11th Hour Stay of Execution Ordered by SCOTUS

SCOTUS issued an 11th hour stay of execution
one hour before the scheduled procedure.
Katherine Welles / Shutterstock.com
A Missouri inmate received a literal 11th hour stay of execution by the US Supreme Court after an issue to halt the proceeding occurred one hour before the lethal injection was to take place.

Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito did not explain why he issued the order suspending Russell Bucklew’s execution, which was scheduled for 12:01am Wednesday. But Chris Koster, Missouri’s Attorney General, stated his office understands the Supreme Court would consider Bucklew’s request.

The state still has 24 hours to continue the proceeding of the death warrant. Under Missouri state law, they could legally execute Bucklew anytime Wednesday if the court rejected the appeal.

Sentenced in 1996 for the death of a Missouri man, Bucklew has a rare medical condition that might cause him tremendous pain when given the lethal injection. The consideration came under the likelihood of “unnecessary pain and suffering beyond the constitutionally permissible amount inherent in all executions.”

The condition is congenital and is known as cavernous hemangioma that causes a weakening of the blood vessels. Bucklew, 46, and his attorneys argued that he would suffer great pain during the process and in an interview told to the AP last week he is scared of what might happen.

If the execution were to continue today, it would be the first US execution since the botched injection in Oklahoma last month. An inmate was left in agony on the gurney before he died of a heart attack nearly 40 minutes after the procedure began.

Bucklew’s hopes rest with the courts, as Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon rejected his clemency request late Tuesday.

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