The gruesome death of Clayton Lockett as a result of a botched execution last week is unlikely to make Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin rethink her support for the death penalty, based on a statement released from her office Tuesday.
While Fallin said that Lockett’s execution, which stretched for 40 minutes, during which he writhed and groaned before dying of a heart attack, “took too long,” the Republican said that death penalty critics and constitutional rights advocates “consistently forget to mention or even consider … Lockett’s victims.”
In an attempt to justify the procedure, which was shrouded from viewers in the gallery when it became clear something was wrong, the statement describes in grisly detail the 1999 rape and murder of which Lockett was convicted, adding that “Lockett had his day in court. The state lawfully carried out a sentence of death. Justice was served.”
Lockett’s guilt has not been questioned in the week since his execution, nor the judicial process that brought him to death row.
Advocates for civil liberties have argued that new and untested drug cocktails like the one that killed Lockett pose a high risk of painful, prolonged death, which would violate the Eighth Amendment’s ban on cruel or inhumane punishment.









