Georgia called off a second planned execution on Tuesday, a day after it scrapped a lethal injection at the last minute because it discovered the drugs were “cloudy.”
The state Department of Corrections said in a statement that it was cancelling the executions of Kelly Gissendaner and Brian Terrell out of an “abundance of caution” and that the courts would set new dates when the agency was ready to proceed.
Gissendaner, the only woman on Georgia’s death row, was waiting to hear if the U.S. Supreme Court would stop her Monday night execution when prison officials postponed it about 11 p.m. ET, citing a possible problem with the drug.
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“Prior to the execution, the drugs were sent to an independent lab for testing of potency,” the agency said. “The drugs fell within the acceptable testing limits.”
But in the hours leading up to the execution, officials said, the chemicals obtained through a specialty pharmacy appeared “cloudy.”
“The Department of Corrections immediately consulted with a pharmacist, and in an abundance of caution, Inmate Gissendaner’s execution has been postponed,” the agency said in a statement Monday night.
On Tuesday afternoon, officials said they were also cancelling Terrell’s execution, originally planned for next week, while they analyze the drugs.
It’s still not clear what might have been wrong with the dose.
“This particular batch just didn’t come out like it was supposed to,” the state’s attorney told defense lawyers, according to papers Gissendaner filed with the Supreme Court on Tuesday.
Georgia uses pentobarbital in a one-drug protocol for executions. But an FDA-approved form of that drug is no longer available, so the state has to have it compounded by pharmacies.









