BFF-08 Tennessee executes first man in nearly a decade

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US-CRIME-EXECUTION-TENNESSEE,LEAD

Tennessee executes first man in nearly a decade

CHICAGO, Aug 10, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – The US state of Tennessee on Thursday
used a controversial lethal injection procedure to execute a man who was
convicted of raping and killing a child, after the nation’s top court
declined his final bid for a stay.

“I just want to say I’m really sorry. And that … that’s it,” Billy Ray
Irick said in his final words before prison officials in Nashville, Tennessee
started the process. He was pronounced dead at 7:48 pm, officials said at a
press conference.

Irick was the first inmate to be executed in Tennessee since 2009.

The US Supreme Court had earlier denied a stay of execution for the
convict, rejecting concerns about the inmate potentially feeling sensations
equivalent to being “burned alive.”

The high court’s decision was countered with a blistering dissent from
Justice Sonia Sotomayor, who questioned whether Billy Ray Irick’s planned
execution would be too painful and whether allowing it to proceed required
accepting “barbarism.”

The 59-year-old was convicted in 1986 of raping and killing seven-year-old
Paula Dyer. His lawyers have argued Irick has a history of severe mental
illness.

In an appeal to the Supreme Court, Irick’s lawyers challenged Tennessee’s
lethal injection protocol, which included the use of the sedative midazolam.
Other states have also used the drug for executions with mixed results.

Sotomayor, citing lower court testimony about the potential risks of
midazolam executions, dissented.

Medical experts warned the drug may not be strong enough to keep a prisoner
unconscious once he starts to feel pain.

If Irick were to awaken, a paralytic used as the second drug in Tennessee’s
lethal injection would prevent him from alerting officials that he can feel
pain, Sotomayor noted.

“Medical experts explained in painstaking detail how the three-drug
cocktail Tennessee plans to inject into Irick’s veins will cause him to
experience sensations of drowning, suffocating, and being burned alive from
the inside out,” Sotomayor wrote.

“If the law permits this execution to go forward in spite of the horrific
final minutes that Irick may well experience, then we have stopped being a
civilized nation and accepted barbarism.”

Three out of 14 executions in the US this year have employed midazolam,
according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

But the drug has been the subject of multiple legal challenges.

Ohio halted executions in 2014 after the botched execution of Dennis
McGuire using midazolam. The prisoner appeared to suffer for several minutes
before dying.

A federal appeals court in 2017 granted Ohio permission to resume
executions, after officials increased the dose of the drug by a factor of 50.

Meanwhile, the state of Nevada last month postponed an execution after
midazolam-manufacturer Alvogen successfully sued to stop its product from
being used in executions.

BSS/AFP/MRI/0847 hrs