- June 30, 2026
- Updated 7:44 pm
Supreme Court Halts Execution Using Nitrogen Gas in Alabama
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- admin
- June 12, 2026
- Court News
The Supreme Court has stopped Alabama from executing Jeffery Lee using nitrogen gas. This decision, made without a signed opinion, rejects the state’s last-minute appeal. Lower courts had ruled that the method seemed unconstitutional in this instance.
The dissenting opinions came from three conservative justices: Clarence Thomas, Samuel A. Alito Jr., and Neil M. Gorsuch. Alabama officials, who intended to proceed with Lee’s execution, see this as a considerable obstacle.
This ruling may trigger a more extensive legal challenge regarding nitrogen hypoxia, a relatively new execution method. Alabama became the first state to adopt this approach in 2024.
If the execution proceeded as planned, Lee would have been the eighth inmate in Alabama, and the ninth nationwide, executed by this method. The Supreme Court rarely intervenes in executions at the final moment.
Customarily, such emergency requests come directly from prisoners. In Lee’s case, a federal appeals court stopped the execution, prompting Alabama to seek the Supreme Court’s intervention.
As developments unfold, more information will become available. Reporters Rick Rojas and Abbie VanSickle contribute expertise, covering the South and the Supreme Court respectively.
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