“We’re going to close the blinds temporarily,” the Oklahoma corrections officer told those in the witness room, when Clayton Lockett’s execution started to go terribly wrong. None of those outside could see what happened during the almost 45 minute-long botched execution, and the “shuttered blinds” became a metaphor for the modern administration of the death penalty. Behind the curtain, “unknown drugs” and “untested protocols” were used “behind a wall of secrecy,” said Lockett’s lawyer Cheryl Pilate. Challenges to such secret protocols have been brought in a range of states, including Georgia, Ohio, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Missouri and Texas; one federal judge in a recent dissent [PDF] argued the state cannot simply hide “behind the hangman’s cloak.” But following that botched execution the Oklahoma Court of Appeals approved a six-month stay of executions to at least review the matter.

Citation
Brandon L. Garrett, Behind the Hangman’s Cloak, Jurist (May 15, 2014).