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Killer dodges lethal injection after death row doctors spend over an hour trying to find vein

Home> News

Published 21:08 21 Nov 2022 GMT

Killer dodges lethal injection after death row doctors spend over an hour trying to find vein

An execution in Alabama was delayed after officials struggled to find the prisoner's vein.

Shola Lee

Shola Lee

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An execution in Alabama was delayed after officials struggled to find the prisoner's vein.

Kenneth Eugene Smith’s death was scheduled for 17 November, by lethal injection.

However, after officials spent 90 minutes trying to deliver the deadly cocktail, they were forced to call things off.

Smith was sentenced to death this week.
Alabama Department of Corrections

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Smith's executions had been stayed by the U.S Court of Appeals earlier that evening but didn't go ahead due to issues administering the deadly drugs.

Smith was sentenced to death following the murder-for-hire of Elizabeth Dorlene Sennett.

Smith was one of two men hired to fatally stabbed and beat the pastor's wife and was convicted by a jury - that recommended life imprisonment, over the death penalty.

However, Smith was handed the death sentence, which he appealed on the basis that the state has previously had issues administering lethal injections.

While his appeal was rejected, ironically Smith's death was postponed for the same issues he raised in his appeal.

They were forced to postpone the execution.
Chad Robertson / Alamy Stock Photo

Smith is not the first prisoner to have experienced a delay while waiting for lethal injection.

Convicted murderer Joe Nathan James Jr was sentenced to death by lethal injection at a south Alabama prison on 29 July.

However, there was an unexplained three-hour delay during Nathan's execution, during which time officials at the Alabama Department of Correction (ADOC) failed to establish an intravenous line for the lethal injection; now his sister, Yvette Craig, has called for an investigation into that delay.

Nathan was pronounced dead at 9:27 pm local time following the delay in his execution.

While officials insisted that 'nothing out of the ordinary' occurred during the execution, they later explained they had difficulties establishing an intravenous line to administer the lethal drugs to Nathan.

It's not the first execution delay this year.
Norma Jean Gargasz / Alamy Stock Photo

Following the execution, human rights organisation Reprieve US argued that the process of administering Nathan's lethal injection occurred long before media witnesses were admitted to the facility at 9:00pm.

What's more, Lee Hedgepeth, who attended the execution as a media witness for CBS42, said: "[Joe] James’ eyes were not open at the beginning of the execution, and he appeared motionless, save for his breathing."

Nathan's physical condition coupled with the delay in his execution has caused human rights advocates and his family to speak out.

In an interview with The Guardian, the director of Reprieve US, Maya Foa, said: "Subjecting a prisoner to three hours of pain and suffering is the definition of cruel and unusual punishment. States cannot continue to pretend that the abhorrent practice of lethal injection is in any way humane."

Featured Image Credit: Alabama DOC / Michele Molinari / Alamy Stock Photo

Topics: News, Viral, True crime

Shola Lee
Shola Lee

Shola Lee began her journalism career while studying for her undergraduate degree at Queen Mary, University of London and Columbia University in New York. She has written for the Columbia Spectator, QM Global Bloggers, CUB Magazine, UniDays, and Warner Brothers' Wizarding World Digital. Recently, Shola took part in the 2021 BAFTA Crew and BBC New Creatives programme before becoming a journalist at UNILAD, where she works on breaking news, trending stories, and features.

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