The U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday granted a stay of execution for three Oklahoma death row inmates until the justices rule on a separate challenge involving the controversial sedative midazolam, NBC News’ Pete Williams reported.
The court’s order on Wednesday came just five days after the justices decided to take up the challenge this spring over the use of midazolam, which was used recently in problematic executions in Arizona, Ohio, and Oklahoma. The justices’ decision marked the first time since 2008 that the high court has agreed to hear a challenge to the legality of lethal injection. The inmates’ lawyers and the state had requested a temporary halt to their upcoming planned deaths.
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The prisoners include Richard Glossip, who was scheduled to die Thursday night, as well as Benjamin Cole and John Grant, who were to be executed in February and March respectively.
“I want to just say that truly the eyes of the world are on Oklahoma today,” Sister Helen Prejean, a prominent opponent of capital punishment, said Wednesday. She noted that more than 30,000 people around the world have signed a petition against Glossip’s death. “I believe that many people simply don’t understand how the people of Oklahoma can allow this to be done in their name.”
The court’s order left open whether the state can execute an inmate without using midazolam, The Associated Press reported.
Last April, Clayton Lockett and Charles Warner were scheduled to be executed with previously untested drugs two hours apart from one another at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary. Lockett, the first to die, suffered a heart attack after officials injected him with a lethal drug. As it was being administered, Lockett reportedly shook uncontrollably and gritted his teeth before the eventual failure of his vein.
After Lockett’s death, Oklahoma’s attorney general agreed to stay Warner’s execution. He was put to death earlier this month on Jan. 15 — Oklahoma’s first inmate to die by lethal injection since Lockett’s botched execution.









