‘I’m not ready’ says death row inmate Kenneth Eugene Smith as Alabama is set to carry out first nitrogen gas execution

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THE first-ever US inmate to be executed using nitrogen gas has spoken out after losing his last-minute appeal.

Kenneth Eugene Smith, who has been on death row since 1996, will face his second experience with execution after surviving an earlier attempt.

ReutersKenneth Eugene Smith spoke before his scheduled execution[/caption]

APSmith shared how a previous execution attempt two years ago had affected him[/caption]

APThe courts rejected a last-minute appeal by Smith to not face execution[/caption]

Smith is set to be the first individual to be executed using nitrogen gas

Smith, 58, has been kept in the Holaman correction facility in Alabama and has stayed a few feet away from the death chamber that he will soon face.

His execution date has been set for Thursday, January 25, but Smith has said he has not come to terms with his apparent fate.

“I am not ready for that. Not in no kind of way,” Smith told The Guardian.

“I’m just not ready, brother.”

Following Smith’s failed execution attempt in November 2022, where prison officials were unable to find a vein to administer a lethal injection, he has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress syndrome.

Smith has said that he faced recurring nightmares of the death chamber following the failed attempt and is on a mixture of medications for this, according to The Guardian.

“All I had to do was walk into the room in the dream for it to be overwhelming. I was absolutely terrified,” he said. 

“It kept coming up.”

Smith said that his symptoms and trauma had worsened since he received his second execution attempt date.

“They haven’t given me a chance to heal,” he said. 

“I’m still suffering from the first execution and now we’re doing this again. They won’t let me even have post-traumatic stress disorder – you know, this is ongoing stress disorder.”

This is set to be the country’s first new execution method since 1982 and it has proved to be controversial.

This method would kill Smith through nitrogen hypoxia after a respirator-type face mask is placed over his nose and mouth, according to the Associated Press.

Breathable air will be replaced with nitrogen, which would cause death due to a lack of oxygen in the body.

The state of Alabama said the inmate would lose consciousness within seconds and die within minutes.

Critics of the method have claimed the state cannot be sure what will happen as the method is untested and Smith’s legal team has said he is at risk for a prolonged suffering and choking to death on his own vomit.

The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected Smith’s last-minute request to stop the execution in a 2-1 decision, according to AP.

These judges said that Smith had failed to explain how this method would violate the constitutional ban on cruel and unusual punishment but added that there was “no doubt that death by nitrogen hypoxia is both new and novel.”

Smith was one of two men convicted for a murder-for-hire plot against Elizabeth Sennett in 1988.

Prosecutors said the two men were paid $1,000 by Sennett’s husband who was in debt and wanted to collect insurance money.

The second hitman, John Forrest Parker, was executed in 2010 and Sennett’s husband killed himself before prosecutors arrested him.

Family handoutElizabeth Sennett was the victim of a for-hire killing in 1988[/caption] Published: [#item_custom_pubDate]

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