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United StatesCrime9 days ago

Jeffery Lee breathes ‘sigh of relief’ after Alabama’s nitrogen execution deemed unconstitutional

Jeffery Lee, a death row inmate in Alabama, expressed relief after a federal court ruled that the state's use of nitrogen gas for executions violates the Eighth Amendment's prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment. The execution, originally scheduled for Thursday, was halted pending further legal action. Lee stated he would continue fighting his case despite the ruling. State Attorney General Steve Marshall has appealed the decision, potentially leading to a Supreme Court review. Alabama introduced nitrogen hypoxia as a method of execution in 2024, with seven such executions already taking

A death row prisoner whose planned execution Thursday was suddenly halted became emotional when he learned that a federal court had ruled Alabama’s use of nitrogen gas violates the constitutional ban on cruel and unusual punishment.

“It’s like an expected sigh of relief in one aspect, and then you still got to stay and maintain your focus and continue to fight,” Jeffery Lee, who has been on death row for nearly three decades, said by phone Tuesday. He spoke from the William C. Holman Correctional Facility in Atmore, Alabama, moments after a district court judge agreed to stop his execution.

“Fear not, I am not finished, and just, you know, to me, my faith is everything,” said Lee, 49.

Jeffery Lee. Alabama Dept. of Corrections Despite the ruling, his fate remains uncertain: State Attorney General Steve Marshall has filed an appeal, most likely sending the case up to the Supreme Court, which has previously sided with Alabama by allowing nitrogen executions to proceed after last-minute appeals. Marshall’s office declined to comment Wednesday.

Lee was scheduled to become the ninth person in the country put to death via nitrogen hypoxia, which was pioneered by Alabama in 2024 and entails breathing pure nitrogen through a mask while being denied oxygen. Seven of those executions took place in Alabama ; one was carried out in Louisiana . Alabama’s primary method of execution remains lethal injection, which it last carried out in April 2025, but sourcing the drugs has been difficult in the last several years.

Lee filed a lawsuit challenging nitrogen use in August.

During a three-day bench trial in February, U.S. District Judge Emily Marks heard testimony that nitrogen executions cause “severe air hunger” for the condemned, leading to “extreme emotional distress, panic, anxiety, and fear.”

“Indeed, many people find air hunger ‘worse than pain’ because it is associated with the fear of dying,” she wrote in an opinion in May.

Even so, Marks initially upheld the method as constitutional.

But the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned her decision Monday and ordered the district court to review Lee’s request to be executed by firing squad, instead. In response, Marks permanently blocked the state Tuesday from executing Lee by nitrogen.

In his appeal, Marshall pointed to challenges the state would face by implementing the firing squad — including finding five willing shooters and the possibility that any shots fired could miss a target placed over the heart, resulting in more pain for the condemned.

“An inmate facing the firing squad might be quickly dispatched or, like Mikal Mahdi in South Carolina last year, he might suffer the pain of being shot multiple times in the chest due to poor aim,” the appeal said.

Witnesses to previous nitrogen executions in Alabama have described the condemned in apparent agony. They watched as prisoners struggled against the restraints that held them to the gurney while they gasped for air.

A media witness to the last nitrogen execution in October described a prolonged process; the prisoner, Anthony Boyd, was not declared dead until 30 minutes after the air started flowing.

Lee expressed grief over the experiences of those who were executed before him through a method that has now been found unconstitutionally cruel.

“I was raised up around those guys, because when I first got to the row, I was 23 years old, just turning 24,” he said. “What we heard they went through, man, it’s like losing a family member.”

Jimmy Ellis was shot and killed in Jimmy’s Pawn Shop in Orrville, Ala., in 1998. Courtesy Office of the Alabama Attorney General Lee was found guilty in 2000 of the murders of Jimmy Ellis and Elaine Thompson and the attempted murder of Helen King during a robbery west of Montgomery.

On Dec. 12, 1998, Lee visited Jimmy’s Pawn Shop with his brother and cousin, saying he was looking at wedding rings for his girlfriend. After browsing, he said, he didn’t have money on him and left. Minutes later, he re-entered the store with a sawed-off shotgun and shot and killed Ellis and Thompson and wounded King, authorities said.

A jury sentenced Lee to life without parole, but a judge set aside that decision and sentenced him to death, a practice known as “judicial override” that was outlawed in Alabama in 2017.

Elaine Thompson was murdered at Jimmy’s Pawn Shop in Orrville, Ala., in 1998. Courtesy Office of the Alabama Attorney General Lee has expressed remorse for the slayings and said he believes he has found redemption in the years since then, through his devotion to Christianity.

“I don’t fear dying, and nothing like that, because I know where I would be,” he said, referring to heaven.

He said he hopes his legal win will prevent others from being executed with nitrogen.

“God — he’s not finished,” he said. “He’s still working, not only on my behalf, but on the other brothers’ behalf that are still facing this situation.”

While the ruling has blocked nitrogen gas executions in Alabama, the fu…

Read the full article at NBC News
Source document: U.S. Supreme Court

4 reports

ABC News (US)IndependentCenter9 days ago
Supreme Court rejects Alabama request for nitrogen gas execution

The U.S. Supreme Court rejected Alabama's request to proceed with the execution of Jeffery Lee using nitrogen gas, upholding a lower court's ruling that the method is unconstitutional. The execution was scheduled to take place but was called off after the court's decision. The vote was 6-3, with three conservative justices dissenting. Governor Kay Ivey expressed disappointment with the decision, while Lee's legal team welcomed the outcome.

Bias read (Center): The article presents the facts of the case without overtly favoring either side. It includes quotes from both the governor and Lee's legal team, providing balanced perspectives. The Supreme Court's decision is reported neutrally, with no apparent editorializing or biased language.

Official sources cited

NBC NewsIndependentCenter10 days ago
Jeffery Lee breathes ‘sigh of relief’ after Alabama’s nitrogen execution deemed unconstitutional

Jeffery Lee, a death row inmate in Alabama, expressed relief after a federal court ruled that the state's use of nitrogen gas for executions violates the Eighth Amendment's prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment. The execution, originally scheduled for Thursday, was halted pending further legal action. Lee stated he would continue fighting his case despite the ruling. State Attorney General Steve Marshall has appealed the decision, potentially leading to a Supreme Court review. Alabama introduced nitrogen hypoxia as a method of execution in 2024, with seven such executions already taking

Bias read (Center): The article presents the facts of the court ruling, quotes the defendant, and mentions the opposing side's response without overtly favoring either. It does not use emotionally charged language or selectively omit context.

Official sources cited

  • press release Jeffery Lee
  • government State Attorney General Steve Marshall
ABC News (US)IndependentCenter11 days ago
Judge bars Alabama nitrogen gas execution, says method is unconstitutionally cruel

A federal judge permanently blocked Alabama from using nitrogen gas for the execution of inmate Jeffery Lee, ruling that the method constitutes unconstitutional cruel and unusual punishment. The decision came after an appeals court overturned a previous ruling that had deemed the method constitutional. Alabama plans to appeal the decision, potentially leading to a U.S. Supreme Court review.

Bias read (Center): The article presents the judicial decision without overtly favoring either side. It includes direct quotes from the judge and mentions both the state's intention to appeal and the potential for further legal action. There is no evident bias in language or sourcing, and the content remains focused on

Official sources cited

  • court U.S. District Judge Emily C. Marks' Ruling
  • government Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall's Statement
SlateIndependentLeft13 days ago
One of the Supreme Court’s Worst Decisions Is About to Turn 50. It’s Past Time to Reverse It.

The article discusses the 50th anniversary of the Supreme Court's decision to reinstate the death penalty in the United States. It highlights recent statistics showing an increase in executions, particularly among Black men in states like Florida, Oklahoma, and Texas. The piece critiques the current death penalty system, pointing out issues such as racial discrimination, miscarriages of justice, and arbitrary application.

Bias read (Left): The article presents a critical perspective on the death penalty, emphasizing systemic flaws such as racial disparities and miscarriages of justice. It frames the Supreme Court's decision as 'one of the worst' and suggests it is 'past time to reverse it,' indicating a clear ideological stance favori

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