A Pulaski County judge has blocked the state of Arkansas from using its remaining lethal injection drugs in five executions scheduled for this month. The state plans to appeal.
Arkansas had originally scheduled eight executions in the span of 10 days because its lethal injection supply is set to expire at the end of the month. Three of those executions had previously been issued a stay that extends beyond the drug’s expiration date. Two were scheduled for tomorrow. The ruling came just after the Arkansas Supreme Court stayed the execution of Stacey Johnson so that more DNA testing could be done for his defense.
“While this ruling once again brings temporary relief, Arkansas continues to show no regard for human rights by rushing prisoners to their deaths,” said James Clark, campaigner with Amnesty International USA. “This deadly spate of executions runs counter to the trend in the U.S. away from the death penalty. The literal deadline of a drug’s expiration date is shockingly callous, but all scheduled executions must be commuted permanently. There is no place for the death penalty in a country that claims to value human rights.”
A report released earlier this month by Amnesty International showed that for the first time since 2006, and only the second time since 1991, the U.S. is not among the world's five biggest executioners .The number of executions (20) in 2016 reached the lowest level recorded in any year since 1991. The number of executions has fallen every year since 2009, (except 2012 when it stayed the same).