Sigmon chose a firing squad after concerns were raised about previous lethal injection executions in South Carolina. Inmates required twice the dose of pentobarbital, and one inmate "died with his lungs massively swollen with blood and fluid," akin to "drowning," according to an autopsy report cited in court documents filed by the defense last month.
South Carolina restarted executions in September after a 13-year pause caused by the state's inability to procure lethal injection drugs. A shield law allows officials to publicly withhold details surrounding where the state sources its current supply of pentobarbital.
Richard "Peepee" Harpootlian, a former prosecutor who handled death penalty cases, introduced the firing squad proposal when he served in the state Legislature in 2021. He said he "wrestled" with pushing for the method but found it "less barbaric" than the electric chair.
"I don't relish the idea of somebody being shot to death, but if they're going to die, this is an alternative," Harpootlian said.
The state has released some details about how it plans to carry out the firing squad execution; the last one occurred in 2010 in Utah, the only state that has used the firing squad since the Supreme Court ruled the death penalty constitutional in 1976.
In South Carolina, three Department of Corrections employees will make up the volunteer squad, officials said. They will fire rifles, each one loaded with live ammunition, from behind a wall about 15 feet from the inmate, who will be seated.
Before the shooting, the inmate will be allowed to make a last statement, then a hood will be placed over his head and a target pinned over his heart. Bullet-resistant glass separates the execution chamber from another room where witnesses, including media, will be permitted.
of course soyboys are crying about it
Deborah Denno, a professor at Fordham Law School who studies the death penalty, said execution by firing squad remains one of the "least inhumane" options compared to other methods, including lethal injection and nitrogen gas, given how quickly someone can die after being shot in the heart.
Its return hearkens back to other periods in American history when firing squads were more common, such as the colonial era and the Civil War, when it was used against deserters.
"Even though [a firing squad] was used in our very first execution in 1608, we've never had this many states adopt statutorily the firing squad until now," Denno said, adding that a bill in Idaho would make it the primary execution method.
Witnesses to Utah's last firing squad execution recently recalled to NBC News the sound of rapid gunfire in the chamber and how the inmate, Ronnie Lee Gardner, appeared to flinch and move his arm after being shot. A corrections department spokeswoman said the agency offers mental health support for staff taking part in executions.
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With how advanced medicine is, how have we not developed a pill that knocks you out and kills you within 10 seconds, aren't there already snakes that can do that lol
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I remain bemused that convicted murderers are the only people in America whose death is supposed to be instantaneous and painless.
Everyone else mostly suffers comparisonly gruesome fates.
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It's taking some of the basis of liberal democracy's tenants to their extremely unpragmatic logical conclusion.
"Someone think of the multiple homocidoreno male feminists!"
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!historychads They could just keep a venomous asp around
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0 profit motive. There's plenty of super poisonious toxins. You'd need to go through huge regulatory hoops to handle, manufacture, and sell that. Essentially your only customer is the US/state governments who barely execute anyone anyone anyway, and if you're known to be making chemicals/biologicals for the purpose of execution there's lots of huge companies that will refuse to do business with you. It's not worth it.
Besides that, we do have that execution method already. Inert gas suffocation/oxygen displacement essentially does this, but trying to change execution methods is a huge legal/bureaucratic hurdle that nobody is going to bother to do because we barely execute people anyway.
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