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However, the use of pentobarbital in executions has yet to be reviewed by the U.S. Supreme Court, which last tackled the constitutionality of injection in 2008 when it approved the three-drug method. In Kentucky, where the entire stockpile of sodium thiopental has expired, a switch requires an administrative process that typically lasts six months. Similar hurdles exist in California, Maryland and Nebraska. Even states that require only a prison official sign off on a switch - including Texas, Ohio and Tennessee
- could face a flurry of challenges. "You can't just switch pentobarbital for sodium thiopental and proceed as if nothing has changed," said Ty Alper, the associate director of the death penalty clinic at the University of California-Berkeley. "There's likely to be litigation and courts will have to satisfy themselves that it will result in a humane execution." The sodium-thiopental shortage became more serious when the lone U.S. manufacturer, Hospira Inc. of Lake Forest, Ill., announced it would no longer make the drug after authorities in Italy, where Hospira's factory is situated, demanded assurances the substance would not be used in executions. Hospira is the only sodium-thiopental manufacturer approved by the Food and Drug Administration. And defense attorneys are sure to fight any attempt by states to deal with non-approved sources. In fact, death row inmates in Arizona and Georgia unsuccessfully tried to halt their executions by questioning the quality and source of the sodium thiopental that the two states obtained in England before the British government effectively banned such exports in November. Though he won a one-day delay, the Arizona inmate, Jeffrey Landrigan, was put to death Oct. 27 after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that there was no evidence the drug was unsafe. "Speculation cannot substitute for evidence that the use of the drug is
'sure or very likely to cause serious illness and needless suffering,'" the court said. In Georgia, Emmanuel Hammond's lawyers argued that the state was "using illegally imported drugs that bear the label of a manufacturer that has not existed since 2006 and that were obtained from a fly-by-night supplier operating from the back of a driving school in England." But a state judge said he could find no proof the drug was inferior, and Hammond went to his death on Tuesday.
[Associated
Press;
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