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Communist Vietnam's secret death penalty conveyor belt: How country trails only China and Iran for 'astonishing' number of executions

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Prisoners are dragged from their cells at 4am without warning to be given a lethal injection Vietnam's use of the death penalty has been thrust into the spotlight after a real estate tycoon was on Thursday sentenced to be executed in one of the biggest corruption cases in the country's history. Truong My Lan, a businesswoman who chaired a sprawling company that developed luxury apartments, hotels, offices and shopping malls, was arrested in 2022.

Arizona death-row inmates offered 'do-it-yourself' execution

The Arizona Department of Corrections has had trouble killing people.

It hasn't been able to get the drugs it wants, and the drugs that it has gotten have transformed the already gruesome act of executing a person into a ghoulish, unacceptable freak show.

But the department persists.

The latest move - unique in the world - offers Arizona death-row inmates the opportunity to perform a kind of do-it-yourself execution.

Last month, The Arizona Republic's Michael Kiefer reported on a new execution protocol announced by Corrections Director Charles Ryan.

Like many policy decisions in Arizona government, the process begins with the implausible and ends with the bizarre.

Executions, the Department of Corrections says, are to be carried out using either of 2 barbiturates, pentobarbital or thiopental.

Except there's a small problem. Neither of those drugs can be obtained legally. Thiopental is no longer manufactured in the United States and is banned from importation, and the manufacturers of pentobarbital refuse to sell the drug for the purpose of execution.

Will the state find a compounding pharmacy that will produce the deadly mixture for the department?

We'll see.

In the meantime, the new execution protocol says that if defense attorneys choose to do so, they can pick up the drugs on their own and the department will use it to kill their clients.

Really.

"This is a bizarre notion that calls for actions that are both illegal and impossible," said Dale Baich from the office of The Federal Public Defender in Arizona.

Arizona is alone in this lunacy (surprised?)

"A prisoner or prisoner's lawyer cannot legally obtain these drugs or legally transfer them to the Department. Under the federal Controlled Substances Act, we cannot imagine a way to obtain the drug. Those that obtain controlled substances illegally, go to prison."

As far as Baich or anyone else can determine, Arizona is the only state to even suggest such a thing.

Hey, America, who says the best (meaning worst) governmental craziness is coming out of Washington, D.C.?

Arizona is still in this game, baby!

Not too long ago the DOC got caught trying import from a sketchy foreign source some killer drugs that it hoped to use in executions.

Now, it's actually suggesting that the condemned inmate get his attorneys to participate in his killing.

Beat that, Donald Trump!

"It is hard to comprehend what the ADC was thinking in including this nonsensical, unprecedented provision as part of its execution procedures," Baich told me. "If the state wants to have the death penalty, it has the duty to figure out how to do it constitutionally. The state cannot pass its obligation on to the condemned prisoner."

Maybe any other state cannot or would not do such a thing, but this is Arizona.

We can give it a try.

Source: The Arizona Republic, EJ Montini, February 12, 2017

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