A never-before-used combination of lethal injection drugs could cause a condemned Ohio man to experience “the terror of air hunger” for five minutes, an anesthesiologist argued in federal court Friday, one week before the scheduled execution of 53-year-old Dennis McGuire.
“Air hunger is a horrible feeling,” said David Waisel, a professor at Harvard Medical School, in his testimony as reported by the Associated Press. “It’s the inability to get your breath.”
The two-day hearing marks a last-ditch effort by defense attorneys to stay the execution of McGuire, sentenced to die on Jan. 16 for the 1989 rape and murder of a 22-year-old pregnant woman.
Due a shortage of the typically used lethal injection drug pentobarbital, Ohio’s department of rehabilitation and correction plans to use a dose of the sedative midazolam and the painkiller hydromorphone. Though it’s been a backup in Ohio’s execution process since 2009, that combination of drugs has never been used in the United States.
Florida is the only state that has used midazolam for lethal injections, according to the non-profit Death Penalty Information Center, but it was used as part of a three-drug protocol, not two.
Waisel and defense attorneys argue that the two-drug combination won’t properly sedate McGuire, leaving him with the feelings of “agony and terror” that accompany suffocation, according to court filings. Because McGuire has sleep apnea, resulting in a difficulty to breathe while asleep, the chances of his suffering during execution will be even greater, said Waisel.
The state says its own anesthesiology expert will testify that no such suffering will take place, and points to two instances where higher courts rejected claims that the drugs could cause severe pain. That testimony will be heard on Sunday.









