Yuma Sun

Arizona death-row prisoner won’t be executed in gas chamber

- BY JACQUES BILLEAUD

PHOENIX – A prisoner scheduled to be executed in three weeks in what would be Arizona’s first use of the death penalty in nearly eight years will die by lethal injection and not in the gas chamber – a method that hasn’t been used in the United States in more than two decades.

Clarence Dixon declined to pick a method of execution when officials asked him if he wanted to die by lethal injection or the gas chamber, leaving him to be put to death by lethal injection – the default method for condemned prisoners who don’t make a decision, Dixon’s defense team said Wednesday.

Dixon is scheduled to be executed on May 11 with an injection of pentobarbi­tal for his conviction in the 1978 murder of Arizona State University student Deana Bowdoin. Prosecutor­s believe the execution will likely be delayed if a judge goes forward with a hearing to determine whether Dixon is mentally fit to be put to death.

The last lethal gas execution in the United States was carried out in 1999 in Arizona. The horrific nature of gas-chamber deaths and the advent of lethal-injection executions turned the United States against lethal gas

Arizona refurbishe­d its gas chamber at the prison in Florence, southeast of Phoenix, in late 2020.

Arizona, California, Missouri and Wyoming are the only states with decades-old lethal-gas execution laws still on the books. Arizona is the only one that still has a working gas chamber.

In recent years, Oklahoma, Mississipp­i and Alabama have passed laws allowing executions with nitrogen gas, at least in some circumstan­ces, though experts say it’s never been done and no state has establishe­d a protocol that would allow it, according to the Death Penalty Informatio­n Center.

Correction­s officials in Arizona have declined to say why they were restarting the gas chamber.

The move came as states find it increasing­ly difficult to secure lethal injection drugs as manufactur­ers refuse to supply them. Arizona had struggled to find drug suppliers but revealed last year that it had obtained a shipment of pentobarbi­tal.

The last prisoner to be executed in a U.S. gas chamber was Walter LaGrand, the second of two German brothers sentenced to death for killing a bank manager in 1982 in southern Arizona. It took LaGrand 18 minutes to die in 1999.

Both brothers chose the gas chamber in hopes that courts would find the method unconstitu­tional. While Karl LaGrand accepted the state’s last-minute offer of lethal injection, Walter LaGrand rejected it, saying he would prefer a more painful execution to protest the death penalty.

The case drew widespread criticism in Germany, which has no death penalty, and prompted repeated diplomatic protests.

Arizona’s gas chamber refurbishm­ent was condemned internatio­nally, including coverage in Israel and Germany drawing parallels to Holocaust atrocities.

Earlier this month, a judge denied a request by the Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Phoenix to bar the state from using cyanide gas to carry out executions in Arizona.

Authoritie­s have said the 21-year-old Bowdoin, who was found dead in her apartment, had been raped, stabbed and strangled. Dixon had been charged with raping Bowdoin, but the charge was later dropped on statute-of-limitation grounds. He was convicted, though, in her death.

The last time Arizona used the death penalty was in July 2014, when Joseph Wood was given 15 doses of a two-drug combinatio­n over two hours in an execution that his lawyers said was botched. Arizona has 112 prisoners on death row.

On Wednesday, the South Carolina Supreme Court issued a temporary stay blocking the state from carrying out what was set to be its first-ever firing squad execution.

 ?? ARIZONA DEPT. OF CORRECTION­S, REHABILITA­TION AND REENTRY THIS UNDATED PHOTO PROVIDED ?? by the Arizona Department of Correction­s shows Clarence Dixon, who was sentenced to death in the 1978 killing of Deana Bowdoin, a 21-year-old Arizona State University student.
ARIZONA DEPT. OF CORRECTION­S, REHABILITA­TION AND REENTRY THIS UNDATED PHOTO PROVIDED by the Arizona Department of Correction­s shows Clarence Dixon, who was sentenced to death in the 1978 killing of Deana Bowdoin, a 21-year-old Arizona State University student.

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