Kuwait Times

Arkansas multiple execution in limbo after court rulings

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Arkansas’ push to resume executions after nearly 12 years with an already compromise­d plan to put eight men to death over 11 days is in limbo after a judge blocked the use of a lethal injection drug a supplier says officials misleading­ly obtained and the state’s highest court halted the execution of one of the first inmates who had been scheduled to die. A federal judge could further upend the plans, with a possible ruling on Saturday on whether to halt the executions over the inmates’ complaints about the compressed timetable and the use of a controvers­ial sedative in the lethal injections.

Pulaski County Circuit Judge Wendell Griffen issued a temporary restrainin­g order Friday blocking the state from using its supply of vecuronium bromide after a company said it had sold the drug to the state for medical purposes, not capital punishment. Griffen scheduled a hearing Tuesday, the day after the first execution was scheduled. Griffen’s order effectivel­y halts the executions, which had dropped to six after the state Supreme Court blocked one execution Friday and a federal judge halting another last week, unless it’s reversed or the state finds a new supply of the drug.

Supply of midazolam

Arkansas, which has not executed an inmate since 2005 because of drug shortages and legal challenges, had initially planned to execute eight before the end of April, when its supply of midazolam expires. That plan, if carried out, would have marked the most inmates executed by a state in such a short period since the US Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976. “The rulings today are just part of the process and not unexpected,” JR Davis, a spokesman for Gov Asa Hutchinson, said in a statement. “The Governor will meet with the Attorney General next week to discuss the appropriat­e action.”

Attorney General Leslie Rutledge’s office said she planned to file an emergency request with the state Supreme Court to vacate Griffen’s order, saying Griffen shouldn’t handle the case. Local media outlets had tweeted photos and video of Griffen appearing to mimic an inmate strapped to a gurney at an anti-death penalty demonstrat­ion outside the Governor’s Mansion Friday afternoon. “As a public opponent of capital punishment, Judge Griffen should have recused himself from this case,” Rutledge spokesman Judd Deere said. The order came the same day justices issued a stay for Bruce Ward, who was scheduled to be put to death on Monday night for the 1989 death of a woman found strangled in the men’s room of the Little Rock convenienc­e store where she worked. — AP

 ??  ?? LITTLE ROCK: Pulaski County Circuit Judge Wendell Griffen takes part of an anti-death penalty demonstrat­ion outside the Governor’s Mansion in Little Rock, Ark. — AP
LITTLE ROCK: Pulaski County Circuit Judge Wendell Griffen takes part of an anti-death penalty demonstrat­ion outside the Governor’s Mansion in Little Rock, Ark. — AP

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