Florida Supreme Court Stays Execution to Allow Lethal Injection Hearing
 On July 25, the Florida Supreme Court (4-3) stayed the August 2 execution of Manuel Valle  to allow a lower court to consider a challenge to a new lethal  injection drug.  Last month, Florida substituted pentobarbital for  sodium thiopental as the first drug in its three-drug protocol for  executions.  Florida and many other states were forced to seek  alternatives to sodium thiopental when the drug's sole U.S. manufacturer  decided to stop its production.  Valle's lawyers contend that the use  of pentobarbital would subject him to a substantial risk of harm because  the drug has never been tested on humans for the purpose of inducing an  anesthetic coma.  Federal judges in Ohio and Delaware  have also recently stayed executions in those states because of lethal  injection challenges, although the stay in Delaware was lifted pending  clarification of the basis for the stay.  On separate grounds, a federal  judge in Florida found the state's death penalty law  unconstitutional because jurors are not given decision-making power to  determine whether a defendant is eligible for the death penalty.  That  case is still under review.
On July 25, the Florida Supreme Court (4-3) stayed the August 2 execution of Manuel Valle  to allow a lower court to consider a challenge to a new lethal  injection drug.  Last month, Florida substituted pentobarbital for  sodium thiopental as the first drug in its three-drug protocol for  executions.  Florida and many other states were forced to seek  alternatives to sodium thiopental when the drug's sole U.S. manufacturer  decided to stop its production.  Valle's lawyers contend that the use  of pentobarbital would subject him to a substantial risk of harm because  the drug has never been tested on humans for the purpose of inducing an  anesthetic coma.  Federal judges in Ohio and Delaware  have also recently stayed executions in those states because of lethal  injection challenges, although the stay in Delaware was lifted pending  clarification of the basis for the stay.  On separate grounds, a federal  judge in Florida found the state's death penalty law  unconstitutional because jurors are not given decision-making power to  determine whether a defendant is eligible for the death penalty.  That  case is still under review.Valle's case will return to Circuit Judge Jacqueline Hogan Scola in Miami, who will hear evidence on the new drug and make a ruling by August 5.
 
 
 
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