play_arrow

keyboard_arrow_right

Listeners:

Top listeners:

skip_previous skip_next
00:00 00:00
playlist_play chevron_left
volume_up
  • cover play_arrow

    Kapital FM 92.9 The Station that Rocks!

Foreign

Alabama Inmate Faces First Nitrogen Execution In US

todayJanuary 25, 2024

Background

An Alabama death row inmate is about to undergo the first US execution by nitrogen gas after losing last-minute appeals.

The US Supreme Court and a lower appeals court have declined to block what Kenneth Eugene Smith’s lawyers called a cruel and unusual punishment.

They say pumping nitrogen through a mask could mean he chokes on his vomit. The UN says it could amount to torture.

Smith, 58, was convicted in 1989 of murdering a preacher’s wife.

He told the BBC earlier this week that the wait to learn his fate felt like “torture”.

Alabama has 30 hours to carry out the execution from Thursday at 0600 GMT (0100 ET).

Smith would be the first person to be put to death by this method in the US and, according to the Death Penalty Information Center, anywhere in the world.

Lawyers for the inmate – who has been on death row since 1996 – told the BBC on Wednesday night that they were lodging another appeal to the nation’s top court in the hope of an 11th-hour reprieve.

Alabama already tried to execute the convicted murderer by lethal injection two years ago.

But the attempt failed because executioners were unable to raise a vein before the state’s death warrant expired at midnight.

Smith was one of two men convicted of murdering 45-year-old Elizabeth Sennett in a $1,000 (£790) killing-for-hire on 18 March 1988.

She was beaten with a fireplace implement and stabbed in the chest and neck, her death staged to look like a home invasion and burglary.

Her husband, a debt-ridden preacher, had orchestrated the scheme to collect insurance money. He killed himself as investigators closed in.

Smith’s fellow hitman, John Forrest Parker, was executed in 2010.

Smith had also made a separate legal challenge to the lower 11th US Circuit Court of Appeals – where he contested the legality of Alabama’s nitrogen gas protocol.

But that court also rejected the inmate’s request for an injunction in a ruling on Wednesday evening.

Smith’s lawyers said they would again appeal to the Supreme Court.

His legal team argue the nitrogen gas method is “recently released and untested”, leaving him at risk of choking on his own vomit.

Alabama said in a court filing that they expect him to lose consciousness within seconds and die in a matter of minutes.

State Attorney General Steve Marshall previously called it “perhaps the most humane method of execution ever devised”.

As the drugs used in lethal injections have become more difficult to find, Alabama and two other US states have approved the use of nitrogen hypoxia as an alternative method of execution.

Alabama has one of the highest per capita execution rates in the US and has 165 people currently on death row.

Since 2018, the state has been responsible for three botched attempts at lethal injection in which the condemned inmates survived.

The failures led to an internal review that largely placed blame on the prisoners themselves

BBC

Written by: Editorial Team

Post comments (0)

Leave a reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *