A Republican lawmaker in Wyoming has proposed mandating the using of firing squads for executions if lethal injections drugs are unavailable.
State Sen. Bruce Burns told The Associated Press that he had introduced the bill because current law called for using a gas chamber, but the cost would be too high.
“The state of Wyoming doesn’t have a gas chamber currently, an operating gas chamber, so the procedure and expense to build one would be impractical to me,” Burns opined. “I consider frankly the gas chamber to be cruel and unusual, so I went with firing squad because they also have it in Utah.”“The expense of building a gas chamber I think would be prohibitive when you consider how many people would be executed by it, and even the cost of gallows,” he said.
In recent years, supplies of lethal injection drugs have dwindled as European manufacturers have refused to sell to states for the purposes of executions. States haveresorted to using untested drugs, creating constitutional challenges.
Death Penalty Information Center Executive Director Richard Dieter explained to the AP that firing squads were not the answer. Condemned inmates are allowed to choose firing squads or lethal injections in Utah, but the state is working to phase out the practice.
“That I think would raise concerns in the federal courts, perhaps the state courts, about whether an unusual, perhaps a cruel and unusual punishment is being inflicted,” Dieter pointed out. “I don’t know how the ultimate ruling would come down, but I think there would be delays as that case got considered and it might even go up to the Supreme Court. This would be unusual. This is not what Utah has done.”
[Photo credit: Wyoming Senate]