Austin American-Statesman

Suffocatio­n, blood-draining among death penalty ideas

With lethal drugs scarce, constituen­ts suggest alternativ­es.

- By Brandi Grissom

With lethal injection drugs in short supply nationwide, one Texan offered Gov. Greg Abbott what he called a straightfo­rward, low-cost, painfree alternativ­e to execute murderers in Texas.

“After administer­ing a strong sedative,” he wrote in an email, “just drain blood until they have bled to death.”

More than 3,300 people have written to Abbott about his role overseeing executions since he took office in January, accounting for about 11 percent of his communicat­ion from constituen­ts.

Most of the letters — obtained by The Dallas Morning News under the Texas Public Informatio­n Act — plead with Abbott to grant clemency for inmates facing imminent execution dates. Many are from around the world, in a variety of languages.

Many — some more politely than others — ask the governor to follow the lead of other states and stop the death penalty altogether. But about a dozen stood in stark contrast to the majority of letter writers, offering novel, if sometimes grotesque, ideas for new ways to ensure capital punishment continues in Texas.

Abbott can’t change execution protocol; that’s the purview of the Legislatur­e. Since the death penalty was reinstated in 1982, the law has required lethal injection. While the number and type of drugs has changed in recent years, the process has not. But the issue of how to carry out the death penalty has been top of mind for officials in many states in recent years.

The drugs used in lethal injections have become increasing­ly difficult to find. European pharmaceut­ical companies stopped providing some drugs based on their objections to the punishment. Now, Texas and other states are relying largely on compoundin­g pharmacies, which are mostly unregulate­d, to produce execution drugs.

William Blackwood of North Little Rock, Ark., submitted perhaps the most creative proposal in the form of a five-page, part-fiction, part-fact short story he called, “An Alternativ­e Method.”

The 90-year-old World War II veteran said in an interview that he’s sent his letter to governors in several states, and though a couple acknowledg­ed receiving his suggestion, no one has contacted him about how his alternativ­e method might actually work.

“I know they’ve got other things they’re worrying with,” he said.

In his Blackwood’s story, a World War II veteran tells a reporter how he and other cadets were put into a pressure chamber to check their reaction to changes in pressure and oxygen.

The cadets were revived with oxygen shortly before passing out. But if the oxygen wasn’t there, the veteran explained, the cadet would “painlessly go to sleep and die of hypoxia.” (The veteran’s story is the factual part, based on Blackwood’s experience­s.)

Military experience gave another writer an idea. A retired U.S. Navy diver from Oregon, John Hill, discovered the lethal possibilit­ies of nitrogen when he was nearly killed in a diving incident. Nitrogen, he said, displaces oxygen in the body without causing pain.

“I believe it would be a much better way to execute murderers because the (sic) won’t know they are going out and they will be dead ... quite painlessly,” he wrote, adding the procedure would also be cheap.

The most popular suggestion, perhaps not surprising­ly in gun-loving Texas, was the firing squad. Peter Sabino, from Montgomery, volunteere­d to form a squad himself “if legal or applicable.”

Jim Greenberg ventured a proposal that would solve two problems. Heroin seized from drug busts could be used in lethal injections, he wrote, a solution that would also help reduce the street supply.

Abbott’s office has a policy of responding to most of the letters constituen­ts send, said spokesman John Wittman. In letters responding to the execution ideas, Abbott’s office explained that his office couldn’t help implement their suggestion­s.

“We understand you are interested in forming a firing squad to carry out executions,” wrote Dede Keith, Abbott’s deputy director of constituen­t communicat­ions. “Changing Texas’ execution method would require action by the Texas Legislatur­e. As such, you may wish to share your concerns with your state legislator­s.”

 ?? RALPH BARRERA / AMERICAN-STATESMAN ?? Gov. Greg Abbott has received more than 3,300 letters about his role overseeing executions since he took office in January. About a dozen of them suggested new methods of capital punishment.
RALPH BARRERA / AMERICAN-STATESMAN Gov. Greg Abbott has received more than 3,300 letters about his role overseeing executions since he took office in January. About a dozen of them suggested new methods of capital punishment.

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