Arkansas鈥檚 Reckless Plan to Execute 8 Men in 10 Days Could End in State-Sanctioned Torture Before Death
Between April 17 and 27, Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson plans on doing what should be inconceivable: executing .
After killing no prisoners in the last 12 years, the state is rushing to execute these eight men before the it needs to carry them out expires on April 30. The drug, midazolam, has been directly linked to , but that hasn鈥檛 stopped Hutchinson from planning a killing spree in a few weeks. By racing to use a drug known to play a part in botched executions, the governor risks debasing the state of Arkansas, its citizens, and the very American traditions of justice by torturing prisoners to death.
In a hospital setting, midazolam is to calm patients鈥 nerves or act as a sedative for minor procedures. It is not used to put patients under for surgery, let alone anesthetize prisoners before killing them. And when midazolam is combined with the two other drugs used during the execution 鈥 vecuronium bromide and potassium chloride 鈥 it produces unspeakable pain before death.
We know this because it鈥檚 happened before.
The most recent midazolam botch occurred during Alabama鈥檚 December execution of Ronald Bert Smith. His execution took 34 minutes, during which time . His attorneys reported that he , well into the execution.
In 2014, the state of Ohio relied on midazolam with the same . That same year, a similar nightmare transpired over the course of two long hours after Arizona used 15 repeated doses to before he finally stopped coughing and, gulping once, died. These botches together have led an using midazolam, while and have also abandoned it.
Beyond the cruelty of using a defective drug to kill someone, Arkansas is upping the probability of something going terribly wrong by ratcheting up the pace of its executions. Double and triple executions are rare in the history of the U.S. death penalty and haven鈥檛 occurred in close to . When they did happen, it was in a bygone era when states were annually executing people as they do today. Even then, no state attempted, as Arkansas plans for this April, .
The last state to attempt a double execution was Oklahoma, when, also using midazolam, it botched the execution of Clayton Lockett. The prison warden himself called it a 鈥.鈥 The scene in Lockett鈥檚 execution chamber was chaos. A doctor was squirted with Lockett鈥檚 blood as it spurted from a vein. The personnel were confused and distressed. Lockett did not die until 43 minutes later, after the execution had been halted and the shades drawn on the adjacent viewing room. Meanwhile, Charles Warner in the state鈥檚 second planned execution of the night. After the botch of Lockett鈥檚 execution, Warner鈥檚 was cancelled, and the state that it would no longer schedule more than one execution in a seven-day period.
Multiple dates, set so closely together, increase the risk of human error and resulting torture and injustice. Arkansas鈥檚 previous 鈥 of in 1992 and Christina Marie Riggs in 2000, like Lockett鈥檚 botch 鈥 each involved failure to place execution lines properly in the veins. This history highlights the role in executions of fallible human beings, who can鈥檛 help but be affected by the pace and horror of multiple executions. As Sen. John McCain of Joseph Wood鈥檚 botched midazolam execution, "The lethal injection needs to be an indeed lethal injection and not the bollocks-upped situation that just prevailed. That's torture.鈥
History risks repeating itself when we don鈥檛 heed its lessons. We don鈥檛 need another state-sanctioned killing to be botched by the use of midazolam or by the reckless clip of Gov. Hutchinson鈥檚 scheduled killings. Assembly line justice 鈥 artificially paced to an expiring controversial drug choice 鈥 can only end in easily avoidable disaster.