Nebraska to carry out its first execution
in two decades
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[August 14, 2018]
By Jon Herskovitz
(Reuters) - Nebraska plans to carry out its
first execution in 21 years on Tuesday by delivering a lethal injection
to a man convicted of killing two taxi drivers in 1979.
The state is scheduled to put to death Carey Moore, 60, at 10 a.m. local
time (1500 GMT) at the Nebraska State Penitentiary in Lincoln. It would
be the first time any state has used fentanyl in a lethal injection.
The drug, 100 times stronger than morphine, has helped fuel the recent
national opioid crisis, which has brought a surge in overdose deaths.
If the execution goes forward, it would also mark the first time
Nebraska has used a lethal injection to kill an inmate since the death
penalty was reinstated by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1976. Three
executions in the 1990s were by electrocution, state records showed.
Moore, the longest serving prisoner on Nebraska's death row, was
convicted of robbing and fatally shooting drivers Reuel Van Ness and
Maynard Helgeland. He initially received a death sentence under an
"exceptional depravity" statute on the books at that time that amplified
punishment, court records showed.
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The other drugs in the lethal injection mix are diazepam, typically know
as valium, cisatracurium besylate, a paralytic that can halt breathing
and potassium chloride, which can cause cardiac arrest.
Court records show Moore has launched no last-minute appeals to spare
his life, but the U.S. arm of German drug maker Fresenius Kabi had sued
unsuccessfully to prevent the state from using its products in a lethal
injection, which it says could harm its reputation. The company claimed
the state obtained the drugs through deception.
The state argued in a court filing that it obtained the drugs from a
licensed U.S. pharmacy, not by "any fraud, deceit or misrepresentation."
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Carey Dean Moore, 60, appears in a police booking photo released in
Lincoln, by the Nebraska Department of Correctional Services,
Nebraska, U.S., August 1, 2018. Nebraska Department of Correctional
Services/Handout via REUTERS
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For several years, the death penalty has been a political football
in the conservative state. In 2015, Nebraska temporarily became the
first Republican-dominated state in more than 40 years to abolish
capital punishment.
At the time, the Republican majority in the unicameral legislature
said it was banning executions because of religious reservations,
difficulty in obtaining lethal injection drugs, the risk of wrongful
convictions and unfair implementation of capital punishment.
But Republican Governor Pete Ricketts pushed back and helped place
a referendum on the ballot in 2016, which passed and restored
capital punishment.
Nebraska has 11 inmates on death row, which ranks among the
nation's smallest. California has 746 inmates on death row, the most
of any state, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.
If the execution is carried out, it would be the 16th in the United
States this year.
(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by David Gregorio)
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