Washington: A man who was convicted for committing a double murder was sentenced to death by deadly injection Thursday in Oklahoma, being the first detention executed in the United States this year.
The implementation of the southern state of Donald Grant “was conducted with the complications of 10:16 this morning (1616 GMT),” said the Office of the Attorney General Oklahoma John O’Connor in a statement.
The last 46-year-old words were barely understood.
In 2001, Grant, then 25 years old, robbed a hotel to steal a guarantee for his being imprisoned girlfriend.
During the robbery, he fired a shot on two hotel employees.
One instantly die, and another grant is complete with a knife, according to court documents.
He was sentenced to death in 2005.
He submits a lot of attraction during a prison sentence because his punishment is reversed, citing intellectual deficiencies in particular.
In an online petition, the default claims that he suffered from fetal alcohol syndrome and brain trauma caused by violence harassment in his childhood from his alcohol father.
His last appeal was about the method of execution used by the South US Oklahoma state, rejected Wednesday by the US Supreme Court.
The grant received an injection of three deadly substances in the Oklahoma state county institution in McAlester.
Deadly cocktails are suspected of causing extraordinary pain for those who are cursed, which are prohibited by the US Constitution.
At the end of October, a prisoner suffered seizures and vomited several times after the first injection.
Nothing happened during the execution of grants.
The amount of execution carried out every year in the United States has declined in recent years.
Capital punishment has been abolished in 23 US states, while three others – California, Oregon and Pennsylvania – have observed the moratorium on its use.
A series of failed executions in Oklahoma caused a temporary moratorium on the death penalty in the state in 2015, but the moratorium was lifted in 2021.