Alabama, unless stopped by the courts, intends to strap Kenneth Eugene Smith to a gurney Thursday and use a gas mask to replace breathable air with nitrogen, depriving him of oxygen, in the nation’s first execution attempt with the method.

The Alabama attorney general’s office told federal appeals court judges last week that nitrogen hypoxia is “the most painless and humane method of execution known to man.” But what exactly Smith, 58, will feel after the warden switches on the gas is unknown, some doctors and critics say.

“What effect the condemned person will feel from the nitrogen gas itself, no one knows,” Dr. Jeffrey Keller, president of the American College of Correctional Physicians, wrote in an email. “This has never been done before. It is an experimental procedure.”

Keller, who was not involved in developing the Alabama protocol, said the plan is to “eliminate all of the oxygen from the air” that Smith is breathing by replacing it with nitrogen.

  • IntheTreetop
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    611 months ago

    Okay, can someone explain to me why states with capital punishment don’t just inject someone with a bunch of morphine and they just go to sleep and never wake up again? I hear all the time about the horrific shit they inject into people and the horrible deaths they suffer, while one easy drug can execute the person with no fuss? I just don’t understand.

    • @[email protected]
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      1011 months ago

      Or just shoot them, or decapitate them. We’ve known how to kill people for centuries, but “humane” here usually just means what’s prettiest to look at, not what kills the quickest or cleanest.

    • squiblet
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      711 months ago

      Drug companies refuse to supply states with execution medications. Not sure if it’s liability, legality or ethics (probably not the latter). I’d think states could synthesize their own or use drugs they confiscated, though.

      • @mkwt
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        911 months ago

        Also, the AMA and state medical boards punish doctors who agree to supervise executions, because to do so violates the Hippocratic oath.

        Often doctors have travelled to the prison in secret, and go to great lengths to remain anonymous. Kinda like the hooded axe man of old.

      • aard
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        711 months ago

        Some of the drugs are not manufactured in the US. There has been an EU wide ban for selling drugs used in executions to the US without making sure they’re not used for executions. Which also is the reason why medical organizations were very unhappy few years ago when states lied to them in an attempt to get those drugs - as they risk getting cut off for legitimate medical use.

        Reason for the EU ban is simple: We consider executions a human rights violation over here.

      • snooggums
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        111 months ago

        The appearance of having ethics matters for drug companies because of liability concerns.

        • @mkwt
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          311 months ago

          The other thing that matters to big multinational pharma companies is when Italian prosecutors start charging their executives with murder. That’s definitely a “liability concern.”

    • @[email protected]
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      711 months ago

      Morphine is considered a ‘fun’ drug, and they wouldn’t want to be giving prisoners that.