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"It does illustrate how difficult it is to find doctors willing to do this," he said. Doerhoff practiced surgery 20 years in Missouri's prison hospitals before becoming its executioner. Doerhoff advised Missouri on dosages for its new lethal injection machine on George "Tiny" Mercer in 1989, and executed him. In 1995, Missouri again turned to him after errors caused Emmitt Foster's execution to take a half-hour. Corrections officials called him the next day, wanting help with their public relations problem. He said he conducted every subsequent Missouri execution. The state halted executions in 2006 until reforms were enacted. Doerhoff said the national debate about lethal injection has mistakenly centered on drugs, which "always work." Failures result from IV malfunctions or misplacement by untrained personnel. Though his primary role is starting a central line, Doerhoff has helped mix drugs, and reassured nervous guards pressing the drug-release plunger. "These guys are scared to death, they're shaky," he said. "I assure them I've taken care of everything so that nothing will go wrong. I help them calmly go through the procedure." Missouri's court-ordered written execution protocol will be tested Aug. 27, when the state conducts its first execution in nearly three years. It calls for 10 to 15 syringes rather than the usual three. Doerhoff said Missouri's new protocol is overly complicated and potentially problematic. He said administering the drugs over a longer period of time in various syringes could jeopardize their effectiveness. "It will have the same effect, the guy will die," he said. "But it may not be pretty." Doerhoff, who's had three heart attacks, isn't sure he'll do more executions. But he hasn't slowed down. He owns three Harley-Davidson motorcycles and rides the annual Sturgis, S.D., rally every year. "I'm not a boring person," he said, "and I can still read the road signs."
[Associated
Press;
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