Missouri carried out its seventh execution this year, less than two weeks after a botched execution in Arizona raised questions about lethal injection and capital punishment in the U.S.
The Missouri Department of Corrections said Michael Worthington, 43, was pronounced dead at 12:11 am CDT, the Associated Press reported early Wednesday. Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster confirmed the inmate’s death. Worthington was convicted in 1995 of raping and murdering a woman in suburban St. Louis.
His execution was the first since July 23, when it took almost two hours and 15 injections of a lethal drug cocktail to execute Joseph Wood in Arizona. Wood’s execution was the third such death this year to veer far from what has been considered normal procedure for lethal injection executions.
Witnesses say Worthington breathed heavily for 15 seconds before his breathing halted. He had a Bible on his chest. NO APOLOGY for crime.
— Jessica C. Machetta (@jmachetta) August 6, 2014
A federal appeals court denied an appeal from Worthington’s attorneys on August 1 to halt the execution. They argued that the inmate had a right to know details of the drugs that would be used to put him to death, but the appeal was unsuccessful. The Missouri Supreme Court denied a similar request on July 31. Both the U.S. Supreme Court and the Governor of Missouri both denied last minute appeals by Worthington.
In an interview with the Associated Press last week, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg declined to make any predictions about what the court might do in the wake of Wood’s prolonged death – an execution the court upheld. “Your crystal ball is as good as mine,” Ginsburg said.
This year, Missouri is set to carry out its greatest number of executions since 1999, and it currently sits just behind Florida and Texas on the list of most active death chambers in the United States. Missouri has also avoided the sort of controversy other states have faced because it employs a one-drug protocol that has been in use since 2011.
Other states have been experimenting with different combinations of drugs, most of them previously untested, after drug companies stopped allowing states to use their products to kill humans. These untested drug cocktails, many death penalty opponents argue, have raised the risk of visible suffering and have led many inmates to challenge their death sentences under the Eighth Amendment, which protects against cruel and unusual punishment.
A bipartisan panel recommended a massive overhaul of the U.S. death penalty system in May. In addition to calling for better training for officials carrying out death sentences, transparency about execution protocols and changes to the appeals process, the panel called on states to rely only on one-drug lethal injection protocols and to use only drugs approved for use in humans.









