Advocates call Alabama execution an ‘avoidable disaster’
ATMORE, Ala. — Defenders of a condemned inmate in Alabama are calling his execution an “avoidable disaster,” but the state prison commissioner says there was no visible evidence that he suffered during a lethal injection.
Death row inmate Ronald Bert Smith Jr. coughed, and his upper body heaved repeatedly, for the 13 minutes as he was being sedated, and his arms appeared to move slightly after two tests were administered to determine consciousness.
Smith’s attorneys, who watched the execution, said in a statement Friday that the movements show that he “was not anesthetized at any point during the agonizingly long procedure.”
Alabama’s Corrections Commissioner Jeff Dunn disputes the assessment that Smith was in pain, saying Alabama properly followed a lethal injection protocol that has been upheld by the courts.

