US

Murderer to be gassed to death after botched execution

A prisoner in Alabama is set to become the first inmate in America to be gassed to death with nitrogen after the US Supreme Court declined to halt his execution.

Convicted murderer Kenneth Smith is set to be executed on Thursday after his legal bid to have the method declared unconstitutional failed.

Smith’s survival following a botched lethal injection in 2022 helped prompt a review of the state’s death penalty procedures.

The Supreme Court justices denied Smith’s request to stay his execution and declined to hear his legal challenge contending that a second execution attempt by Alabama – after the first failed attempt caused him severe trauma – would violate the US Constitution’s Eighth Amendment protections against cruel and unusual punishment.

Smith, 58, is separately contesting the legality of Alabama’s nitrogen gas protocol on Eighth Amendment and other grounds.

Smith’s lawyers have urged the US Supreme Court to intervene, calling Alabama’s nitrogen-gas protocol “recently released and untested,” and “a novel method of execution that has never been attempted by any state or the federal government”.

Alabama’s gassing method – nitrogen hypoxia – is designed to deprive prisoners of oxygen by placing a mask connected to a cylinder of nitrogen over their face.

More on Alabama

Smith’s botched execution was the third consecutive instance in which Alabama officials encountered problems or delays inserting intravenous lines for a scheduled lethal injection, with two of the executions, including Smith’s, eventually called off, according to court filings.

State officials repeatedly tried and failed to place the necessary intravenous lines or a central line in his collarbone area before calling off the execution.

Smith’s lawyers have characterised the experience as torture and said that it “exposed him to the severe mental anguish of a mock execution”.

Read more:
Alabama Supreme Court approves use of nitrogen gas to execute prisoner
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Smith was convicted of the 1988 killing Elizabeth Sennett after he and an accomplice were hired as hitmen by her husband Charles Sennett, a Christian minister who had taken out a large life insurance policy on his wife.

She was stabbed repeatedly and beaten with a blunt object. Charles Sennett later committed suicide.

Smith’s accomplice also was convicted and sentenced to death and executed 2010.

States with the death penalty increasingly struggle to get the barbiturates used in lethal-injection protocols, in part due to a European ban on pharmaceutical companies selling drugs to be used in executions.

Alabama, Mississippi and Oklahoma have all introduced new gas-based protocols.

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