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Lethal Injection Drug Discontinued By Sole Manufacturer

Lethal Injection

ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS   01/21/11 07:58 PM ET   AP

COLUMBUS, Ohio — The sole U.S. manufacturer of a key lethal injection drug said Friday it is ending production because of death-penalty opposition overseas – a move that could delay executions across the United States.

Over the past several months, a growing shortage of the drug, sodium thiopental, has forced some states to put executions on hold. And the problem is likely to get worse with the announcement from Hospira Inc. of Lake Forest, Ill.

Hospira said it decided in recent months to switch manufacturing from its North Carolina plant to a more modern Hospira factory in Liscate, Italy. But Italian authorities demanded a guarantee the drug would not be used to put inmates to death – an assurance the company said it was not willing to give.

"We cannot take the risk that we will be held liable by the Italian authorities if the product is diverted for use in capital punishment," Hospira spokesman Dan Rosenberg said. "Exposing our employees or facilities to liability is not a risk we are prepared to take."

Italian Health Ministry officials were not immediately available for comment.

All but one of the 35 states that employ lethal injection use sodium thiopental. In nearly every case, they use it as part of a three-drug combination that sedates and paralyzes the inmate and stops the heart.

There are other, similar sedatives on the market, but substituting one drug for another would require new laws or lengthy administrative processes in some states, and could also lead to lawsuits from death row.

Similarly, switching to another manufacturer could invite lawsuits from inmates demanding proof that the drug will not cause pain in violation of their constitutional protection against cruel and unusual punishment. Hospira is the only sodium thiopental-maker approved by the Food and Drug Administration.

Because of what Hospira described as problems with its raw-material suppliers, sodium thiopental is already scarce in the U.S., and any batches Hospira made before it suspended manufacturing more than a year ago are set to expire this year.

In Texas, the nation's busiest death penalty state, the Department of Criminal Justice said Friday it is exploring the use of another anesthetic. The state has four executions scheduled between now and July but has enough sodium thiopental to carry out only two February executions, spokesman Jason Clark said.

Ohio has enough to carry out a Feb. 17 execution but will not comment on its supply after that, or on Hospira's announcement, said Ohio prisons spokeswoman JoEllen Smith.

Hospira has long deplored the drug's use in executions but said it regretted having to stop production, because sodium thiopental has legitimate medical purposes as an anesthetic used in hospitals. Hospira continues to make two other drugs used in executions – pancuronium bromide, which paralyzes, and potassium chloride, which stops the heart.

Without providing details, Rosenberg said the company's state-of-the-art Italian factory was the only plant capable of manufacturing sodium thiopental.

Like most other European countries, however, Italy does not have capital punishment and opposes the death penalty. Italy's Radical Party brought a motion to Parliament, which passed overwhelmingly on Dec. 22, requiring Hospira to ensure that the drug would be used only for medical purposes and would not find its way into prisons.

The current shortage of the drug in the U.S. has delayed or disrupted executions in Arizona, California, Kentucky, Ohio and Oklahoma.

In the fall, states including Arizona, Arkansas, California and Tennessee turned to sodium thiopental made in Britain. That supply dried up after the British government in November banned its export for use in executions.

But California, which placed an order for 521 grams of the drug before the ban, filed a notice in federal court Friday that the order had been received. The state's lethal injection protocol calls for preparation of 3 grams of the drug for execution, along with 3 grams on a backup tray. Prisons spokeswoman Terry Thornton said portions of the drug are also used for training.

Oklahoma has gone a different route, switching to pentobarbital, an anesthetic commonly used to put cats and dogs to sleep. The state has conducted two executions with that drug.

___

AP Business Writer Colleen Barry in Milan contributed to this report.

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COLUMBUS, Ohio — The sole U.S. manufacturer of a key lethal injection drug said Friday it is ending production because of death-penalty opposition overseas – a move that could delay execut...
COLUMBUS, Ohio — The sole U.S. manufacturer of a key lethal injection drug said Friday it is ending production because of death-penalty opposition overseas – a move that could delay execut...
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04:36 AM on 01/24/2011
So, they took their plant overseas, cutting those jobs out of America, and now they can't manufacture drugs to use HERE because Italy doesn't like it? Nice. There are a lot of deserving inmates waiting, and I'm not even extremely pro death penalty, but every time I read the news lately, I get more and more thankful we have it, in cases where there is dna evidence and I'm not talking about a hair found, I mean tons of it, and cases that have been caught on camera, I am all for those suckers not getting an appeal and going straight ahead, quit wasting our tax money. Italy has no damn business telling them what they can and can't sell to us. I'm really just mad about that mainly, that they left here, went there and stopped making the drug because Italy is whining about it.
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chaapai
just an earthbound misfit, I
10:04 PM on 01/23/2011
well, back to the rope. Its clean, efficient and can be used over and over! So its good for the environment.
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lpharless2000
Live . . . Laugh . . . Love
09:09 PM on 01/23/2011
I wouldn't worry too much. I mean, in a country that has a higher percentage rate of its population behind bars in "for profit" prisons and is one of the remaining developed countries that still uses capital punishment, they'll think of something.

Wouldn't be surprised if Texas just brought back public hangings.
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11:51 AM on 01/23/2011
Thank you Italy and the Catholic Church.
11:37 AM on 01/23/2011
Outlaw lawyers and we can cut 20-40% out of the Federal Budget
08:57 AM on 01/23/2011
Perhaps now we can go back to something that is cheap and effective. Rope: $30 , Scaffolding:$100 . Not having to worry about a lack of supply of some random horse tranquilizer to take care of evil, murderous thugs: priceless.
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rayinprague
08:00 AM on 01/23/2011
China still also has the death penalty. Why not make it in China and import it? I am sure the Chinese government why try to seek any assurances that it will only be used for nonlethal purposes.
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mdmccormick
I am tired of this BS
06:23 AM on 01/23/2011
It cost too much to have a death penalty life is the way to go.
10:29 AM on 01/23/2011
People think it's cheap since once someones dead, they no longer have to house/feed/etc. The appeals process for death row inmates costs more than imprisoning them for life. TO me, executing sets them free... sitting in a cell until they die is punishment.
11:41 AM on 01/23/2011
We ought to just build a 100 foot high wall around Camden NJ and send them all there.
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freecitizen1946
02:39 AM on 01/23/2011
It occurred to me on the way home from work last night that the guillotine under general anesthesia would be entirely painless.

Now if only I believed in capital punishment.
11:44 AM on 01/23/2011
You can't bring General Anesthesia into this without a least talking to Major Malfunction and Colonel Mustard first!
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Broderick Crawford
01:17 AM on 01/23/2011
If you give them enough Thorzine they won't wake up again. There are so many substitutes you can use why focus on one med...
11:46 AM on 01/23/2011
How about using the opium from Afghanistan or the Cocaine from Columbia that we captured during the War on Drugs and just give them as much as they want and let them have at it?
04:37 AM on 01/24/2011
That's way to nice of you Sir.
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D-V-H
I am a Damn Liberal
09:51 PM on 01/22/2011
I love the irony of righties, who are typically pro-death_penalty and jobs getting shipped overseas.

Wonder how they feel about companies moving off-shore now.
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Tresco
Sistagirl Laughin' Thingy Award Winner!
09:13 PM on 01/22/2011
This isn't rocket surgery. It's a medical procedure. We're talking about a undifferentiated bunch of cells, not a human being. How about a lethal dose of good old morphine?
08:59 AM on 01/23/2011
Funny how there are 101 acceptable ways to perform an abortion on a child that has never done anything to anyone. But god forbid a murdering thug receive a single moment of discomfort as we send them to hell.
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Parade Keegan
I Can Hear You
08:01 PM on 01/22/2011
I was always against the death penalty until I had children, I then realized were any harm to come to my children by another I would beg that those who did the harm die. Islam has this one right, "an eye for an eye". Lethal Injection is too easy for most and I don't care if their humane needs are met. I would however change the death penalty requirements. Proof of guilt for the death penalty should be more than reasonable doubt, there should be no doubt.
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Aaron Aarons
03:15 AM on 01/23/2011
How about the death penalty for the United Snakes officials responsible for killing probably over a million children in Iraq through 13 years of murderous 'sanctions' sandwiched between two murderous wars? Or for the Israelis responsible for the murder of hundreds of children in Lebanon in 2006 and Gaza in 2008-2009 (and of hundreds more Palestinian children through denial of access to medical treatment)?
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09:24 AM on 01/23/2011
One of the reasons I appreciated life in the KSA. Kidnapping, child molestation, and murder were all capital crimes.
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06:58 PM on 01/22/2011
Is the full lock-down mode on this site a full employment program for censors?
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RK Johnston
Let The GOP Hate--So Long As They Fear!
01:47 PM on 01/22/2011
Actually, if lethal injections are no longer feasable, all the states that carry out executuions have to do is revert back to their former "pre-injection" method.

This means that instead of one method, we will be going back to a patchwork of the "Four Faces Of american Judicial Death"--hanging, firing squad, gas chamber, electric chair.

Personally, this might be a good time to consider abolition now, because if the Pubs take the White House in 2012 (especially with the crowd they have), it will be a moot point.

--RKJ
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tehixe
Anything can change the nature of a man.
08:38 PM on 01/22/2011
I'm pretty sure the Federal government can't outlaw lethal injection. That's one of the main points from the Lopez and Morrison cases. The United States can't take control of state criminal law because it's not one of Congress' powers. The Supreme Court could rule it unconstitutional, but that's unlikely, even if we had a liberal majority that's a very big step to take. To the extent it gets abolished, it's going to be on a state-by-state basis.