The Oklahoman

Records show Ohio has plenty of execution drugs

- BY ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS Associated Press

COLUMBUS, OHIO — Ohio has been able to replenish part of its lethal drug supply in recent months, and could carry out nearly 20 additional executions under certain conditions, according to new records obtained by The Associated Press.

The Department of Rehabilita­tion and Correction took in new supplies of midazolam, a sedative administer­ed first to condemned inmates, and potassium chloride, which stops prisoners’ hearts, in December and January, several weeks after receiving previous supplies of the drugs, the records show.

The records don’t indicate whether the department received fresh supplies of the second drug in Ohio’s method called rocuronium bromide, which paralyzes inmates.

But even relying on previous supplies, Ohio still has enough drugs for 18 more executions, according to drug logs which the AP obtained exclusivel­y through an open records request.

Over the past decade, execution drug supplies nationally have dried up as manufactur­ers, under pressure from death penalty opponents, started putting them off limits for capital punishment. The shortage of drugs stopped executions in the state between January 2014 and July.

Getting any informatio­n about Ohio’s execution drug supply has become increasing­ly difficult in recent years, thanks to a secrecy law that shields almost all details about the drugs, including their source and their expiration date. Death penalty supporters said the law — similar to laws in other states — was necessary to protect drugmakers from threats of violence if their role in capital punishment was made public.

Through records requests, the AP has twice been able to document the amounts Ohio receives, though not the source of the drugs.

The number of upcoming executions is not guaranteed.

Court rulings, drug expiration dates and other factors may reduce the supply.

After executing Dennis McGuire in January 2014, Ohio — like many states — looked unsuccessf­ully for years for a new source of lethal drugs.

The state won’t say where it obtains its drugs.

Attorneys for Ohio have said in court filings the drugs are from federally regulated manufactur­ers and are not being compounded in specialty doses, as in some states.

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