric hospital for evaluation for denying the child was her son. It wasn't until the boy's dentist testified that he had filled several cavities in Walter's teeth and this boy had no signs of dental work that the boy finally confessed he wasn't Walter but had impersonated him just to get a free trip to Hollywood and escape his father and his step-mother, whom he disliked.
At this point, attention turned to Gordon Northcott and his mother who had been convicted of molesting and murdering multiple young boys at his chicken farm. Although Walter Collins body was never identified among the remains found at the site of the Winesville Chicken Coop Murders, the LAPD marked this one solved after Northcott confessed to the deed even though he later recanted his confession.
Now I say all this to say this: Cops are fucking liars and they will frame an innocent person in a heartbeat if they need to get the public off their back in a high-profile case. The State should never be trusted to take a life, period. They're all scumbags and crooks.
Yeah we wouldn't want them taking the life of a mass-murdering kiddie fucker because there is some shadow of doubt about one of his multiple victims.
Gee I wonder why libertarians are so invested in protecting kiddie fuckers?
"Botched Death Row Executions"
Really? How many of the prisoners survived?
a few, unfortunately, and the hundreds on death rows who won't be executed because of them.
They wouldn't fuck up the executions if they did it right. Two in the back of the head is quick, effective, and costs less than a dollar.
Faggot pedophile groomers like Scott got that declared cruel and unusual. Then they got hanging declared cruel and unusual. Then they got electric chairs and gas chambers declared cruel and unusual. Then they got the effective lethal injection drugs that have been used since the 1970s banned for executions. And now their hearts bleed for the suffering of mass murdering kiddie fuckers. It's almost like their agenda was never about the supposed cruelty of any given execution method but about eliminating criminal penalties for mass murdering kiddie fuckers.
Gee I wonder why libertarians are so invested in protecting kiddie fuckers?
An "execution style" execution.
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Not saying I want to live in Saudi Arabia (had enough 1990-91, not one decent Kosher Deli in the entire Kingdom) But they consider a "botched" execution one in which the condemned's head doesn't make at least 5 rotations before hitting the ground (and you lose style points if it spins to the side) Seriously, was expecting Judges to hold up score cards like in the Olympics. Even worse than losing your head were the multiple executions (most I saw was a Triple-Header (get it? Triple-head-er) one after the other, no sword sharpening in between, no mound conference with the beheading coach,
Frank
I have doubts about the government’s ability to tell guilt from innocence, or to distinguish among degrees of guilt.
But I see no *humanitarian* problem in hanging a sane, cold-blooded killer.
Lethal injection is more of a problem because of the boycott against it and the question of involving medical personnel. What with what's going on in countries like Canada, anything which gets medical professionals used to killing people should be avoided.
May I point out that it's kind of silly to demand that the executioner in a fatal injection scenario be a 'medical professional'?
First, many would refuse, having sworn to the Hippocratic Oath.
Second, you could find a fairly endless supply of junkies right on the streets of any large city who'd have all the 'expertise' needed to put the OD into the vein of the condemned criminal.
And before you claim that 'all convictions and death sentences' are without fault or inaccuracy, do a web search for the organizations that do deep research into death-row-sentenced people and, in at least in dozens, if not hundreds of cases, they discover that the dude was NOT the guilty party.
So, that makes the next question this one: What percentage of such "mistakes" is tolerable to YOU in this process? One a year of an innocent being executed? 1%? 5%?
As a very old friend put it... if you're willing to tolerate THAT kind of inaccuracy, why aren't you willing to accept some similar degree of "inaccuracy" on your paycheck?
The vets can put dogs and cats down with no problem, but the government can't accomplish that without huge problems. No real surprise though
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