Execution Drugs

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Judge: Imported execution drugs illegal

CDCR

Sodium thiopental is one of three drugs used in California's lethal injection procedure.

The Federal District Court in Washington D.C. today ruled that execution drugs obtained by U.S. prisons from foreign suppliers are illegal and will have to be returned to the Food and Drug Administration.

A number of states purchased sodium thiopental–an anesthetic used in lethal injections–from a company in the United Kingdom amidst a U.S. shortage of the drug in 2010. California is among those states, having bought 514.5 grams, in theory, enough for 171 executions.

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Lethal injection drugs harder and harder to find

CDCR

For the second time in as many years, a drug commonly used in executions will become unavailable.

Word’s come out that pentobarbital, a barbituate several states use in lethal injections, will be much harder to find shortly, as the sole FDA-approved manufacturer of the drug is refusing to sell it to states that use it for executions. Pentobarbital, incidentally, became widely adopted just last year as a replacement for sodium thiopental, which was recently discontinued by its US maker.

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The high cost of capital punishment in California

Since 1978, California juries have sentenced about 800 convicts to death — of which only 13 have actually been executed. The rest either continue to wait on Death Row, or have already died of other causes. Meanwhile, California taxpayers have spent over $4 billion on administering a death penalty that, critics say, exists only on paper. What explains the delays — and the high cost? In a new report, the ACLU of Northern California provides a partial answer:

[Death Row] inmates are housed in single cells unlike other prisoners, and there are significant security costs. Death penalty trials cost up to 20 times more than trials for life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. In fact, death sentences are handed down after two trials, instead of one [a guilt phase and a penalty phase]. Taxpayers are legally required to pay for numerous appeals in death penalty cases, unlike cases involving life without possibility of parole, where the prisoner gets only one taxpayer funded appeal. In California, the average time between conviction and execution is now more than 25 years. This figure is likely to get even longer with budget pressures and challenges to the state’s lethal injection procedure.

I say this is only a partial answer because other states face similar structural and constitutional constraints, yet manage to carry out executions at a regular pace. For instance, this year alone, Texas has already executed seven prisoners with several more scheduled this summer. How does the Texas legal system move so much more quickly than ours? That would take a lot longer than a blog post to answer fully, but one reason is that Texas has historically been more tolerant of sloppy lawyering in capital cases. Then too, Texas doesn’t have to answer to the Ninth Circuit, the federal appeals court with jurisdiction over the West.  Continue reading

New execution drug under scrutiny

Georgia Department of Corrections

Roy Willard Blankenship

When the execution drug sodium thiopental became scarce last year, and then the US company that manufactured the drug ceased production, states turned to a new drug, pentobarbital, to take its place. Pentobarbital, like sodium thiopental, is an anesthetic. In the lethal injection process, the drug is used to put an inmate comfortably to sleep before a second drug paralyzes him or her and a third injection stops the heart. Until recently, pentobarbital–which itself is lethal in high doses–was primarily used to euthanize pets. So its use in human executions has gotten a fair amount of press. Now, ABC reports, it’s under even more scrutiny following the “thrashing, jerking death” of Roy Willard Blankenship, executed in Georgia last week:

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Arizona’s execution drugs declared “illegal;” inmate executed with new drug

Yesterday, the US Department of Justice intervened to effectively stop an execution scheduled hours later in Arizona. The DOJ informed the state of Arizona that it could not use one of the three drugs used in the state’s lethal injection protocol because the drug had been obtained illegally from a foreign source. Arizona, along with several other states, imported supplies of sodium thiopental–an anesthetic used to put inmates to sleep in advance of their death–from a company in the United Kingdom. The DOJ has not yet given specifics on why exactly it believes Arizona acted improperly when it imported the drugs, but the Drug Enforcement Agency had already seized the supplies of five out of ten states that imported sodium thiopental.

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Execution drugs: Who has what


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The saga over a national shortage of the execution drug sodium thiopental and states’ legally questionable international searches for the drug continued last week in federal court in San Francisco. The ACLU of Northern California and San Francisco Bay Guardian are suing the Drug Enforcement Agency for documents related to the legality of foreign-bought executions drugs that have found their way into several states. Continue reading

New lethal injection drug, new controversy

CDCR

More and more states are shifting to a new execution drug, pentobarbital, in the wake of an international controversy that essentially resulted in the end of sodium thiopental production by the American company, Hospira. Hospira had always been uncomfortable with its product’s use in the lethal injection process–sodium thiopental, an anesthetic, is also used by hospitals and clinics. After a raw material shortage slowed sodium thiopental production by Hospira in the United States, many states, including California, looked for the drug abroad, and ended up importing it from distributors in the United Kingdom. (Georgia’s supply has since been seized by the Drug Enforcement Administration, which is investigating the transaction.) Hospira later announced that they’re leaving the sodium thiopental business altogether, in response to outrage in Europe over European-made drugs ending up in US executions. The announcement meant states started looking for alternatives–and now, a new execution drug has emerged.

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Execution drugs: Georgia’s stock seized by DEA

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The Drug Enforcement Agency has seized Georgia’s supply of sodium thiopental, the first of three drugs used in the state’s lethal injection process. According to the New York Times, the DEA action came about because of the origin of the drugs. Georgia, like many states (including California) recently obtained sodium thiopental, scarce in the United States, from companies in the UK, which have not been approved by the FDA to manufacture the drug:

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