Tennessee Has a New Execution Method, 2.5 Years After Last Scheduled Execution Abruptly Halted

Tennessee Has a New Execution Method, 2.5 Years After Last Scheduled Execution Abruptly Halted
Federal Public Defender Kelley Henry speaks during a news conference about Tennessee death row inmate Oscar Franklin Smith during a news conference from the the Middle Tennessee FPD's office in downtown Nashville, Tenn., on April 28, 2022. Stephanie Amador/The Tennessean via AP
The Associated Press
Updated:
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NASHVILLE, Tenn.—More than 2 years after Tennessee abruptly halted the execution of inmate Oscar Smith—admitting that correction officials were not following their own execution protocols—the state has announced a new method that could allow it to resume executions halted since May 2022. But that won’t happen right away.

The Tennessee Department of Correction announced in a brief statement Friday it had “completed its revision of the lethal injection protocol, which will utilize the single drug pentobarbital.” The Department did not immediately release the new protocol to the public or give any further details.