Old Sparky's Making A Comeback.
Posted on Feb 19, 2016 2:13pm PST
Most capital litigants have been wildly successful in frustrating their
grim reaper by ensuring the blood thirsty states where they are incarcerated
have no lethal-injection drugs to pull off the state-sanctioned murder.
The Commonwealth of Virginia has had enough of the obstruction and has
given notice that the electric chair is now a viable option. Historically,
states turned away from the electric chair, believing lethal injection
to be quicker, less painful and less likely to be declared cruel and unusual
punishment. However, Virginia is one of eight states that already allow
electrocution as a method of execution, letting inmates choose between
it and lethal injection. The next inmate slated to die, Ricky Gray, has
not yet picked a method. What will happen at his March 16 execution —
or if it will go on as planned — remains unclear.
Executions by electrocution are far less common than those by lethal injection,
though they are not unheard of. According to the Death Penalty Information
Center, 158 people have been executed by electrocution since 1976, compared
with 1,252 by lethal injection. Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Kentucky,
Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia permit the practice in
theory, according to data from the center, though each state has different
rules. The last inmate to pick electrocution in Virginia was Robert Gleason
Jr., who was given a life sentence for killing someone to cover up his
involvement in a drug gang, then death for killing two fellow inmates
behind bars. He was executed in 2013.
Courts in Georgia and Nebraska have ruled that electrocution violates their
state constitutional protections against cruel and unusual punishment.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/public-safety/lacking-lethal-injection-drugs-va-might-turn-to-the-electric-chair/2016/02/13/9a331dea-d02c-11e5-88cd-753e80cd29ad_story.html?hpid=hp_local-news_vaelectrocution657pm%3Ahomepage%2Fstory