There are 5 executions set over a week's span in the US. That's the most
in decades
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[September 24, 2024]
By SEAN MURPHY
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Death row inmates in five states are scheduled to
be put to death in the span of one week, an unusually high number of
executions that defies a yearslong trend of decline in both the use and
support of the death penalty in the U.S.
If carried out as planned, the executions in Alabama, Missouri,
Oklahoma, South Carolina and Texas will mark the first time in more than
20 years — since July 2003 — that five were held in seven days,
according to the nonprofit Death Penalty Information Center, which takes
no position on capital punishment but has criticized the way states
carry out executions.
The first execution was carried out on Friday in South Carolina, and if
the other four scheduled this week proceed, the United States will have
reached 1,600 executions since the death penalty was reinstated by the
U.S. Supreme Court in 1976, said Robin Maher, the center's executive
director.
“Two on a single day is unusual, and four on two days in the same week
is also very unusual,” Maher said.
Here are some things to know about executions set this week across the
country.
How did 5 executions get set for a 1-week span?
Experts say five executions being scheduled within one week is simply an
anomaly that resulted from courts or elected officials in individual
states setting dates around the same time after inmates exhausted their
appeals.
“I'm not aware of any reason other than coincidence,” said Eric Berger,
a law professor at the University of Nebraska with expertise in the
death penalty and lethal injection.
Berger said some factors can result in a backlog of executions, such as
a state's inability to obtain the lethal drugs necessary to carry them
out, which happened in South Carolina, or a moratorium that resulted
from botched executions, like what happened in Oklahoma.
South Carolina
The first of the five executions took place on Friday when South
Carolina put inmate Freddie Owens to death for the 1997 killing of a
convenience store clerk during a robbery. It was South Carolina's first
execution in 13 years, an unintended delay caused by the inability of
state prison officials to obtain the drugs needed for lethal injections.
To carry out executions, the state switched from a three-drug method to
a new protocol of using a single sedative, pentobarbital.
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In this Nov. 19, 2013 file photo, a small group of death penalty
opponents stand outside St. Francis Xavier Church during a vigil in
protest of the scheduled execution of Missouri death row inmate
Joseph Paul Franklin in St. Louis. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson, File)
Alabama
Alabama on Thursday is preparing to carry out the nation’s second
execution ever using nitrogen gas after becoming the first state to
use the new procedure in January. Alan Miller is set to die by the
process in which a mask is placed over the inmate’s head that forces
the inmate to inhale pure nitrogen. Miller, who was given a reprieve
in 2022 after his execution was called off when officials were
unable to connect an intravenous line, was sentenced to die after
being convicted of killing three men during back-to-back workplace
shootings in 1999.
Missouri, Oklahoma and Texas
On Tuesday, Texas is scheduled to execute Travis Mullis, a man with
a long history of mental illness who has repeatedly sought to waive
his right to appeal his death sentence. Mullis was sentenced to
death for killing his 3-month-old son in January 2008. Mullis'
attorneys did not plan to file any appeals to try and stay his
lethal injection.
Also on Tuesday in Missouri, Marcellus Williams is set to receive a
lethal injection for the 1998 stabbing death of a woman in the St.
Louis suburb of University City. Williams' attorneys argued on
Monday that the state Supreme Court should halt his execution over
alleged procedural errors in jury selection and the prosecution's
alleged mishandling of the murder weapon. But the state's high court
rejected those arguments, and Gov. Mike Parson denied Williams’
clemency request, paving the way for his execution to proceed.
In Oklahoma, Emmanuel Littlejohn is set to receive a lethal
injection on Thursday after being sentenced to die for his role in
the 1992 shooting death of a convenience store owner during a
robbery. Littlejohn has admitted to his role in the robbery, but
claims he did not fire the fatal shot. The state's Pardon and Parole
Board voted 3-2 last month to recommend Gov. Kevin Stitt spare
Littlejohn's life, but the governor has yet to make a clemency
decision.
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