It Could Happen Here

The Shady Business of Lethal Injection: Out of Sight, Out of Mind

10 snips
Nov 5, 2025
Dick Reavis, a veteran journalist and civil rights activist, shares his haunting memories of witnessing the first execution by lethal injection—Charlie Brooks in Texas in 1982. Corinna Lain, a law professor and author, delves into the medical and legal failings of this method, revealing it often mimics a slow drowning rather than a painless death. The discussion highlights the improvised origins of lethal injection, its political motivations, and the consequences of untested protocols, shedding light on the dark realities behind this controversial practice.
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INSIGHT

Protocol Born From Improvisation

  • Oklahoma coroner Dr. Stephen Crawford improvised the three-drug lethal injection protocol with no proper medical research.
  • The protocol combined drugs that interact poorly, producing prolonged deaths resembling slow drowning.
INSIGHT

Lethal Injection Feels Like Drowning

  • Medical experts describe lethal injection deaths as acute pulmonary edema — a drowning-from-within sensation.
  • Corinna Lain equated the experience to waterboarding people to death.
INSIGHT

Medical Aesthetic Normalized Killing

  • Lethal injection visually resembled medical procedures, making executions more palatable to the public and politicians.
  • Texas used that aesthetic to revive and normalize capital punishment after televised electrocution fears.
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