Louisiana seeks to resume executions imminently after a 15-year pause
Send a link to a friend
[February 12, 2025]
By JACK BROOK
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Louisiana will seek to resume carrying out death
sentences in the coming months after a 15-year pause, this time using
nitrogen gas as the execution method, the state's attorney general said
Tuesday.
Attorney General Liz Murrill told The Associated Press that she expects
at least four people on death row to be executed this year. District
attorneys have already begun trying to schedule executions for March.
State’s GOP Legislature expanded execution methods
The push to resume executions follows a move last year by the state’s
GOP-dominated Legislature to expand death row execution methods to
include electrocution and nitrogen gas.
Republican Gov. Jeff Landry, who took over last year from a Democratic
predecessor opposed to the death penalty, announced this week that the
Department of Public Safety and Corrections had updated its execution
protocols and is ready to begin carrying out death sentences.
“For too long, Louisiana has failed to uphold the promises made to
victims of our State’s most violent crimes; but that failure of
leadership by previous administrations is over,” Landry said Monday in a
news release.
He added that he expected “the courts to move swiftly to bring justice
to the crime victims who have waited for too long.”

Murrill said that executions will proceed for those on death row who
have exhausted their legal appeals. She said the status of the cases of
four men — all convicted of first-degree murder — means they will likely
be the first to be executed.
There are around 60 people on death row in the state.
District attorneys move to execute three men
DeSoto Parish District Attorney Charles Adams filed a motion Tuesday
requesting to execute Christopher Sepulvado on March 17. The court has
not yet issued a ruling. Sepulvado was convicted in 1993 of murdering
his 6-year-old stepson after hitting him on the head with a screwdriver
and immersing him in scalding water.
His attorney, federal public defender Shawn Nolan, said the 81-year-old
uses a wheelchair and is “in his last days” and moving “forward with an
execution makes no sense.” He also said his client is “immensely
remorseful” for his actions.
St. Tammany Parish District Attorney Collin Sims said this week that he
filed a request to execute Jessie Hoffman, who was convicted of first
degree murder in 1998. Hoffman's attorneys did not immediately respond
to a request for comment.
In another case, district Judge Lowell C. Hazel granted and then halted
Rapides Parish District Attorney Phillip Terrell's request to schedule a
March 19 execution for Larry Roy, who was convicted of murder in 1994
for stabbing an ex-lover’s partner and aunt to death. He also slit the
throats of his ex-lover and her children, who survived, according to
court records.
Roy's attorneys blocked the execution request by filing a motion
pointing out that Roy still had a post-conviction petition pending
before the court. They said Terrell had ignored the petition.
The Louisiana Supreme Court had ordered an evidentiary hearing on
several of Roy’s claims, including that he received “constitutionally
ineffective counsel,” according to the filing from Roy’s attorneys.
Cecelia Kappel, director of the Loyola University Center for Social
Justice, which is representing Roy, said the district attorney’s attempt
to proceed with the execution was “patently unlawful” and “emblematic of
how reckless the state’s plan to restart executions is.”
[to top of second column]
|

Death Row building is seen at the Louisiana State Penitentiary
Friday, Sept. 18, 2009, in Angola, La. (AP Photo/Judi Bottoni, File)

“Mr. Roy is entitled to his day in court, he’s entitled to full
assistance in counsel in litigating his post-conviction claims, he’s
entitled to his hearing and his claims need to be heard by a fair
judge and see the light of day and the state needs to grapple with
these claims,” Kappel said.
Kappel said Roy’s team legal team had not been notified of plans to
execute him and said she learned by reading about it in local media.
Terrell did not return calls to his office requesting comment, but
said in a statement post on his office's Facebook page that he
considered nitrogen gas a “painless method of execution” and sought
to "bring justice to the survivors of Roy’s horrible crimes.”
Murrill told The Associated Press that she anticipates Roy’s case to
be resolved soon and still expects him to be executed.
A controversial new execution method
The country's first execution using nitrogen gas was carried out
last year in Alabama, which has now executed four people using the
new method, most recently last week. Oklahoma and Mississippi have
also authorized the method but have yet to use it.
People executed using the new method will have masks placed over
their faces to replace the flow of oxygen with pure nitrogen gas
until they die, according to a summary of Louisiana’s new protocol.
Before the execution, the inmate will have access to a spiritual
advisor and the opportunity to provide a final statement. Media
representatives and “victim relationship witnesses” will also be
allowed to observe, according to the protocol.
Attorneys for those on death row and death penalty opponents have
called the method cruel.
All of the men executed in Alabama using nitrogen shook or gasped to
varying degrees on the gurney as they were being put to death,
according to media witnesses including The Associated Press.
Opponents say that is a sign of suffering and that the method needs
more scrutiny before it is used again. Alabama officials have said
they believe the movements were involuntary and associated with
oxygen deprivation.
Louisiana's Department of Public Safety and Corrections did not
respond to a request for comment.

Since 1976, four out of five death sentences in Louisiana have been
overturned on appeal and the majority of people on death row in the
state are Black, according to the Promise of Justice Initiative, a
New Orleans-based criminal justice reform advocacy group that is
also involved in Sepulvado's defense.
The death penalty in Louisiana is “rife with significant racial
disparities, widespread evidence of intellectual disability, and
misconduct by prosecutors that has resulted in innocent people being
sentenced to death,” the group said in a statement.
Louisiana’s governor pushed back against criticism of the death
penalty and said that he intends “to advocate for the innocent
victims and the loved ones left behind” and that “justice will be
dispensed.”
___
Associated Press writer Kim Chandler in Montgomery, Alabama,
contributed.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |