Imperial Valley Press

SC delays execution, citing lack of lethal injection drugs

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COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — The South Carolina Supreme Court on Monday stayed the execution of a death row prisoner after correction­s officials said they couldn’t obtain the necessary lethal injection drugs in time.

Richard Bernard Moore had been scheduled to be put to death on Friday. The court scheduled the execution earlier this month after Moore exhausted his federal appeals. Moore, 55, has spent nearly two decades on death row following his conviction for the 1999 killing of a convenienc­e store clerk in Spartanbur­g County. He would be the first person executed in South Carolina in nearly a decade.

An attorney for the state Department of Correction­s wrote in a letter to the South Carolina Supreme Court last week that the agency cannot carry out the execution due to the lack of drugs. The Associated Press obtained a copy of the letter.

The state’s usual injection protocol calls for three drugs: the sedative pentobarbi­tal, pancuroniu­m bromide and potassium chloride. But the correction­s agency has said it hasn’t had the drugs in stock since 2013, when its last supplies expired.

The agency has previously said it reserved the right to execute Moore with a single lethal dose of pentobarbi­tal if it was unable to obtain the other two drugs. Chrysti Shain, a spokespers­on for the correction­s department, confirmed Monday that the agency had not obtained any of the three drugs.

Lindsey Vann, one of Moore’s attorneys, on Monday said the delay of an execution due to a lack of drugs is unpreceden­ted in the state. In 2017, correction­s officials said they could not carry out the execution order of Bobby Wayne Stone without the appropriat­e drugs. At the time, however, Stone had not yet exhausted his appeals in court.

The high court affirmed Monday that per state law, Moore must be executed by lethal injection by default because he did not choose between that and electrocut­ion by a deadline earlier this month.

Moore’s attorneys said he didn’t make a decision because the agency has not been transparen­t with its execution protocols. The attorneys said that they have asked the prison for specific details such as what drug dosages are used in a lethal injection and the condition of the state’s electric chair. They said prison officials responded that they could only give them the informatio­n confidenti­ally, meaning the attorneys would be unable to run it by experts or use it in court.

Securing lethal injection drugs has become an increasing­ly difficult task in the U.S. as drug manufactur­ers have shied away from selling to states under pressure from anti-death penalty activists. Correction­s chief Bryan Stirling, along with the governor and attorney general, have advocated for a bill to shield the identities of manufactur­ers who provide such drugs.

 ?? SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTION­S VIA AP, FILE ?? This undated file photo, provided in 2019 by the South Carolina Department of Correction­s, shows the new death row at Broad River Correction­al Institutio­n in Columbia, S.C.
SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTION­S VIA AP, FILE This undated file photo, provided in 2019 by the South Carolina Department of Correction­s, shows the new death row at Broad River Correction­al Institutio­n in Columbia, S.C.

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