Part of it is to give time for them to be exonerated, as often happens, or to prove through behavior in prison that they are not a threat to society. The prisoners attorney will draw out the process as much as possible with appeals or mistrials or re-sentencing. If they’re gonna die, you might as well exhaust every single other option first.
Part of it is because it’s actually very difficult for most states to get the drugs used in lethal injection, and lethal injection is the only method most states will use, despite being the least humane way to do it.
The companies producing these drugs will often not sell them to prisons or state agencies on the basis that the people administering the drugs are NOT healthcare professionals, they are cops, and even if a doctor was involved the drugs are not humane (the drug that stops the prisoner from reacting violently to the ones that kill them is a muscle paralytic, they still feel everything, they just can’t speak or react physically)
Latest Answers