As the Supreme Court prepares to hear oral arguments next week on lethal injection in Glossip v. Gross, a growing number of death penalty states have been seeking out dramatic alternatives for carrying out executions. Last May, Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam signed a bill that would send death row inmates to the electric chair if lethal drugs became unavailable. In Oklahoma, the state at the center of Glossip, Gov. Mary Fallin just signed a bill that would allow for the unprecedented use of nitrogen gas if the state’s protocol is ruled unconstitutional. But perhaps most surprising to many Americans was the decision by Utah last month to revive an execution method of centuries past: the firing squad.
As in other states where lawmakers have sought to solve ongoing problems with lethal injection, the Utah legislation was influenced by the botched execution of Clayton Lockett in Oklahoma last year. The bill, sponsored by state Rep. Paul Ray, barely passed the House of Representatives by a vote of 39 to 34 before passing the Senate 18 to 10. The language of the bill reads, “if substances are not available to carry out the death penalty by lethal injection on the date specified by warrant, the death penalty shall be carried out by firing squad.”
Republican Gov. Gary Herbert then signed it into law. “It was pretty controversial,” Ralph Dellapiana, a veteran anti-death penalty lawyer and activist in Utah, told The Intercept. “Before Gov. Herbert signed the bill, about a thousand people contacted the governor’s office. Thirty-seven of them were in favor of the firing squad, but over 950 people were against the firing squad. So people were not very apathetic about it.”
Firing squads are far from unprecedented in Utah. In fact, since becoming a state in 1896, 41 out of its 51 executions were carried out by firing squad. Not many other states have officially recorded executions from a firing squad, but there are notable exceptions. In a 1913 execution in Nevada, Andriza Mircovich was given the choice of being hanged or shot to death. Mircovich chose the latter. Kansas, before it became a state, executed a murderer named John Coon in January 1861 by firing squad.
The new Utah law overturns a ban placed on firing squad executions in 2004, when legislators decided that death row prisoners should not have the power to decide how they want to be executed. “The death penalty is a serious duty of the state,” one Utah representative said at the time, adding, “I do not know why Utah ever put in statute that (the method of execution) is up to the discretion of the offender.” The law was not retroactive, however; those prisoners sentenced to death before the firing squad ban still had the option to be killed by a firing squad or lethal injection.
Among these prisoners was Ronnie Lee Gardner, the most recent person executed by firing squad, in 2010. “I would like the firing squad, please,” Gardner told a judge in April 2010. A five-man squad of police officer volunteers granted him that wish by firing multiple times before he was pronounced dead by the medical examiner. Gardner’s death received a fair share of national and international attention, but did not generate sufficient public backlash in Utah to demand abolishing capital punishment.
Although Gardner’s execution came on the heels of a number of botched lethal injections, he did not appear to choose the method out of fear of suffering a tortuous death. “He was kind of a big personality, he liked to be in the news,” University of Utah Criminal Justice Professor Rob Butters told The Intercept. “He had all sorts of appeals that were splashed all over the news, and he just wanted to make a big impact. So he chooses the firing squad while everybody else is getting lethal injections. So he elected to want to do that, so why would we deprive him of that liberty?”
The new law does not revive prisoners’ right to choose which way they want to die in Utah, although those convicted before 2004 still have a choice. Ron Lafferty and Doug Carter, both of whom, like Gardner, were convicted before the firing squad ban in 2004, do not have execution dates. But both have chosen their execution methods, having been asked at sentencing how they would prefer to die. Carter opted for lethal injection, but the new law means he will die by firing squad if Utah cannot get the drugs 30 days before his set execution date (Utah currently has no lethal drugs in its state). Lafferty, meanwhile, has asked for a firing squad.
It’s a practice that even Gov. Herbert admitted is “a little bit gruesome.” The bill’s sponsor, state Rep. Paul Ray, has not returned The Intercept’s multiple requests for comment, but has gone on record in the past saying there are no better methods of execution than firing squads. “It sounds like the Wild West, but it’s probably the most humane way to kill somebody,” Ray said last May, after the botched executions in Oklahoma, and reiterated the same thing to MSNBC’s Chris Hayes in an interview last month.
“Personally, I think it’s a good move because I would like to see the death penalty outlawed some day,” Butters said. “I think if we’re actually honest about what we’re doing, and we’re, like, shooting people and blowing their heart apart, that’s actually more reflective about what’s really going on, as opposed to just placating this idea that we’re putting people to sleep and that it’s peaceful and kind. We had a couple of terrible incidents (in Oklahoma) where they’ve gone badly. That kind of media coverage on things just highlights, ‘Hey, we’re killing people.’ Let’s make no bones about that.”
Photo: Trent Nelson/Pool/AP
In general I am against capital punishment but if you really wanted the most painless way to execute a prisoner then the obvious solution is explosives.
One second they are there….the next second, BOOM!, they are a red mist!
Maybe we could pit two condemned to death men in a giant coliseum and let them fight to the death, with the winner getting a reprieve? And give away free food to the attendees and have music acts playing to distract people?
I propose using gas chambers disguised as cattle cars. It’s a twofer!
j/k
Those who support the death penalty make the following arguments (1) It is a deterrent to others, (2) The criminal ‘deserves’ it, (3) It provides some degree of revenge, I mean closure, to those affected by the crime and (4) It has a low recidivism rate.
The more gruesome the execution, the more arguments 1 to 3 are enhanced, while 4 is unaffected. So logically, anyone who supports the death penalty should be in favor of making the execution as slow and painful as possible. Anyone who has studied Medieval methods of torture and execution will realize that the States still have a ways to go.
Seriously though. You know that’s not true.
Let em OD ON HEROIN
Death penalty should be stopped immediately. After we have cleaned up the ISIS stuff, we can create a penal colony in Iraq and resettle all the convicts there. This will be a win-win situation for all. Hopefully these convicts can turn the place into something like Australia which was also a penal colony once.
Personally if I had only a choice between Life in prison without chance of parole, or execution… my choice would be firing squad.
Any veterinarian could tell you many painless ways to accomplish the task.
The anti’s are responsible for their non-use.
They want the methods to be gruesome so as to raise opposition to the penalty itself.
Ditto the high cost.
The death penalty is gruesome not just the method.
The objective is horrifying – the calculated, organized and efficient killing of a human-being supported and managed at the highest levels of government: State and Federal.
Maybe the bloody, primitive and visceral versions of execution as opposed to the clean and sanitized lethal injection will bring the grave reality of this into full focus and change supporter’s mindsets – I hope so.
So I guess painless, clean, and easy carbon monoxide is out of the question.
The terrorist 0.1% are having a field day devising new ways to torture and kill their wage slaves.
There was this pig who was getting into my chicken coop eating not only the eggs but started killing the chickens and eating every part but the feathers. I tried fortifying the coop, chasing the pig, and shooting the pig with my air rifle in an attempt to disuade him. Yesterday I had had enough and reluctantly killed him with my .410 using 6-00 buckshot. The shot was perfectly placed and dropped him, yet even though the shot went through his lungs and heart, death was not instantaneous. My gun jammed ruling out a second shot to put him out of his misery and mine. The point of my gruesome story is to illustrate the gruesomeness in killing, even with a perfect shot. For those in favor of capital punishment, don’t be so eager to dispatch even the most unruly of creatures.
Totally against the dead penalty. But if you really want to do it low cost just go for CO poisoning, One motor, one exhaust, confined space, no mess, painless sleeping in, most humane way. What is it with these cruel dead penalties? Is there still a factor for (family of) victims getting supposibly more closure of some kind when it is done more cruely? I am baffled.
Obama takes responsibility for the murder of Westerners.
Obama claims he needs no war powers approval from congress because an attack where no American lives are at risk is not a war.
So, when does Obama indict himself and subject himself to the murderous US legal system for his murders under the color of law?
How does a God fearing christian type rationalize participation in a firing squad?
Well, there we’re not really talking about Christianity, but Mormonism… See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_atonement . (Though this doesn’t explain the equally bizarre decisions of the other states that lack the excuse of bad theology)
I absolutely oppose the death penalty. That being said, if I ever found myself at the receiving end of it, I’d take the firing squad over lethal injection or gas chamber any day of the week.
Total agreement.
As long as we’re going Old School here, why not execute people with a guillotine and place the severed heads on posts in public? The Romans thought it worked pretty well…
No, the French Revolution introduced Mme. la Guillotine in 1789, and it remained in use in France into the 1970s. As for sticking heads up on pikes on Tower Bridge, that was British custom.
You should study a little history before you cite history.
Well. if Utah really wanted to go Roman with the death penalty, driving into Salt Lake City might become interesting. For most of the time the Roman mode of execution was crucifixion, at least for slaves, pirates and enemies of the state (read terrorists). Mass crucifixions were executed along the roads leading into the city. The corpses were left on the crosses for public display as a deterrent to other criminals. And not even that deterred other criminals, to put that argument in perspective.
But apart from this historical excursion my theory on banning cruel modes of execution is, that those who are mainly supposed to be protected by this are the executioners and witnesses. Some ways to kill cattle or the firing squad are arguably more humane than the gas chamber or some lethal injections. They are more bloody too and probably harder to watch, which I think is why proponents of the death penalty in general prefer other methods.