Baltimore Sun Sunday

Out of drugs, SC puts electric chair on table for executions

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COLUMBIA, S.C. — South Carolina once had one of the county’s highest rates of execution, even putting two prisoners to death in one night.

But now the state hasn’t executed a prisoner in nine years and currently lacks the drugs to carry out lethal injections for any of the 37 inmates on the state’s death row.

Some lawmakers are pushing to give the state an option to begin executing prisoners again by giving them at least for now no choice but to go to the electric chair.

“We have to have a method in which to carry out the sentences of the court,” said Republican Rep. Eddie Tallon, a retired state agent from Spartanbur­g who was the lead investigat­or in the case that sent South Carolina serial killer Pee Wee Gaskins to the electric chair in 1991.

Currently, condemned South Carolina prisoners have a choice between lethal injection or electrocut­ion, with lethal injection as the default if they do not pick.

The bill approved by the House Judiciary Committee last week forces inmates to be electrocut­ed if lethal injection is not available, like the current situation where South Carolina’s supply of lethal injection drugs expired and no pharmaceut­ical companies will sell them any more without a guarantee they won’t be publicly identified. The proposal now heads to the House floor.

Opponents of the bill said electrocut­ion is barbaric and South Carolina acknowledg­ed that when it allowed lethal injection in 1995.

Democratic Rep. Justin Bamberg said if the bill passed, the state would treat inmates worse than dogs because while lethal injection is a humane way to euthanize an animal, other ways are not.

“If you were to take that dog and throw it into a high voltage power line to electrocut­e it, you’d get hit with animal cruelty,” he said.

At least one Republican with an intimate knowledge of the legal issues involved in capital punishment isn’t sure South Carolina needs to go back to the electric chair.

“Death by electrocut­ion, like Rep. Bamberg said, is just a very cruel way to die,” said Republican Rep. Gary Clary of Pickens, a retired judge who presided over the trials of two current death row inmates and one who has been executed.

Clary also said South Carolina would invite lawsuits and several more years of appeals from death row inmates over whether violated their rights to change the method of execution while they awaited punishment.

“We’re going to certainly improve the economy for lawyers in the state on these criminal appeals which will basically be funded by the Legislatur­e,” Clary said.

But supporters of the bill said they aren’t changing the sentence, just how it is carried out. And the victims and their friends and families deserve a chance to have that sentenced carried out, said, a Republican from

Charleston who has been nominated to be South Carolina’s next U.S. Attorney.

“We need to keep in mind the victims who do suffer these heinous deaths is of upmost importance when discussing this,” McCoy said.

The Senate has already passed the bill, but included an option allowing death by firing squad that supporters of the proposal said was put in to derail the legislatio­n. House members removed the firing squad option, but that means the bill would have to pass the Senate again.

There is at least one other bill to help restart executions by allowing any company providing the lethal injection drugs to remain secret. That proposal hasn’t been considered.

From 1995 to 2005, South Carolina executed 31 inmates. In the 15 years since, the state has carried out just six executions and none since 2011. Since lethal injection was introduced in 1995, only three inmates have picked the electric chair instead.

The lack of execution drugs is clearing out death row in a different way. There was once close to 70 inmates awaiting a death sentence. But as some inmates win appeals and new, lesser sentences prosecutor­s aren’t seeking death as much.

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