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Ohio governor delays execution, orders look at other drugs

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Gov. Mike DeWine on Friday delayed next month's execution of a condemned Ohio man and ordered the prison system to look at alternative lethal injection drugs.

The announcement by the Republican governor followed a federal judge's ruling this month that said Ohio's current execution protocol could cause the inmate "severe pain and needless suffering."

Warren Keith Henness was scheduled to die by lethal injection Feb. 13 at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in Lucasville.

Henness was convicted of killing 51-year-old Richard Meyers in Columbus in 1992. Authorities say Meyers had been helping Henness find a drug treatment for his wife.

DeWine's order raises new questions about Ohio's troubled death penalty system, including the possibility of an additional round of delays lasting months or years.

It took Ohio more than three years to establish its current three-drug lethal injection protocol, in part because of the difficulty many states have had finding drugs. The state carried out the first execution under the current system in 2017.

The drug scarcity occurred over the past decade as multiple manufacturers and distributors put their drugs off limits for executions.

The first drug in Ohio's system, the sedative midazolam, has also been subject to lawsuits that argue it exposes inmates to the possibility of severe pain because it doesn't render them deeply enough unconscious.

Because of Ohio's use of midazolam, federal Judge Michael Merz called the constitutionality of the state's system into question in a Jan. 14 ruling and said inmates could suffer an experience similar to waterboarding.

However, Merz did not stop the execution. Instead, he said that under a test created by a previous U.S. Supreme Court ruling, Henness couldn't demonstrate that a feasible execution alternative exists, and thus the execution could proceed.

Merz's ruling is likely headed to a federal appeals court, which has previously upheld the use of midazolam in Ohio.

Three additional executions are scheduled before September. It's likely attorneys in all those cases will ask for similar delays.

Henness' lawyers, who had asked DeWine on Thursday for the delay, were pleased with the decision.

"We commend Governor DeWine for his leadership and for ensuring the justice system operates humanely in Ohio," said David Stebbins, a federal public defender, in an emailed statement.

The announcement was DeWine's first as governor regarding a death penalty case.

Myers was a lab technician at a veterans hospital in Chillicothe in southern Ohio and frequently volunteered with Alcoholics Anonymous.

Prosecutors said Henness kidnapped Myers, bound and then shot him at an abandoned water treatment plant, and then stole his credit cards, checks and car.

Henness, 55; his wife, Tabatha Henness; and friend Ronald Fair drove around in Myers' car for several days afterward, forging the checks and using the credit cards, according to prosecutors.

Henness' wife and their friend pleaded guilty to minor charges of forgery and then testified against Henness at trial.

Henness' attorneys have argued he deserves mercy because of lingering questions about the others' involvement in the killing.

Prosecutors say Henness has a history of lying and refusing to take responsibility for the killing.

The Ohio Parole Board unanimously rejected Henness' plea for mercy this month.