Los Angeles Times

The execution assembly line

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The director of Arkansas’ correction­s department appeared at a Little Rock Rotary Club meeting Tuesday with an unusual appeal. The state needs volunteers — as many as 48 by mid-April — and the qualificat­ions are simple. “You seem to be a group that does not have felony background­s and are over 21,” the director, Wendy Kelley, told the lunch gathering. “So if you’re interested ... just call my office.” And what exactly would the Rotarians be volunteeri­ng for? To watch the state put eight men to death over 10 days in April.

No state has executed so many people in such a short time since the U.S. Supreme Court revived the death penalty in 1976. Arkansas is one of several states that requires “citizen witnesses” for each execution — in Arkansas’ case a minimum of six people who don’t know the victim or the condemned inmate (nothing precludes a witness from sitting through more than one).

But Arkansas’ assembly-line pace has correction­s officials scrambling, and thus Kelley’s visit to the Rotary Club. (The Arkansas Democrat Gazette reported that no club members took up Kelley’s call.)

As absurd as that scenario is — “Hey! Who here wants to watch someone be put to death? Huh? You with me?” — Arkansas is in this rush because its supply of midazolam, the first of three drugs in its execution protocol, reaches its “use by” date on April 30. And with drugmakers refusing to sell to executione­rs, it’s unclear whether Arkansas can replenish its supply. So the state is in a macabre race to see which expires first: the eight condemned men or the drug it wants to use to kill them. Heaven forbid that Arkansas and other states just abandon the barbaric practice of execution, as almost every country around the world has done.

Kelly should at least be honest about what the witnesses may see. Midazolam is supposed to render the inmate insensate before a second drug induces paralysis and a third stops the heart. But midazolam — medically approved to sedate patients before an operation, not to render them so unconsciou­s they can’t feel — has been involved in several botched executions. Most recently, Ronald Bert Smith Jr. “appeared to be struggling for breath and heaved and coughed and clenched his left fist” for 13 minutes after the drug was administer­ed Dec. 8 in Alabama’s execution chamber. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor recently wrote that prisoners executed with the drug “are suffering horrifying deaths beneath a ‘medically sterile aura of peace’ ” and that lethal injections “may turn out to be our most cruel experiment yet” in finding a humane method of execution.

So step right up, people of Arkansas, and save your seats. Time’s running out.

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