In what was described in the New York Times as a legal­ly que­sion­able swap club,” states search­ing for a scarce exe­cu­tion drug have gone to great lengths to obtain sodi­um thiopen­tal for car­ry­ing out their death sen­tences. In Arkansas, a deputy direc­tor of the Department of Corrections revealed that states often shared their sup­ply of sodi­um thiopen­tal with each oth­er. Wendy Kelly, who has per­son­al­ly trav­eled to obtain drugs from oth­er states, said, I went wher­ev­er they had them. As best as I’m aware, the agree­ment my direc­tor had with oth­er direc­tors, any time there was an exchange, was that there would be a pay­back when need­ed.” Arkansas gave the drug to Mississippi, Oklahoma and Tennessee free of charge, and obtained the drug from Texas. Last September, Arizona ordered a ship­ment of lethal injec­tion drugs from over­seas and worked close­ly with U.S. Customs and the Food and Drug Administration to pre­vent the ship­ment from being delayed at the bor­der. The ship­ments were labeled as being for vet­eri­nary use, per­haps to avoid tighter scrutiny.

Dale Baich, a fed­er­al pub­lic defend­er in Arizona said, Based upon our review of doc­u­ments released by fed­er­al agen­cies, it appears that there was a cul­ture of pre­med­i­tat­ed decep­tion. Someone came up with a plan to bypass the process that would have stopped the drugs at the bor­der.” Arizona denied any wrong­do­ing. Criminal jus­tice expert Douglas A. Berman of Ohio State University said the recent legal chal­lenges con­cern­ing lethal injec­tion drugs are more than an incon­ve­nience to the process. This mess is a speed bump, but one that does raise seri­ous issues about the death penal­ty.” Recently, the Drug Enforcement Administration seized lethal injec­tion drugs that were obtained from over­seas by Georgia, Kentucky, and Tennessee. 

(J. Schwartz, Seeking Execution Drug, States Cut Legal Corners,” New York Times, April 14, 2011). See International and Lethal Injection.

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