In Alabama, New Rules Make Botched Executions More Likely
"Under the new rule, the State would have been able to prolong the botched execution process indefinitely," the Equal Justice Initiative wrote in a press release.

Last week, the Alabama Supreme Court made a startling change to the state's execution procedures. Instead of requiring that executions occur during a specific date, the governor will now have the sole authority to set a "time frame" during which executions can be carried out. The change is unprecedented in the United States.
While the change seems minor, it has major ramifications for death-row inmates. When attempts to execute an inmate drag on for too long, they were previously required to cease by midnight on the execution date if unsuccessful. However, with the new change, prison officials will be able to drag out an execution attempt over days.
The new rule, finalized last Thursday, seems to be related to a string of botched executions and execution attempts in the state. In November, the state called off one execution after attempts to insert a needle necessary to begin the lethal injection process took too long and the midnight deadline passed. Another inmate was successfully executed but only after significant delays allegedly caused by the same problems with inserting an I.V. catheter. In the wake of these cases, Republican Gov. Kay Ivey announced in November that she would be seeking a temporary moratorium on executions.
The rule was enacted as part of a larger set of changes ordered by the Alabama Supreme Court. In addition to changing the time restrictions on executions, the court also introduced a new rule eliminating automatic "plain error review" in death penalty cases. The change removes an important due process protection for death row inmates where death penalty cases are automatically reviewed for clear errors at trial, even if the defense attorney did not object at the time. Under new rules, judges can still undertake these reviews, but they're no longer required.
Almost immediately, the new rules received criticism from civil liberties groups. "What's troubling about this is, we recognize that the Department of Corrections was basically botching executions…now we are putting the power for them to basically torture people for as many as hours for as many days as they need to, to get the execution done," Allison Mollman, a senior legal counselor for the American Civil Liberties Union of Alabama, told a local news station.
"The practical effect of allowing an execution to be carried out during an undefined 'time frame' instead of a specific date is that the State could continuously attempt to execute condemned prisoners like Kenneth Smith for hours or days," the Equal Justice Initiative, an anti-death-penalty group, wrote in a Tuesday press release. "Under the new rule, the State would have been able to prolong the botched execution process indefinitely,"
With these new rules in force, Alabama seems poised neither to solve the problems leading to a recent string of botched executions nor to rethink the practice entirely—but rather to make torturous, hourslong executions the norm.
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“It was a botched joke.”
— John Kerry (D)
So render them unconscious by any drug available, then cut their throat.
Crude, but effective.
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Don't even need drugs. Hit them with a ball bat. Or just shoot them in the back of head.
Well, then, people concerned about this should undertake to supply Alabama with the necessary drugs and trained personnel to avoid botched executions then, shouldn't they?
These are features, not bugs.
One might have thought that both timing and review were matters for the legislature to resolve. But perhaps they're too busy playing the banjo
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They can just let Alec Baldwin shoot them.
Difficult intravenous access is a fact. In the practice of anesthesia, I face this challenge every day. None within the professional realm would consider care to be 'botched' if it took multiple attempts to find a vein, resort to central venous line placement, placed an intra-osseous line, or used intra-muscular injection to facilitate anesthetic care, or any other care within a hospital. We often use inhaled induction of anesthesia for difficult patients, such as infants and children, plus the occasional behaviorally challenged teen or adult. Beginning with one method, and transitioning to a second or third is not botched, but merely adapting to the situation presented.
Decrying that the condemned 'suffered' merely what is unfortunately a common malady for the general population trying to have medical care is disingenuous.
If you have a valid and persuasive moral objection to capitol punishment, then advance that argument. If all you got is a bit of a boo-boo suffered by the condemned that is no worse than the blown vein I got from my last blood draw, then I'm not persuaded.
The “by an means necessary” level of mendacity displayed by these people leads me to question what sort of ‘morals’ their opposition to the death penalty is based upon.
Is it really a concern for all humanity?
Because this sort of serially displayed dishonesty could lead one to suspect that it has more to do with shielding criminals from consequences.
Would decent, reasonable and patriotic Americans operating in the immediate wake of the Civil War have permitted Alabama and the other states on the bigoted, traitorous, losing end of that war to resume statehood had they known the degree to which those southern backwaters would remain a stain and drain on our society -- morally, culturally, economically, educationally -- for more than 150 years?
Think of how much better America would be with a string of unincorporated territories along our southern border. No senator from South Carolina or Arkansas, no House member from Tennessee or Florida, no electoral delegate from Mississippi or Alabama.
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Well, it would have meant that Woodrow Wilson and FDR would never have become President, so that's an undeniable plus!
It's a pity how these States have propped up so many people from the Democrat Party over the last 150 years. We would have, indeed, been far better off without them!
The change is unprecedented in the United States.
Get fucked. The two weeks spanning 2019-2022 were filled with unprecedented changes in the United States. Schedule changes concerning the killing death row inmates is like 8 millionth on the list.
I have never heard of someone taking over 24 hours to die from being repeatedly shot with bullets or beheaded. Stop medicalizing death. Stop sanitizing it. If we're going to execute people do it in the most brutal and efficient method possible. I'm not overly concerned about how painful or gory these methods might be. You don't win a death sentence for jaywalking. Death row inmates can just suffer for a few seconds of bleeding out like the dogs that they are.
Maybe Alabama can outsource its executions to the Canadian MAID program? You don’t hear them botching any execut…er, suicides.
I can't recall Reason addressing Canada's euthanasia problem. As someone who agrees with euthanasia on libertarian grounds (it is my life to live and therefore also to end) it feels like this is a major thing to talk about with multiple libertarian angles. I would absolutely like to see them address how voluntary deaths can be enacted efficiently and yet we can't do so for those who have forfeited their life (in the eyes of gov/public)
Shoot in the head. Repeat until target expires. It won't take that long.
A vet can put your pet down with no problems.
The government can't put down a convicted killer without screwing it up
… and many fools want the government to run more things!
Why use drugs at all?
Instead, use a CPAP mask, with nitrogen replacing air. Death within two minutes, and no more painful than falling asleep.
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