Skip to main content

Idaho will soon turn to firing squad executions. Police will pull the triggers

Trained members of Idaho law enforcement with demonstrated firearms proficiency are expected to fill slots for carrying out the death penalty by firing squad as the state prison system transitions to the controversial execution method next month. 

Six volunteers certified for no less than three years apiece through Peace Officer Standards and Training, or POST, will be recruited to ensure the Idaho Department of Correction is ready to comply with a state law that prioritizes shooting prisoners to death over lethal injection starting July 1. 

No one on the team may have faced disciplinary action over firearms, use of force, or related conduct over the prior year, according to new execution protocols the prison system released this week. 

State prison leadership has sought to avoid needing to rely on volunteers among corrections officers to pull the triggers in an execution, IDOC Director Bree Derrick previously said. The agency explored the possibility of a remote-operated system as Idaho becomes the only U.S. state with a firing squad as its lead execution method, but one did not come to fruition. That left IDOC to instead devise a human firing squad, the agency said. 

“The Idaho Department of Correction recognizes the gravity of carrying out a court-ordered execution and the responsibility that comes with it,” Derrick said in a statement to the Idaho Statesman. “The department is committed to fulfilling this responsibility with professionalism, respect, and strict adherence to the law. Our procedures are designed to ensure that any execution is conducted in a secure, orderly, and dignified manner while safeguarding the rights of all individuals involved and maintaining the safety and security of staff, witnesses, and the public.” 

The firing squad will consist of three primary shooters and two alternates, with a team leader who will check, maintain, and load with live rounds each of the IDOC-owned rifles used for executions. None of the team members may have a blood or legal relationship to the condemned prisoner or their family or the victims or their relatives. The identities of all firing squad members will be confidential, per state law. The only two people allowed to know their names are the state prisons director and a deputy prisons chief. 

During marksman testing from a minimum of 7 yards away, each member chosen must be able to hit a similar shaped and sized target at a similar height as the one that will be used during an execution without missing. During the execution, the three-member firing squad will shoot the seated prisoner from a distance of approximately 10 yards, department spokesperson Ryan Mortensen said by email. 

“Failure to accurately hit the specific target with one round from each IDOC-provided firearm disqualifies the volunteer from selection,” reads the Idaho execution standard operating procedure approved by Derrick. 

The three shooters will be positioned behind a protective wall with a 1-foot opening through which they’ll fire the rifles at the prisoner, Mortensen said. The intent is to limit the firing squad’s exposure to the execution area and minimize the effects on those involved in the process, he said. IDOC has yet to determine whether the shooters will be seated or standing, he added. 

The state prison system has already purchased five AR-style Daniel Defense DD5-P .308-caliber rifles, equipped with scopes, suppressors, and bipods for use by its firing squad, Mortensen said. The DD5-P is technically a pistol but is referred to as a rifle in the IDOC protocols. The cost with accessories per firearm was $4,844—or a total of more than $24,000. The particular rifle model includes components designed to reduce recoil and is “engineered for reliability in demanding conditions,” the manufacturer’s website said. 

$1 million-plus renovation 


Work to retrofit the execution chamber for a firing squad at the state’s maximum security prison south of Boise started in May 2025 and is now finished, Mortensen said. Construction cost more than $900,000, with another $314,000 spent on design and engineering for a project total of more than $1.2 million. 

In 2023, the Idaho Legislature dedicated $750,000 to complete the renovations when it passed a bill that made a firing squad the state’s backup execution method. After a failed attempt by lethal injection in 2024, state lawmakers passed follow-up legislation in 2025 that made the firing squad Idaho’s primary method for carrying out the death penalty but provided no additional funds for buildout.

Idaho is one of 27 U.S. states with the death penalty and one of five with a firing squad as a permitted execution method. The others are Mississippi, Oklahoma, South Carolina, and Utah. South Carolina executed three death row prisoners by firing squad last year—the first of their kind since Utah last performed one in June 2010. 

Robin Maher, executive director of the Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit Death Penalty Information Center, which tracks capital punishment in the U.S. and takes no position on the practice, noted concerns about the return of the firing squad in some states. 

“Every new execution method in history has been introduced with the promise that it will be foolproof and ‘more humane’ than the previous method,” Maher said by email. “Unfortunately, those promises have always been broken. Idaho officials have now invested more than a million taxpayer dollars to implement a firing squad—a method of execution that has already proven to be as flawed as any other.” 

Eight prisoners are on Idaho’s death row, including seven men and one woman — all convicted of murder. Idaho has not executed a prisoner in 14 years, last carrying out the death penalty by lethal injection in June 2012. The Federal Defender Services of Idaho, a legal nonprofit that represents the majority of the state’s death row prisoners, declined to comment about the new firing squad protocols. 

A target on the heart 


Republican Gov. Brad Little, who seeks a third term this November, signed both firing squad bills into law. The 2025 bill delayed implementation so IDOC had time to rebuild its execution chamber. 

“While I am signing this bill, it is important to point out that fulfilling justice can and must be done by minimizing stress on corrections personnel,” Little wrote after approving the law in 2023. 

Toward that end, IDOC has worked to find a solution for who would carry out the new firing squad execution law following the issuance of a death warrant. The agency intends to hand off the responsibility to police officers “whose training and experience include the deployment and proficient use of firearms,” the new protocols said. 

Bonneville County Sheriff’s Sgt. Bryan Lovell serves as president of the Idaho Fraternal Order of Police. He had yet to review IDOC’s firing squad standard operating procedure but said it’s a misconception that members of law enforcement are better suited to handle shooting deaths, namely for state-sanctioned executions. 

“I don’t want people to convolute things about why people become cops, including for carrying out an execution,” he said in a phone interview. “It’s not the goal and very far from any duties that any law enforcement would be involved in.” 

Police train for the possibility of using deadly force in rare circumstances to mitigate danger to themselves and the public, and separately to help others through emergencies, Lovell said. But police are not uniquely qualified from prison guards or corrections officers to process their own emotions as it relates to trauma from the high-stress environment inside the prison system—including to perform a planned execution. 

“You’re talking about the complete opposite end of the spectrum of reasons why deadly force would be used, and that’s something you work to avoid first, if at all possible,” he said.

To prepare for the potential need, members of the firing squad will conduct at least quarterly trainings and execution rehearsals with IDOC rifles, the document details. All prison execution team members—consisting of the firing squad, the escort team, a medical unit, and administrators—must participate in at least four training sessions within a year of the scheduled execution or will be ineligible. 

The firing squad’s rehearsals will include both live fire and dry fire sessions. Weekly trainings will go into effect once a death warrant is issued, and at least four trainings and two rehearsals will take place in the two days before the scheduled execution, according to the new protocols. 

No later than 11 p.m. the night before the execution, the condemned person will be offered a mild sedative, and once more no later than four hours before they are scheduled to die, the document reads. The prisoner will be escorted into the execution chamber and strapped to an execution chair with restraints. A target will be affixed to the prisoner’s chest, directly over their heart. 

The firing squad plan details that the prison director will read the condemned person’s death warrant aloud and grant them a chance at any last words. An eye covering will be provided to the prisoner if they request it. 

The firing squad team leader will then begin a cadence for the three shooters to fire the rifles—each loaded with a magazine with a single .308 110-grain TAP round—in unison at the target. The director will wait up to two minutes while the medical team leader watches for any signs of life on an electrocardiogram, and the director under consultation can order a second “volley of fire” at the prisoner if needed before sending in the on-site county coroner to pronounce the time of death. 

With three weeks until the law takes effect and following updates to the prison, policy development, and operational planning, IDOC is nearly ready to implement firing squad executions for the first time in the state of Idaho, Mortensen said. 

“The department will be prepared to carry out an execution order after July 1,” he said.

Source: idahostatesman.com, Kevin Fixler, June 10, 2026. Kevin Fixler is an investigative reporter with the Idaho Statesman and a four-time Idaho Print Reporter of the Year.




"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed,
but by the punishments that the good have inflicted."
— Oscar Wilde
Globe
Death Penalty News For a World without the Death Penalty

Comments

Most viewed (Last 7 days)

US | Army lays groundwork for death row executions if Trump gives approval

The Army is preparing to carry out the executions of the military's four death-row inmates if ordered to do so by the president, according to an internal planning document reviewed by ABC News. If carried out, it would mark the first time the military executed convicted American inmates in more than a half-century The plan, dubbed "Operation Resolute Justice" and issued internally in February, directs Army officials to coordinate with the Federal Bureau of Prisons to transfer condemned prisoners from the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, to the federal execution facility in Terre Haute, Indiana, where the Justice Department carried out a series of non-military federal executions during President Donald Trump's first term.

Texas | Tanner Horner now incarcerated at the Polunsky Unit

Convicted child killer Tanner Horner has now taken up residence in one of the most brutal death row prisons after being sentenced to die by a Texas jury last month. Horner is incarcerated at the Polunsky Unit, an infamously restrictive prison outside Houston where the state's death row inmates are housed in an all-solitary confinement wing and spend at least 22 hours a day in their 60-square-foot cells. The former FedEx deliveryman, 34, was booked at the notorious prison on May 5 within hours of being sentenced for the gruesome murder of Athena Strand, 7, whom he admitted strangling while delivering a Christmas gift to her home in November 2022.

Alabama | Judge bars nitrogen gas execution, says method is unconstitutionally cruel

MONTGOMERY, Ala. -- A federal judge on Tuesday permanently blocked Alabama from executing an inmate with nitrogen gas after declaring it violates the ban on cruel and unusual punishment. U.S. District Judge Emily Marks issued the ruling hours after an appeals court reversed her initial finding that the method was constitutional. Marks permanently enjoined the state from executing Jeffrey Lee, 49, by nitrogen gas. He was scheduled to be executed Thursday. The decision, for now, blocks the use of the controversial new execution method that the state has championed since 2024, but the issue will likely end up before the U.S. Supreme Court.

Alabama Plans to Execute Jeffrey Lee Despite Jury Vote for Life

Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey has scheduled the execution of Jeffrey Lee by nitrogen suffocation for June 11, 2026, even though his capital jury voted 7-5 against the death penalty and chose a sentence of life imprisonment without parole. The trial judge overrode the jury’s verdict and sentenced Mr. Lee to death in 2000, relying on a unique Alabama practice that allowed judges to overrule jury verdicts in death penalty cases. Alabama is the only state where judges overrode jury verdicts of life to impose the death penalty routinely—in more than 100 cases since 1976. As a result, nearly 20% of the people currently on Alabama’s death row were sentenced to death by elected judges even after their juries chose life imprisonment without parole.

20 Minutes to Death: Witness to the Last Execution in France

The following document is a firsthand account of the final moments of Hamida Djandoubi, a convicted murderer executed by guillotine at Marseille’s Baumettes Prison on September 10, 1977. The record—dated September 9—was written by Monique Mabelly, a judge appointed by the state to witness the proceedings. Djandoubi’s execution would ultimately be the last carried out in France before capital punishment was abolished in 1981. At the time, President Valéry Giscard d'Estaing—who had publicly voiced his "deep aversion to the death penalty" prior to his election—rejected Djandoubi’s appeal for clemency. Choosing to let "justice take its course," the President allowed the execution to proceed, just as he had in two previous cases during his term:   Christian Ranucci , executed on July 28, 1976 and Jérôme Carrein , executed on June 23, 1977. Hamida Djandoubi , a Tunisian national, was sentenced to death for killing his former lover, Elisabeth Bousquet. He was execu...

Texas | Death Row Inmate Gets Resentenced to Life

Harris County district judge recommends compassionate release for Clarence Jordan A 1977 convenience store robbery that resulted in a clerk’s death landed Clarence Jordan on Texas Death Row, where he remained for decades even though he was declared incompetent for execution. On Monday, a judge recommended that the disabled man be released.  Harris County District Court Judge Katherine Thomas resentenced Jordan to life with the possibility of parole and suggested that he be considered for the Texas Department of Criminal Justice’s Medically Recommended Intensive Supervision program, also known as compassionate release.

New Mississippi billboard warns criminals: ‘Firing squad is legal’

DESOTO COUNTY, Miss. (WREG) — A billboard standing on Interstate 55 southbound as you cross the Tennessee state line and enter Mississippi from Memphis is sending a grim message to those coming into the state. DeSoto County District Attorney Matthew Barton recently announced the new billboard campaign, which features the sign reading, “WELCOME TO MISSISSIPPI. WHERE THE FIRING SQUAD IS LEGAL. THINK TWICE.” It references Mississippi’s law permitting execution by firing squad under certain circumstances for inmates sentenced to death. Barton says this campaign is aimed at deterring violent crime and sends a direct message to criminals entering Mississippi.

Oklahoma | Richard Glossip on Life After Decades on Death Row

In an exclusive interview at home in Oklahoma City, Glossip describes his first days of freedom in a world he hasn’t experienced for nearly 30 years. For three decades, Richard Glossip lived on concrete. First at the Oklahoma County jail, after his arrest for murder in 1997, and then in the underground bunker housing death row inmates at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary. As with the rest of his surroundings, he eventually got used to the hard, unforgiving floors, although recently he’d developed painful swelling in his legs.

Florida executes Andrew Richard Lukehart

Jacksonville man who killed his girlfriend’s 5-month-old baby in 1996 executed 30 years later A Jacksonville man who confessed to killing his girlfriend’s 5-month-old daughter and throwing her body in a pond 3 decades ago was executed on Tuesday evening.  Andrew Richard Lukehart, 53, was scheduled to receive a 3-drug injection starting at 6 p.m. at Florida State Prison near Starke.  He was sentenced to death after being convicted of aggravated child abuse and felony murder in the death of Gabrielle Hanshaw. The baby’s mother told News4JAX she plans to attend the execution.

Alabama | Judicial Decision About Nitrogen Hypoxia Renders the Constitutional Prohibition of Cruel Punishment Meaningless

On June 11, the state of Alabama plans to execute Jeffrey Lee with nitrogen hypoxia . He will be the ninth person put to death by this method since its first use in 2024. Lee contends that nitrogen hypoxia will cause him great suffering. On May 28, Federal District Judge Emily Marks agreed with him but said his execution could proceed nonetheless. Hers is a remarkable and shockingly candid decision. It made history, coming after the first trial in the country on the constitutionality of nitrogen hypoxia. To her credit, Judge Marks offered an unusually detailed picture of the pain imposed by capital punishment.