Arizona executed a convicted murderer by lethal injection on Tuesday in a case that stirred controversy after it emerged that one of the drugs being used to end the inmate’s life was obtained in the UK.
Jeffrey Landrigan, convicted of the murder of Chester Dean Dyer in 1989, was pronounced dead at 10:26pm at a state prison in Florence, southeast of Phoenix, a spokesman for the Arizona Department of Corrections said.
A federal judge previously granted a stay and asked to know where the dose of sodium thiopental came from. The drug is used to render a condemned prisoner unconscious.
Arizona has no stock of the drug. The state’s attorney general, Terry Goddard, sparked controversy on Monday when he said it had been imported from Britain, although he declined to name the supplier.
Britain outlawed the death penalty, and has not carried out an execution since 1964.
A columnist at the Guardian newspaper had questioned whether it was criminal for a British firm to profit from the supply of drugs used in an execution.
Sodium thiopental, an anesthetic, is the first of a sequence of three drugs administered in lethal injection that paralyze breathing and stop the heart.
Lawyers for Landrigan argued that the drug might not meet US drug standards if it was obtained abroad, and risked causing serious pain and suffering in violation of the US Constitution.
Landrigan, 50, was sentenced to death in 1990 for strangling Dyer, who was found dead by a coworker on Dec. 15, 1989, after he failed to show up for work.
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