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Communist Vietnam's secret death penalty conveyor belt: How country trails only China and Iran for 'astonishing' number of executions

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Prisoners are dragged from their cells at 4am without warning to be given a lethal injection Vietnam's use of the death penalty has been thrust into the spotlight after a real estate tycoon was on Thursday sentenced to be executed in one of the biggest corruption cases in the country's history. Truong My Lan, a businesswoman who chaired a sprawling company that developed luxury apartments, hotels, offices and shopping malls, was arrested in 2022.

Missouri executes Walter Storey

Walter Storey
A man convicted of murdering a young woman has been executed in Missouri after the US Supreme Court declined to intervene, officials say.

Walter Storey, 47, died by lethal injection on Wednesday in the town of Bonne Terre, said Mike O'Connell, spokesman for the state prison system.

Storey had been convicted 25 years ago of killing a neighbour, a 36-year-old social worker, by stabbing and beating her to death, after learning his wife wanted to divorce him.

His final appeal was rejected by the nine-member Supreme Court six hours before the execution.

Storey's argument was the same as those of three death row inmates in Oklahoma whose planned execution the court has in fact delayed and agreed to study.

Storey's lawyer, Jennifer Herndon, had argued that the lethal injection technique used was illegal on grounds of the unreasonable suffering it can cause to inmates.

She said the reasons that the court had agreed to study in the Oklahoma cases justified a stay for Storey.

In April the court is scheduled to take up the issue of execution by lethal injection.

It could ban the use of midazolam, a barbiturate used in executions and associated with suffering by inmates, if it rules that it causes 'cruel and unusual punishment' banned by the US constitution.

Midazolam is used as a sedative before executions in Missouri.

Executions are sometimes carried out in the US using it as part of a lethal cocktail that also includes the drug pentobarbital.

An execution in Oklahoma last year using midazolam in the case of man named Clayton Lockett was botched and the inmate was seen writhing in pain until he died.

'Missouri carried out 12 executions using pentobarbital since November 2013 and no observer has seen anything inconsistent with these executions all being rapid and painless,' said Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster.

He said Missouri's method using midazolam as a sedative makes it impossible to compare with Oklahoma.

The Supreme Court’s upcoming case involving lethal injections could reshape the way executions are carried out in the United States. In taking that case, the justices are also acknowledging that the lethal injection landscape has dramatically changed since they last considered the issue in 2008.

States including Missouri have scrambled since then to find the drugs needed to carry out executions, switching drugs and protocols and adopting new layers of secrecy. Missouri, for example, planned to use propofol, an anesthetic, but halted an execution and switched to pentobarbital after the European Union threatened to curb exports of the drug.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor, in a dissent that seemed to foreshadow that the justices would hear a lethal injection case, specifically questioned “states’ increasing reliance on new and scientifically untested methods of execution.” 

This was the eighth execution of the year in the United States and the first in Missouri, according to the Death Penalty Information Centre.

Source: SkyNews, February 11, 2015

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