The family of an Ohio inmate whose Thursday execution took nearly 25 minutes and was marked with ten minutes of gasping and struggling will file a lawsuit over the circumstances of his death.
Dennis McGuire was put to death using a combination of intravenous drugs that had never before been used in a lethal injection execution. John Paul Rion, the attorney representing McGuire’s children in their lawsuit, said at a press conference that the execution violated McGuire’s constitutional protection against cruel and unusual punishment.
“I can’t think of any other way to describe it than torture,” daughter Amber McGuire said in a statement.
While fighting last week to block the execution, McGuire’s lawyers argued that the new drug combination could cause “agony and terror” before killing him. Ohio prison officials opted to use midazolam, a sedative, and the painkiller hydromorphone because manufacturers of other drugs used in executions will no longer export them to be used for capital punishment.
The lawsuit could have implications in other states that are also struggling to find new ways to execute convicts thanks to the nationwide drug shortage. Thirty two states authorize the use of lethal injection, and there are inmates on death row in Connecticut, Maryland, and New Mexico that are still facing lethal injection executions.









