This week, Point of Inquiry welcomes Dahlia Lithwick, Senior Editor and Legal Correspondent for Slate,
where she writes the "Supreme Court Dispatches" and "Jurisprudence"
columns. Her legal commentary won her a National Magazine Award in 2013.
She is a graduate of Stanford Law School and she joins Lindsay
Beyerstein to talk about the crisis facing capital punishment in the
United States.
Almost all executions in the United States are performed by lethal
Injection but America's go-to lethal injection drug cocktail is rapidly
becoming obsolete because a key component is no longer readily
available. States have been reduced to scrounging drugs from unregulated
bulk pharmacies and experimenting with secret and untested mixtures of
medications, a practice that may amount to cruel and unusual
punishment.
On May 21, the U.S. Supreme Court stayed the execution of Russell
Bucklew of Missouri, just two hours before he was scheduled to be
executed for the murder of Michael Sanders. Bucklew suffers from a
condition called cavernous hemangioma, which means that his brain is a
swamp of blood-vessel based tumors where drugs could pool or leak during
a lethal injection. Bucklew's lawyers argued that Missouri's secret
lethal execution protocol risked causing their client an agonizing
death. They cited the example of Clayton Lockett, an Oklahoma inmate who
took 43 minutes to die last month, during a botched execution, a death
so horrific that the State of Oklahoma suspended executions pending an
investigation.
Lithwick and Beyerstein discuss immediate practical crisis of capital
punishment, as well as the larger moral and legal issues surrounding the
death penalty.
Interview:
http://www.pointofinquiry.org/capital_punishment_in_crisis_with_dahlia_lithwick
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