A pharmacy that had been set to provide the state of Missouri with drugs needed for an execution later this month has agreed not to do so, according to court documents filed Monday.
Lawyers for Michael Taylor, the Missouri inmate scheduled for lethal injection on Feb. 26, had filed a lawsuit claiming that the state could not guarantee the quality of the drugs to be used and that the drugs could cause cruel and unusual punishment during the execution. Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon’s office said last week that the state already had the drugs needed to carry out Taylor’s death sentence.
Papers filed Monday, according to the Associated Press, said the pharmacy had agreed not to provide or prepare any pentobarbital for the execution, and that the pharmacy had not already supplied the state with the necessary drugs. The Tulsa, Oklahoma-based Apothecary Shoppe had been tapped to provide compounded pentobarbital for the execution because the only company licensed to manufacture pentobarbital has agreed not to sell it for executions, according to the report.
U.S. District Judge Terence Kern dismissed Taylor’s lawsuit against the Apothecary Shoppe Tuesday, after the agreement was reached. Missouri officials said Tuesday afternoon that the execution would still take place on February 26 but have not revealed the source of the drugs they plan to use.









