An injection of chemicals used to execute death row inmates can cause such excruciating pain that veterinarians are banned from using them to put down animals, according to one of the most thorough reviews ever undertaken of the administration of the death penalty.
The report, endorsed by a range of criminal justice experts, urges states have the death penalty to kill an inmate with a single chemical overdose, rather than the “three drug cocktail” used in
a series of botched deaths, including Oklahoma's
disturbing execution of Clayton Lockett last week.
Lockett’s attempted execution, which took
one hour and 44 minutes from the moment he was first restrained on the gurney,
prompted outrage across the world.
He was administered a drug cocktail in dosages
never before tried in American executions, and complications arose after officials were unable to locate a suitable vein. Witnesses
saw him writhing and groaning on the gurney, and it was a full 43 minutes after the drugs were administered before he died.
Source: The Guardian, May 7, 2014