Skip to main content
  • English
  • Events
  • Contact
  • Get our emails
Catholic Mobilizing Network logo.
  • Donate
    • Give Once
    • Give Monthly
    • Other Ways to Give
  • Who We Are
    • Leadership
    • Our Guiding Principles
    • Our Impact (2022-2023)
  • Death Penalty
    • News
    • Resources
    • The Church Speaks
    • Scheduled Executions
    • Monthly Vigils
    • In Your State
    • Federal Death Penalty
  • Restorative Justice
    • News
    • Resources
    • Catholic Social Teaching
    • The Church Speaks
    • Engagement Guide
    • National Conference
      • 2020 (Virtual)
      • 2023 (Minneapolis-St. Paul)
  • Take Action
    • Mercy in Action Project
    • CMN Actions
    • State-Specific Actions
  • Blog

Alabama Set to Use Untested Nitrogen Gas for Execution

In January 2024, Alabama will try to execute Kenneth “Kenny” Eugene Smith for a second time. The state’s first attempt failed after corrections officials spent hours working unsuccessfully to set an intravenous line for his lethal injection. The execution warrant expired before they found a vein.

On January 25, the state plans to use the untested method of nitrogen asphyxiation in a second attempt to execute Kenny. 

Nitrogen asphyxiation, or death by nitrogen hypoxia, is a process in which an individual is fitted with a mask and forced to breathe pure nitrogen gas. Without oxygen flowing through the airways, the body will be slowly deprived of this element which is necessary for all tissue functions, and the person will die.

This method has never before been used in an execution in the U.S. Alabama is the only state which currently has a nitrogen asphyxiation execution protocol, which was released in a heavily redacted court filing this August. The limited information made visible to the public has raised questions about the risk of potential gas leaks and accidental gas exposure to corrections personnel and spiritual advisors who would be proximate to the execution.

Alabama, like many other states, has recently struggled to obtain lethal injection drugs after pharmaceutical companies have refused to sell their products for the purpose of executions. Nitrogen gas is much more readily available, which prompted Alabama to pursue this method of execution.
 

Issue: 
Death Penalty
State: 
Alabama

Recommended For You

Report Reveals Most Exonerations Last Year Were People of Color

Nearly 84% of all exonerations last year (127.153) were persons of color. Nearly 61% (93/153) were Black.

Louisiana House votes to allow executions by nitrogen gas and electrocution. Bill moves to Senate.

Louisiana has not executed any individual since 2010. Under the leadership of newly-elected Governor Jeff Landry, that might change.
canisters of nitrogen gas

Kenny Smith Executed by Nitrogen Hypoxia in Alabama

Kenny was restrained to a gurney with an industrial-grade respirator mask strapped to his face. The valve on the respirator was closed, and pure nitrogen gas was forced into the mask. Without oxygen, Kenny suffocated to death.

CMN Statement on the Impending Execution of Kenneth Eugene Smith

On January 25, Alabama plans to execute Kenneth “Kenny” Eugene Smith using the untested execution method of nitrogen hypoxia. Kenny is a human being, not an experiment. It’s confounding the lengths to which Alabama is going to take his life.
American flag behind barbed wire

New Report Demonstrates America’s Continued Shift Away from the Death Penalty

The Death Penalty Information Center's annual report shows an increase in American opposition to the death penalty, and only a handful of state's which continue to conduct executions.

Related Resources

2024 CMN Lenten Reflections

WEBINAR RECORDING | The U.S. Death Penalty in 2024: A State of the Union

CMN LogomarkCMN Logotype
415 Michigan Ave. NE, Suite 210
Washington, DC 20017
(202) 541-5290 | Email us
  • En Español
  • Sitemap
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Donate
Read our newsletter
Copyright © Catholic Mobilizing Network (CMN) | Web design