Oklahoma’s highest court put an indefinite hold on three scheduled executions on Friday so state officials can investigate how the wrong drug got delivered for a lethal injection earlier in the week.
The state attorney general’s office requested the delay while officials investigate the mix-up and look to possibly change the execution protocol.
The switch was discovered Wednesday afternoon, just a few hours before Richard Glossip was set to be executed for the 1997 murder of his boss over the objections of Pope Francis and celebrity supporters who say he is innocent.
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Gov. Mary Fallin’s office said the pharmacist used by the prison couldn’t get the third chemical requested for in the three-drug injection — a heart-stopping dose of potassium chloride. Instead, the pharmacist substituted potassium acetate without notifying prison officials.
They arrived at the prison in a sealed package that was opened in the early afternoon, according to Fallin’s office, contradicting her earlier statement that the mistake was uncovered in mid-morning.









