3/24/2015 brings back the firing squad, so how does it work? ­ Houston Chronicle

Utah brings back the firing squad, so how does it work? By BRADY McCOMBS, | March 24, 2015 | Updated: March 24, 2015 11:59am

Comments 6 E-mail Print Share 33 Tweet 2 2 0

Photo By Trent Nelson/AP 1 of 2 FILE - This June 18, 2010, file photo shows the firing squad execution chamber at the Utah State in Draper, Utah. Utah's governor has signed a law that makes his state the only one to allow firing squads for carrying out executions if no drugs are available. Gov. signed the bill Monday, March 23, 2015. He has said he finds the method "a little bit gruesome," but that it gives the state a fallback execution method.

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Utah Gov. Gary Herbert gave his Utah brings back firing squads stamp of approval Monday to a law that brings back the Reuters firing squad in the only state that has used it in the past 40 http://www.chron.com/news/us/article/Utah­s­firing­squad­How­does­it­work­6154411.php 1/4 3/24/2015 Utah brings back the firing squad, so how does it work? ­ Houston Chronicle years.

Under the law, firing squads will be a backup method if lethal injection drugs aren't available.

Utah and other states have struggled to keep up their inventories as European manufacturers opposed to refuse to sell the components of lethal injections to U.S. .

A closer look at how Utah's firing squad works:

___

WHAT HAPPENS ON EXECUTION DAY?

The prisoner is seated in a chair that is set up in front of a wood panel and in between stacked sandbags that keep the bullets from ricocheting around the room.

A target is pinned over the inmate's heart. Shooters aim for the chest rather than the head because it's a bigger target and usually allows for a faster death, said Utah Rep. Paul Ray, who sponsored the proposal.

The prisoner is offered a two-minute window to offer final words. In 1977, used that chance to say, "Let's do this," before he died.

Five shooters set up about 25 feet from the chair, with their .30-caliber Winchester rifles pointing through slots in a wall. Assuming they hit their target, the heart ruptures and the prisoner dies quickly from blood loss.

In 2010, was declared dead two minutes after he was shot. He was the last person killed by firing squad in the U.S.

___

WHO ARE THE SHOOTERS?

The gunmen are chosen from a pool of volunteer officers, with priority given to those from the area where the crime happened.

There are always more volunteers than spots on the squad, Ray said recently.

http://www.chron.com/news/us/article/Utah­s­firing­squad­How­does­it­work­6154411.php 2/4 3/24/2015 Utah brings back the firing squad, so how does it work? ­ Houston Chronicle The shooters' identities are kept anonymous, and one of their rifles is loaded with a blank round so nobody knows which officer killed the inmate.

___

HAVE FIRING SQUAD EXECUTIONS EVER GONE WRONG?

Not in recent history, said Deborah Denno, a Fordham Law School professor who has long studied executions. Utah's three firing squad executions in the past four decades went as planned, she said.

But the Washington, D.C.-based Death Penalty Information Center, which opposes capital punishment, warns that a firing squad is not a foolproof execution method because the inmate could move or the shooters could miss the heart, causing a slower, more painful death.

One such case appears to have happened in 1879, during Utah's territorial days, when a firing squad missed Wallace Wilkerson's heart and it took him 27 minutes to die, according to newspaper accounts.

Denno said errant shots to Wilkerson's shoulder might have been intentional to make him suffer.

___

CAN ORGANS BE DONATED AFTER FIRING SQUAD EXECUTIONS?

Yes. Unlike a lethal injection that poisons the organs, the bodies of people executed by firing squad remain usable.

Gilmore, executed by firing squad in 1977, agreed to donate his eyes, kidneys, liver and pituitary gland for medical use. His kidneys proved unusable because of bullet wounds.

Gardner did not donate his organs.

___

ARE ANY UTAH INMATES IN LINE FOR THE FIRING SQUAD?

Yes. Ron Lafferty, who claimed God directed him to kill his sister-in-law and her baby daughter in 1984 because of the victim's resistance to his beliefs in polygamy, has requested the firing squad.

Lawmakers in the state stopped offering inmates that choice in 2004, saying firing squads attracted intense media interest and took attention from victims. But Lafferty got the option because he was convicted before 2004.

The other Utah inmate who could be next up for execution, Doug Carter, has chosen lethal injection. Under the new law, Carter would get the firing squad if the state can't get lethal injection drugs.

http://www.chron.com/news/us/article/Utah­s­firing­squad­How­does­it­work­6154411.php 3/4 3/24/2015 Utah brings back the firing squad, so how does it work? ­ Houston Chronicle

http://www.chron.com/news/us/article/Utah­s­firing­squad­How­does­it­work­6154411.php 4/4