Stuff You Should Know - SYSK Selects: Is lethal injection humane?
Episode Date: October 6, 2018Since the Supreme Court's ban on capital punishment was reversed, states have sought a humane method of killing sentenced criminals. They settled on lethal injection, but is this quasi-medical means o...f killing as quick and painless as we think? Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hi, everyone, it's me, Josh,
and for this week's SYSK Selects
have chosen how lethal injection works.
In the holiday spirit, we released this around Christmas
of 2013, and it can be a hard one to listen to.
But since whenever a person is executed,
the state is actually doing it on your behalf.
Since you're a member of the public,
it's probably best to know what they're doing in your name.
It's an eye-opening one and a sobering one,
and I hope it means a lot to you, because it did to me.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know
from HowStuffWorks.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark, and this is Charles W. Chuck Bryant,
and this is Stuff You Should Know, the podcast.
Greetings.
This is not a capital punishment show,
although we will deal with that, obviously,
but we at some point will probably do a full episode
on capital punishment.
I would guess, don't you, Mandan?
We have an article on it, and we're
going to touch on it here with lethal injections.
Yeah, and just coming across some stuff
on the electric chair, that to me seems
like it deserves its own episode as well, because it's so nuts.
Sounds like we're cooking up a suite.
Yeah, the capital punishment suite.
We come up with the best suites, don't we?
Well, it's a big deal, you know.
It's important.
I agree.
To cover, you know.
You know, Chuck, about 14 hours ago,
a guy named Joseph Paul Franklin.
I can't remember what his birth name was,
but he legally changed his name to Joseph Paul
after in honor of Joseph Paul Goebbels, the Nazi propagandist.
What a nice guy.
He must be to change his name to that.
Right, so Missouri just executed him at 1201 Wednesday,
November 19th.
It's today the 19th or the 20th.
I don't know.
One of those two.
And actually, hustler publisher Larry Flint
was making a big hubbub trying to keep the man from being
killed, which is somewhat ironic, although not really
if you followed Larry Flint's career,
because he was the man who supposedly shot Larry Flint
and paralyzed him for life.
Supposedly, was he not convicted of that?
No, he confessed to it.
And it was quite possible.
The reason that he gave for doing it
was because hustler had had some interracial spread
that the guy didn't like.
Like, yeah, sure.
And he was targeting interracial couples.
Got you.
He shot a couple of black kids in Ohio, I believe.
He was killed in Missouri because he randomly
picked St. Louis out of the phone book
and went and found a synagogue and just sat outside
and took shots at people as they came out of a bar mitzvah.
So he's racist.
He's an anti-Semite.
He also had serious mental health issues as well.
And he shot Larry Flint.
But he was executed.
And the whole reason that Larry Flint
was creating this hubbub about not killing this guy,
one, Flint had a famous quote from the last news
cycle that he didn't think the government should
be in the business of killing people.
So he's against capital punishment anyway.
You can say it like Larry Flint.
I don't do a very good Larry Flint.
He's put some marbles in your mouth.
Right.
You going to try?
No.
So he just doesn't think that the death penalty is a good thing.
Anyway, he's an abolitionist, you would say.
And then secondly, he filed a suit
to have the name of the supplier of the drug that
was going to be used in the lethal injection revealed,
unsealed, because it's secret.
And it's not supposed to be secret.
But as we'll find out, states recently
have had to scramble to come up with the drugs
to execute prisoners of the state.
There's a big thing going on that we'll talk about.
But that was the most recent execution in the United States,
which makes 35 for the year.
And all but one of those were lethal injections.
The other one being the electric chair.
Yeah, it has fast become the go-to method
for most states and many countries
if you're going to get capital punishment going.
Then you're probably going to do it
by way of lethal injection these days.
Yeah, but it's also the newest one, too.
And it came out of this, well, basically
what amounted to an abolitionist movement
in the 1960s and 70s that saw it to just get rid
of the death penalty.
And that was the third major movement in the United States
since the late 18th century, where people were just
trying to get rid of capital punishment all together.
Yeah, they did halt it in 1972 after Supreme Court ruling
Furman v. Georgia.
And they remember reading about this later.
Obviously, I didn't read in 1972.
I would have been a very advanced one-year-old.
But they said it was cruel and unusual
under the Eighth Amendment, violating the Eighth Amendment
of the Constitution.
And then but four years later, they
reversed that in Greg v. Georgia and said, you know what?
Maybe that is cruel and unusual, so let's come up
with a way that's not.
And they came up with lethal injection.
Yeah, and the reason why that cruel and unusual
had a lot of traction was because there were hangings before.
And hangings are very, very messy.
If the noose isn't right, the head can pop right off.
Or if the neck isn't broken, the person just hangs there
and suffocates for a minute or two and then dies.
And then electrocution is really, really awful, too.
I was reading a list of botched executions.
And electrocutions are very frequently botched.
Their heads catch fire, blood comes out of their eyes.
It's really awful stuff.
So there was this idea that the whole point of this
is retributive, it's you did something so bad
that we as a society have decided
that you can't live any longer.
But we as a society aren't as cruel as you are.
The point isn't to make you suffer, it's just to take your life.
And to do it in the most humane way possible.
Well, electrocution, hanging, gas chamber, none of those
really fit the bill.
So somebody came up with the idea of lethal injection.
But this wasn't the first time that was proposed.
The first time was in the 19th century, I think.
Oh, yeah?
Yeah, there was a guy named Julius Mount Breyer.
And he was a doctor out of New York who said,
you know, this would work because it'd be efficient, humane,
and it would keep the person from having some sort of hero
status develop around them that sometimes comes
from people who are hanged.
Gotcha.
But they went with electrocution instead.
Well, in 1982, the US became the first country
to use lethal injection.
And like we said, since then, it's really become predominant.
I think the current number of states
that have the death penalty is 32 as of today.
Yeah.
But it's tough because states have been repealing it.
It's dropping like flies.
I don't know about like flies, but maybe like honeybees.
Right.
And those are states that have taken
the possibility of capital punishment
off of their books, right?
Yeah.
So, well, you know, 32 is the number
that have the death penalty, right?
32 have a death penalty, not necessarily meaning
that they used that in the past year necessarily.
There's something called de facto abolition,
which is basically like, yeah, it's on our books,
but we haven't used it in so long that we might as well not
even have the death penalty.
So Chuck, like we said, lethal injection
is the most frequently used method in the United States.
And it's fast becoming the same around the world.
China picked it up after the United States,
and they replaced their shootings.
And that kind of led to, it seems like, almost a domino
effect throughout Asia of other countries picking it up
as well.
Yeah, the Philippines, Taiwan, Guatemala,
they're in Central America.
And they have all gone to lethal injection.
And right now, I have, in 2012, 58 countries
used lethal injection in 2012 down from 67 in 2010 and 63
in 2011.
Yeah.
And 140 countries have outlawed the death penalty worldwide.
And like you said, states are kind of starting to abolish it.
Executions are down in general in the United States.
Last year, there were 43.
This year, like we said, there's been 35.
And we're fast closing out the year.
But lethal injection is the go-to method of execution.
And so we're going to figure out how it works.
That's right.
Right now, there are 3,108 people as of spring of this year
on death row.
98% are male, of course, because you
don't find a lot of females on death row,
because they're smart enough to not to kill other people,
generally speaking.
Is that what it is?
Yeah, women are much smarter.
A lot of these folks have been on death row for decades,
waiting to die.
Maybe they're working through the appeals process,
because that all has to happen first.
Some will die on death row without ever going
into an execution chamber.
It happens.
Some people commit or try to commit suicide
before they can be executed after their appeals run out.
There's a guy in Georgia who almost successfully
killed himself.
He cut his carotid artery.
Wow, with what, I wonder?
Razor, the guard had given him, I guess,
to shave with ostensibly.
Here, take the razor.
And the guy, they rushed into the hospital,
saved his life, and then executed him a week later.
Wow.
It's a funny country.
So you're on death row.
You've exhausted your appeals.
You are finally going to get that execution order,
and a date will be set in place for that execution.
At this point, you're going to be moved from death row
to a place called Death Watch.
And that is basically the last stop that's
your holding area for the last days or weeks.
Right.
So Death Watch is both a physical place.
Like, it's frequently in the same part of the prison
that the execution chamber is located.
Or it might be in another prison entirely.
Some states just maintain one execution chamber
for the whole state inside a certain prison.
So you'd be transferred to that place.
And then Death Watch also is supposedly,
they're supposed to watch you so you don't commit suicide.
And it's also your, I think, rights
kind of open up a little more.
You get visits from people.
Your treatment is a little better.
I think you get a room with a view, as it were.
And you start the preparation of dying,
of saying goodbye, and of coming to terms with the fact
that it's happening.
Yeah, you know, the state of Texas
has these Death Watch rooms on highway exits.
Most highway exits.
You've got your gas station, your subway,
and your Death Watch room.
I believe it.
I'm kidding.
But Texas executes a lot of people.
It does.
Texas bears, they execute a lot, but they're not the only ones
that have all sorts of weirdness going on.
Apparently, 2% of counties account for like 50% to 70%
of executions in the United States.
It just seems like Texas comes up all the time
when they're like, the last time this method was used
or the first time this method was used, it's always Texas.
Well, Texas was the first one to use lethal injection,
like you said.
Exactly.
And yeah, they kill a lot of people there.
Yeah.
Not picking on you, Texas.
I love you guys.
No, here, I've got one.
Alabama.
OK.
In Alabama, it takes a unanimous jury
to hand down a life sentence, but it takes 10 of 12
to hand down a death sentence.
Really?
Yeah.
And a judge can overrule a jury.
A life sentence jury?
Yeah, and say, no, this person needs a death penalty,
and they do it frequently.
Interesting.
We'll pick on Georgia too in a minute.
OK.
Well, Georgia was the one that executed the guy
after saving his life after the suicide attempt.
All right, great.
I just wanted to make sure we doled out
enough embarrassment for each state.
So you're on death watch.
You can be visited more often, generally,
by friends and family.
We're in the last 24 hours now, right?
Yeah.
Your attorneys, spiritual advisors,
you're going to get your last meal.
That is not a fallacy, whatever you want.
They'll prepare for you.
No, that's not necessarily true.
Well, it depends.
Generally, they satisfy your desire,
but when does it not get satisfied?
What state doesn't do that?
Texas.
Really?
Yeah.
There is a legislation that was passed after this one.
This one inmate ordered a meat lover's pizza, like 24 tacos,
like this awesome spread that just reading it.
I was like, oh, man, I'm kind of hungry for this.
Reading about this man's last meal,
and they didn't need any of it.
Even still, there's probably $200 for the food,
but it caused enough outrage in the state legislature
that they passed the thing where it's like,
you can have whatever the prison cafeteria is cooking that night.
That's your last meal.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
There's a really great article in Lapham's Quarterly online
for free called Last Meal.
Go check it out.
It's just basically this awesome history and contemporary
evaluation of last meals.
That's pretty sad.
It is, but it's really interesting what it says.
There's a guy in Arkansas who was executed in the 90s.
His name was Barry Lee Fairchild,
and he pointed out that it doesn't make a lot of sense
to give a condemned person a last meal.
He said it was, quote, like, putting gas in a car that
don't have no motor.
But like, you have no need to take in food
because you have no need to derive the energy from it any
longer because you're about to lose your life.
Well, it's not about deriving energy.
It's about enjoying one last thing.
Right, but if you look at the capital punishment system,
it makes no sense.
It's interesting.
I say go read the article a little.
I'm not getting the point across very well.
Well, I mean, I see what he's saying, but it's not like,
you got to fuel up for the big day.
It's like, here, enjoy a steak.
Yeah, I know.
I'm just saying, like, it flies in the face of the rest
of the criminal justice system.
Oh, well, sure, enjoy the steak.
Then, you know.
And time was, they used to get you drunk beforehand.
That's what I'm talking about.
If you were going to get hanged in London,
like from the prison to the gallows, they would stop,
and they'd let you drink as much as you wanted,
and then would take you super drunk and kill you.
Yeah, that's interesting, because that
could provide a more docile victim, or.
A really weepy one, which would be really.
Yeah, or like someone who starts causing lots of trouble,
you know.
Yeah, he wants to fight one last time.
Yeah, exactly.
Right, but apparently, I read somewhere
that they sedate criminals, or they condemned here first.
Right.
So that's kind of like a modern incarnation of taking them
and getting them drunk, handing them a volume.
Yeah, that's true.
You know.
OK, so you've had your last meal, which may or not
be awesome, depending on where you live.
Yeah.
Your warden and your chaplain are going to visit.
They're going to stay with you till the end,
unless you don't want them there.
You can probably refuse any kind of religious associations,
if you want.
Witnesses, we'll get to all that,
but the witnesses arrive at this point.
They're kept away from you, though.
They don't get to walk by and say things to you.
No, as a matter of fact, most witnesses are required.
Well, in Texas, they can take potshots at you
with their six shooters.
Sorry, Texas.
The witnesses pretty much across the board, I'm sure,
are required to be totally silent the whole time they leave
and are brought into the execution area.
Yeah, not like the people outside of prisons
who are making lots of noise, usually.
Right, one way or the other.
To protest or kill them, kill them.
That's as ugly as this country gets, man.
When you see the footage of people outside prisons
at controversial executions, it's pretty bad.
And then, their final preparations,
they're going to give you clean clothes.
But you take a last shower?
Sure, shower, get dressed, and then connect you
to the old EKG, which is going to let everyone know
if you're gone or if you're still with them.
Yeah, they hook the EKG up to you.
It's not hooked to anything yet, but they've got it like a...
You're pre-wired.
Exactly.
Basically.
And then once you're showered and dressed and wired up
with an EKG, the warden and the chaplain
are hanging out with you, at the predetermined time,
they will start to move you into the execution chamber.
And meanwhile, the witnesses are there.
And let's talk about the witnesses.
The fact that there are witnesses at executions
is actually the modern incarnation
of a very long tradition.
We used to have public executions in this country.
Yeah, like thousands of people would show up.
Sometimes they would charge admission.
And eventually, that stopped, and only a select number
of people were allowed to witness.
But there's still witnesses, you know?
Have you read about the last public execution?
I didn't read that book.
There was... I didn't either.
OK, that's what I thought you were asking.
No, no, just about it.
Oh, OK.
There was a guy named Rainy Bathia in Kentucky,
who was hanged in 1936 for rape and murder, I think.
And his execution was attended by like 20,000 people.
Wow.
The big reason was, it's not because they knew
it was the last public execution.
I think they decided to stop that after this execution.
There was a Kentucky basketball game after?
Yeah.
Is that it?
The sheriff was a woman.
So this is going to be the first execution in US history
ever conducted by a woman.
Gotcha.
And people wanted to go see how badly
she was going to screw this up.
And even though she didn't, the press still
wrote that she'd fainted, that everything had been botched
or whatever.
But that's why everybody turned out.
But there were charges from out-of-town reporters
that people were having hanging parties,
that they were drunk in the streets partying,
that basically there was just a sense of revelry that
shouldn't attend an execution.
And that was the last straw for public executions
in this country.
But it got the idea that you need
to have other people witness a death when the state's
executing somebody just to make sure it's totally
transparent.
That was carried on with witnesses today in executions.
Yeah, I mean, that's part of it too.
And part of it is also to give victims closure, the families
that is victims.
There will be sometimes family members of the prisoner too.
And they are generally kept apart.
Not always.
Generally, yeah.
The prison warden is going to be there.
You're going to have medical people on hand, of course,
to make sure it all goes as planned.
It's pretty controversial, as we'll find.
You got your spiritual advisor, like we talked about.
You got your guards.
State-selected witnesses, maybe.
I mean, there might be members of the state government
there to watch it all go down.
Yeah, you got media there.
You also have what are known as reputable citizens.
And those are basically just average everyday citizens
that witness executions.
Is it like a lottery or something?
No, it's like you contact your state DOC
and say, hey, I want to witness an execution.
And they send you an application form.
You explain why.
You have to be over 18.
You have to explain why you want to do this.
But apparently, the pool is thin enough
that they're not real selective, as long as you don't say,
because I want to see them bleed or something like that.
They will let you do this.
And apparently, when there was a surge in executions
in the 90s, Chuck, departments of corrections
were so hard up, because a lot of state law says,
you have to have six reputable citizens or 12 reputable
citizens, that their pool was running thin.
So departments of corrections were actually
advertising, looking for people to witness executions.
Why do you have the newspapers and stuff?
It's just law.
It's just that holdover from having the public be
a part of this state monopoly on violence.
It's stupid, but so much so that they're trying to force it now.
Well, I don't think it's a problem anymore.
It was just in the 90s, like they were killing everybody.
In the 90s?
Yeah.
All right, so you've got your witnesses there.
Your execution chambers may have clear glass
with a curtain pulled.
It may be a one-way mirror where you can only
see into the executed and to the condemned.
It all depends on your state, basically.
But it's generally going to be a pretty quiet thing,
no matter where you are.
It's a whole group of people there just being utterly
silent watching you.
Or if there's too many family members,
they might have a close circuit feed going on in another room.
If it's not roomy.
And apparently, in Illinois, if you're a family member,
the only way you can witness it is via close circuit TV
in another room.
In Illinois?
In Illinois.
All right.
That's another state.
That's a new one.
We haven't mentioned Illinois yet.
Yeah, we didn't really make fun of them, though.
I guess their execution chamber is small.
Yeah.
We can make fun of them.
There aren't any seats in there.
Nice state budget.
You've got your timeline of events.
It's all very much scheduled, like down to the minute.
You're going to have your person properly dressed.
You're going to escort them into the chamber.
I was thinking about this when I was reading this article, Chuck.
Imagine just taking a shower too fast.
And so you just kind of have to sit there
on the edge of the bed with the warden
and whatever spiritual advisor they throw at you waiting
to go be executed.
That has to be the worst wait ever.
Yeah.
I can't imagine it being much worse than that,
because they can't be like, wow, we'll just
get this started early.
No, everything is on a very delineated schedule,
and they're just going to have to sit there
until the time comes to go to the execution chamber
to get started.
So take a long shower.
That stuck out to me, yeah.
OK.
The longest shower of your life.
The saddest shower of your life, for sure.
You might be rolled in like restrained beforehand
and rolled in on a gurney.
Sometimes you're allowed to walk there yourself,
and then you're restrained once you're in there.
And at that point, they are going
to go ahead and pre-rig you with the IV tubes
to lead you in there.
And then those, once you get in there and you're strapped in,
they will be fed into what's called an anteroom,
where the actual death cocktails await
and the executioner awaits.
Yeah, it's like an enclosed room away
from the eyes of everybody, including
the condemned and the witnesses.
Oh, yeah.
But you have two tubes.
Most states require two.
There's a backup to one to serve as a backup.
At this point, you have your final statement,
if you so choose.
They'll read that out loud on the news that night.
Yeah.
Just be careful what you say.
You can go on to.
Are we giving advice to death row inmates?
It just occurred to me that we are.
You can go on to departments of corrections websites,
and most of them have last statements on there.
Some of them are what you'd expect, some are eerie.
I'm sure.
No.
And generally, the head is unrestrained,
so they can look around and stuff.
Although sometimes they do have a hood or a sheet.
Again, it depends on the state and how they do it.
So the condemned is strapped into a gurney, strapped down,
but their head's under restraint.
They've got tubes leading into the IV needles.
Yeah.
And it's ready to go.
Yeah, I think now's a good time for a message break,
and then we'll get into the actual process after.
Stuff you should know.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s,
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OK, so like you said, it's go time.
For a solid moment.
Yeah.
For a long time, states were using something
called a, well, basically, an electronic lethal injection
machine.
Which makes sense.
It was what Kvorkin came up with, basically.
It was, if not directly based on his model,
it was at least very similar to it.
But then they worried about mechanical failure,
so they said, no, humans need to do this.
I think they had mechanical failures.
I could imagine.
Yeah.
And so in some states, you have one executioner.
In others, you have a couple of executioners.
And again, they're in this anti-room
where the actual drugs are that the IV tubes are leading to
from the execution chamber into the anti-room.
And if you have a few different ones,
a few different executioners, they're all putting drugs
into IV tubes.
But none of the executioners know which one's the real IV
tube and which one's just leading to a mannequin.
And that isn't actually a mannequin.
That old trick.
Like, they used to do the same thing with flipping the switch
too.
I think they had several switches.
Firing squads?
Yeah, because they don't want any one person to have
that weight.
They can always think, I guess I had a 33% chance
that it was me.
Right, yeah.
All right, so I guess we should move on to the drugs
that are used.
It used to almost always be a three-drug cocktail,
but things are getting weird these days, I've noticed.
Yeah.
Originally, it was three drugs.
You would have an anesthetic, a paralyzing agent,
and a toxic agent.
And those were used for years and years.
And then due to a bunch of different circumstances
that converged, in some cases, down to one,
like Joseph Paul Franklin was killed with just one drug.
Well, I looked up almost every single execution in 2013
used a single drug, pinto barbitol.
OK, which is an anesthetic.
Yeah, and it's basically a substitute when
they're in short supply of other ones.
But I did see that it's actually illegal to use this drug
this way, and the manufacturer is Danish,
and was like, well, no, you can't use our drug that way.
So they started fighting people who sold that drug
to state agencies.
Exactly, very controversial.
And states were trying to get this stuff anyway they could.
So since it was banned for use by correctional facilities
for executions.
The ultimate correction.
The DEA was actually raiding departments of corrections
and taking their drugs.
So because of this ban, because of the drugmaker.
And so first, you had the drugmaker
that was making penethol, right?
And then people were like, well, how about this?
We have propofol.
That's the anesthetic penethol is.
Right, and so what they were replacing it with was propofol,
which is Michael Jackson's milk that killed him.
Did we hit it right this time?
Yeah, OK.
And then the maker of propofol said,
if you can't use that to execute people,
it's not what we made this for.
And they said, well, TS, we're going to use it anyway.
And so the maker said, if you use that to kill anybody,
we're going to cut off supplies to the entire United States,
including hospitals.
And you're going to have an enormous problem on your hands.
And so all of the hospitals contacted the departments
of the corrections and said, do not use that.
Like, we can't have a propofol shortage.
Yeah, like we need it.
So now they're turning to compounding
pharmacies, which are generally regulated mostly
by the state, not so much by the feds,
and trying to get their hands any way they can
on some sort of general anesthetic.
And the anesthetic, ideally, if they
were using pentothal or pentobarbital.
Pentobarbital, yeah.
If you were in a hospital and you
were put under general anesthesia,
they would use about 100 milligrams of this stuff,
delivered over 10 to 15 seconds.
And you would be out.
It's an anesthetic.
You wouldn't be asleep.
You wouldn't be unconscious.
You're under general anesthesia.
You're not feeling anything.
You're not anything.
So that's 100 milligrams for just general anesthesia.
When you're given a lethal injection of pentobarbital,
they give you five grams, 5,000 milligrams.
Not 100 milligrams, 5,000 milligrams of this stuff.
Yeah, and that's enough to kill you flat out.
And proponents of lethal injection
will say they don't feel anything after that.
Right.
And again, that should just be enough to kill you,
which is why a lot of states are just using that one drug now.
In the original lethal injection cocktail,
that was step one.
Once they administered the anesthetic,
they would flush the lines with saline solution.
And then they would introduce the next one,
which is a paralyzing agent.
Yeah, that's basically the heaviest duty muscle
relaxant you could ever imagine, because it
relaxes your muscles so much that your diaphragms and lungs
don't function any longer.
Yeah.
That's a serious muscle relaxant.
Right, so you stop breathing.
So that's way to die number two now.
Yeah, and that takes about one to three minutes for that one
to take effect fully.
So then that one's been kind of abandoned
because it's been criticized, or the use of it's been
criticized, because a lot of people
point out that that's really for the witnesses.
Because without it, when somebody's dying,
a lot of times they will writhe, they will gasp for breath,
their back will arch as much as it can when
it's strapped down to a gurney.
When you administer a paralyzing agent, none of that happens.
So the witnesses are like, oh, look,
it looks like he wanted to die.
Look at what a peaceful death that man just went through.
So it's for the witnesses.
And then number two, it could also conceivably mask pain.
So if it's masking pain, then it's
also masking a possibly inhumane method of execution.
So they kind of discontinued the paralyzing agent.
But that was traditionally step two.
And then once that one was administered,
so are you getting the point here
that they're really going the extra mile
to make sure you're dead in the 90s through lethal injection?
Yeah, and you know what?
I might as well go ahead and get into this.
We just put our dog down two days ago,
and they do the same thing with that.
The paralyzing agent?
Three different things were injected into her.
It's like the first, go to sleep thing,
and then the second, a paralyzer,
and then the final thing like, she's gone,
but hey, let's just inject this just to make sure
the heart is stopped.
Was it, OK, so it was the toxic agent, potassium chloride?
I'm not sure.
I mean, they said it was a trade concoction for their company.
I got you.
OK, so then it probably wasn't potassium chloride,
because I don't think that's proprietary.
But in some states, the use of potassium chloride,
the toxic agent, which is the third one,
that's not even allowed for use on pets,
but they were using it on inmates.
Because it induces cardiac arrest?
Because it could considerably cause pain.
OK.
Yeah.
Interesting.
I'm sorry about your dog, buddy.
That's right, I appreciate that.
And hey, thank you to everyone.
I put that on the stuff you should know,
while people were super supportive,
and told a lot of their own stories of their pets passing.
So I think maybe at some point, I
might put together a little like you did the pet costumes.
I might do a pet memorial thing where people can send in.
That would be very nice.
And memorialize their pets, stuff you should know.
Anyway, I did find it interesting, though.
Hey, did I pick this topic?
Yeah, I kept wanting to send you stuff about it yesterday.
And I picked it knowing.
I guess it was just this weird subliminal thing,
like maybe I was trying to work through it or something.
I don't know.
But I did find it interesting, the triple drug cocktail
and the similarities.
I don't think it was the exact same stuff,
but it's the same process, basically.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s,
called David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews,
co-stars, friends, and non-stop references
to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger
and the dial-up sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper,
because you'll want to be there when the nostalgia starts
flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling
of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy,
blowing on it and popping it back in,
as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s, called on the iHeart radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when
questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road.
Ah, OK, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place,
because I'm here to help.
This, I promise you.
Oh, god.
Seriously, I swear.
And you won't have to send an SOS,
because I'll be there for you.
Oh, man.
And so will my husband, Michael.
Um, hey, that's me.
Yep, we know that, Michael.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life step by step.
Oh, not another one.
Kids, relationships, life in general, can get messy.
You may be thinking, this is the story of my life.
Just stop now.
If so, tell everybody, yeah, everybody,
about my new podcast, and make sure to listen,
so we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart
radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
All right, so death from beginning to end,
five to 18 minutes after the execution order is given,
kind of just depends.
OK, so that's ideally.
Remember, the execution order is when it's,
you've moved into the execution chamber.
Yes.
And the warden says, it's time to execute this person.
Like the phone's not ringing, the governor's not calling.
Right.
So that's when they start working on you,
like putting in the IV tubes and all that stuff.
Right.
Now remember, the whole point of execution
in the United States criminal justice system
is not to inflict pain or cause suffering.
Right.
It's simply to take that person's life
and the most humane, efficient means possible, right?
Yeah.
So what happens if you can't find a vein?
That happens very frequently.
Oh, yeah?
There's a lot of cases of the condemned,
helpfully saying, well, try this vein over here.
I think this one feels pretty good.
Try this one.
Right.
Like helping these people stick them
to put these lethal drugs in them.
Sure.
So that particularly is the case with IV drug users
who have lots of collapsed veins.
It's also, Chuck, part of the problem
when you don't have experienced medical personnel, which
is one of the big controversies of lethal injection.
Because if you notice, it has a lot
of the trappings of a medical procedure.
But it completely flies in the face of medicine.
Sure.
Because the Hippocratic oath says, first, do no harm.
Well, carrying out or even assisting in an execution
is doing harm.
So the American Medical Association
tried to pass a resolution saying,
we're going to take the license of anybody who's involved
in an execution.
Right.
And all the states said, no, you can't do that.
We're going to protect the doctor's licenses
because we need these people.
And that's kind of a conundrum, you know?
Like, do you not have anything to do
with an execution and let some prison guard try to find a vein
and stick this person for 60 minutes
and prolong the point from, OK, start executing to death.
So this person's more aware and anxious and thinking about it.
Or do you kind of throw your Hippocratic oath
to the side and help this person's execution go as painlessly
and humanely as possible?
Yeah, finding a vein's not too tough, though.
I was reading, like, botched executions,
and that's the number one.
They can't find a vein?
Yeah.
What are they feeding these people?
You know?
Because they're not using heroin in prison, are they?
No, but I think if you used heroin
for a significant portion of your life,
your veins are collapsed forever.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
I don't think they grow back.
OK.
So it's generally, though, a prison guard or somebody
that works for the prison, though,
that actually administers it, right?
Yeah.
OK.
That's what I thought.
And plus, also, there's another thing, too.
If they're not good at delivering the drugs,
if they're not practiced at that,
the flow of the drugs, if you push it in too fast,
can cause a lot of pain and suffering.
That's one.
Right.
That's another one, too, which is another reason
why some states require that medical staff be on hand
to assist with these things.
Yeah.
I mean, there's really no humane way
to put someone, you know?
So that's to kill somebody.
Like, you can't affixiate someone with feathers.
OK, no.
And it's true.
But I was looking around like, OK, if lethal injection isn't
even considered humane, which a lot of people say,
like, it's not, it's possibly there's a lot of pain.
One of the drugs that's being used these days
is called a medazolam.
And it's a sedative.
It's not an anesthetic.
So if you put somebody out with it,
that doesn't mean that they can't feel pain any longer.
Right.
But that's due to this shortage of pentobarbital.
People are using that.
So they're saying, wait, we're using untested drugs.
These people are possibly feeling excruciating pain.
But you can't tell because we're using a paralyzing agent.
Right.
What?
There's got to be another way to do this.
And some people recently have been speaking up and saying.
Heroin?
No.
But I think there's probably a few seconds
when you're introducing the pentobarbital where they're
like, all right.
This feels pretty good.
Yeah.
No, it's called inert gas asphyxiation.
OK.
So when you suffocate, apparently the pain and discomfort
is caused by not being able to expel CO2.
Right.
With inert gas asphyxiation, you are inhaling gas that's
not oxygen, say pure nitrogen gas.
But you're still capable of exhaling CO2,
which means that the whole process should be painless.
Right.
And unconsciousness takes effect in a couple of seconds,
death a few more seconds after that.
So they think it's possible that they
may have figured out the most humane method of capital
punishment around inert gas asphyxiation.
Are they practicing that?
No, but I suspect that if this kind of reform thing
continues going on, we'll see inert gas chambers pretty
soon.
Yeah.
You know the old firing squad is instantaneous, probably.
No.
If done right.
Yeah, but it rarely is done right.
That's the thing.
What do you mean rarely it's done right?
Give me a statistic.
Well, OK.
How many shooting firing squads percentage-wise
aren't done properly?
So I would probably say the vast majority.
Really?
Yeah.
You're trying to, again, if you're
doing something humane and efficiently,
you want to remove human error.
So finding a vein, introducing the drug at a proper rate.
All of these things are subject to human error, right?
Shooting a bullet at somebody from 50 feet or whatever.
That's got all kinds of human error involved in it.
I would say go read a, and I'm not an activist.
I'm not being an activist here.
Go read this article on the possible pain
from various methods of execution,
I believe it's what it's called.
There's a guy in the 80s who basically went around and said,
let me get all the evidence I possibly
can from the different types of execution
that people are put through to figure out how much pain
and how frequently they feel pain, how much they feel as well.
And he came up with this amazing study.
And firing squads are not, they're bloody.
They're not good.
Oh, I know they're bloody.
But I didn't know that they were botched so that people
lived most of the time after being
shot by eight dudes in the head.
But that's another thing.
They don't aim for the head.
A lot of times, only one guy has a bullet.
Where they aim?
The chest.
The chest.
So you're shot through the heart, right?
Is that like all countries across the border?
I don't know.
I'm just curious.
I'm just saying, I would say go read that study.
My money's on inert gas.
Inert gas?
Definitely not on firing squads.
The guillotine.
Well, that came out of that one reform movement
from the late 18th century.
That's as instant as it gets.
No, it's not.
Do you not remember our?
Yeah, we said it's possible that the head is alive
for a couple of seconds.
Four seconds?
Yeah.
I feel like I don't even know you right now.
I got one last one.
All right.
So there is a huge disparity in the death penalty
as a whole among races.
So it turns out 89% of capital cases feature
a black or Hispanic defendant.
And then with victims, there's a big race disparity too.
In death penalty cases in the United States,
I think either last year or in the last few years,
77% of the victims have been white.
15% have been black.
6% have been Hispanic for the victims.
So it's disproportionately doled out
against people who have killed white people.
Right.
Than it is to people who have killed
black or Hispanic people.
And other was like 2% or something like that.
Interesting.
You got anything else?
I got nothing else.
So lethal injection.
Man, that was a weird one, huh?
Well, I mean, this is touchy stuff, you know.
If you want to learn more about lethal injection,
you can type that into the search bar
at howstuffworks.com.
And since I said search bar, it's time for a listener,
mate.
I'm going to call this what a long, strange trip it's been,
because that's what Whitney called it.
Hey, guys, I'm Whitney.
And I'm a 20-something band teacher from Provo, Utah.
My husband, also a band teacher, introduced me to your show
in 2009 when he was commuting one hour each way
to Park City every day.
When I started my current job last year,
I started listening to you guys after I
realized how crappy radio was.
And I exhausted the music on my iPod.
I started one on episode one.
And just today, caught up with the Werewolf podcast.
Wow.
Yeah, not bad.
I was excited and sad all at the same time.
We hear that a lot, actually.
I know you get lots of emails and you're probably sick of them,
but I felt like I had to write.
Once I caught up during the last school year,
I had my first child, started my new job,
and moved twice, the second move,
being into our first home.
Needless to say, with all this change,
I started to get pretty stressed and even depressed.
On top of all this, I teach beginning band
to sixth and seventh grade kids.
My job is very exciting.
I love it.
But I can get frustrated and even develop
a road rage at times.
Stupid kids.
Your podcast was my sanity through all this, dudes.
I was able to focus my mind on exciting things,
like Barbie dolls and serial killers.
And it all made my day a little bit brighter.
So I just want to say how much I appreciate all the podcasts.
I feel like I'm learning, keeping my mind engaged
and enjoying your banter.
And I think my 18-month-old daughter also
enjoys, since she's heard your voices,
since she was just a tiny thing.
Hope you keep making them, Whitney Werner.
Thanks a lot, Whitney.
From Provo, Utah, band teaching.
And we are shaping young minds, 18-month-old minds.
Yeah.
In utero, even, we've heard.
Yeah.
People, for some reason, play us.
Forget teaching your kids sign language.
Just have them listen to stuff you should know.
Exactly, yeah.
If you want to let us know how we have helped your life out
or how we've influenced the development of your child,
that's a good one, you can tweet to us at SYSKpodcast.
You can join us on facebook.com slash stuff you should know.
You can send us an email.
And as always, check us out at our awesome website.
It's called stuffyoushouldknow.com.
For more on this and thousands of other topics, visit howstuffworks.com.
Unpack and dive back into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to, Hey Dude, the 90s, called on the iHeart radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, yeah, everybody about my new podcast
and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say, bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.