Alabama officials raced clock to execute convicted murderer
ATMORE, Ala. — Alabama’s quest to kill an inmate who spent decades on death row for murder became a high-stakes game of beat the clock after the U.S. Supreme Court finally cleared the way for his execution.
Faced with a deluge of last-minute defence appeals and a legal deadline of midnight to execute Tommy Arthur for a 1982 contract killing, officers at Holman prison had to set the final stage for a lethal injection in only 1 hours, 16 minutes after the justices lifted a temporary stay Thursday night.
An officer performed a test to determine whether intravenous drugs had rendered Arthur unconscious about 3 minutes before his death warrant expired, saying the inmate’s name repeatedly and pinching his arm without a visible response. Color was draining from Arthur’s face and his breathing was shallow at best when the clock hit midnight.
A doctor pronounced the 75-year-old inmate dead at 12:15 a.m. Friday.


