Testimony ends in trial over Arkansas’ use of execution drug
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — A federal trial to consider the legality of Arkansas’ use of a sedative in executions ended Thursday without a ruling from the bench.
In their closing arguments, lawyers for death row inmates challenged the use of midazolam in lethal injections, saying it doesn’t provide enough anesthesia to block pain. They said the sedative effects of the drug aren’t sufficient to stop the second administered drug, a paralytic, from making inmates feel like they’re “being set on fire.”
The state called that argument “pure, rank speculation,” and noted that the sedative has been used in dozens of executions around the country.