On January 16, Ohio car­ried out the first lethal injec­tion in the U.S. using a new pro­to­col, result­ing in a lengthy and dis­rup­tive exe­cu­tion. Ohio employed a back-up pro­ce­dure to exe­cute Dennis McGuire, using mida­zo­lam, a seda­tive, and hydro­mor­phone, a painkiller. Witnesses to the exe­cu­tion report­ed that McGuire snort­ed, gasped, and strug­gled dur­ing the exe­cu­tion, which took longer than usu­al for death to occur. Deborah Denno, a pro­fes­sor at Fordham Law School and lethal injec­tion expert, said, Whether there were chok­ing sounds or it was just snort­ing, the exe­cu­tion didn’t go the way it was sup­posed to go.” Anesthesiologists had warned that the new cock­tail of drugs could cause a con­di­tion called air hunger,” in which the inmate would gasp for air but be unable to absorb oxy­gen. On January 9, Oklahoma exe­cut­ed Michael Wilson using dif­fer­ent drugs, and the inmate on the gur­ney said, I feel my whole body burn­ing,” as the drugs began to flow.

Ohio had pre­vi­ous­ly used pen­to­bar­bi­tal, an anes­thet­ic, but changed drugs after the sup­ply of pen­to­bar­bi­tal expired and the man­u­fac­tur­er put restric­tions in place to stop it from being used in executions.

(R. Lyman, Ohio Execution Using Untested Drug Cocktail Renews the Debate Over Lethal Injections,” New York Times, January 16, 2014). See Lethal Injection. The 4 states (Florida, Oklahoma, Ohio, and Texas) car­ry­ing out the first exe­cu­tions of 2014 are using 4 dif­fer­ent lethal injec­tion pro­ce­dures, an indi­ca­tion of how unset­tled this area is.

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