The U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday added another wrinkle to Ohio's
debate over how strictly the state's lethal injection procedures should
be followed.
The court without comment refused to allow the execution of a condemned
killer of an elderly couple to proceed, an execution delayed by federal
courts over concerns that the state continues to deviate too often from
its written rules for lethal injection.
Both the state and the inmate's attorneys were trying Wednesday to
determine what comes next, but the decision is likely to further delay
executions even though Ohio's procedures have never been ruled
unconstitutional.
The court denied the state's appeal of decisions in inmate Charles
Lorraine's case that said Ohio had strayed too far from its execution
policies to be trusted to carry out the death sentence for now.
Federal courts must monitor every Ohio execution "because the State
cannot be trusted to fulfill its otherwise lawful duty to execute
inmates sentenced to death," the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled
last month.
The court upheld an earlier decision by U.S. District Court Judge
Gregory Frost that chided Ohio for not following his warnings to adhere
strictly to their policies.
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