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Oklahoma Court Delays 2 Executions Because Of Drug Shortage

An Oklahoma court put the execution of two men on hold on Tuesday because a five-judge appellate panel was not sure that the state could procure the drugs used to put convicts to death.

Lawyers for the two men asked that their executions be delayed because of the uncertainty surrounding the method.

USA Today reports:

"The case is the latest in a growing controversy nationwide over the use of lethal injection for executions. Sources for the necessary drugs have dried up, and states with death penalties are scrambling to find more.

"Convicted killer Clayton Lockett was slated to be executed Thursday by lethal injection and a second Oklahoma inmate, Charles Warner, was to die March 27. Lockett's execution was postponed until April 22 and Warner's to April 29.

"Lockett is awaiting execution for his role in the shooting death of a 19-yer-old woman in 1999. Warren is on death row for murdering his girlfriend's 11-month-old daughter in 1997."

As NBC News reports, the issue has been that some manufacturers have refused to sell chemicals to correction officials wanting to use them for executions. That has forced some states "to come up with new cocktails or turn to less-regulated compounding pharmacies."

NBC News adds:

"Both routes have hit snags.

"In Ohio, for instance, the first prisoner executed with the readily available drugs midazolam and hydromorphone took 25 minutes to die and was described as gasping for breath."

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Eyder Peralta is NPR's East Africa correspondent based in Nairobi, Kenya.