By JON GAMBRELL
Associated Press Writer
LITTLE ROCK Executioners in Arkansas will not cut through muscle to find an inmate's veins during a difficult lethal injection procedure, a state prison official said.
A federal court affidavit by Ray Hobbs, a chief deputy director of the Arkansas Department of Correction, said members of a team conducting executions at the state's Cummins Unit would avoid using a technique known as a "cut-down." Federal public defenders said state officials used that method in past "botched" executions, a sign that judges ought to keep stays in place for death-row inmates challenging Arkansas' lethal injection procedures.
Hobbs' affidavit, filed Thursday in federal court, describes a cut-down as making a series of surgical incisions through connective tissue, fat and muscle until an area around a large vein can be found.
Cut-downs "will not be performed during any future lethal injection execution," Hobbs said. "In the event that it become necessary to make an incision for vein access during an execution, such incision would not go through the inmate's muscle tissue and would be made by a licensed physician."