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Appellate court denies execution stay for Alabama inmate

Attorneys for an Alabama death row inmate have filed a federal lawsuit arguing that the state's new lethal injection drug combination has never been tried on any prisoner in the United States and amounts to cruel and unusual punishment.
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Attorneys for an Alabama death row inmate have filed a federal lawsuit arguing that the state's new lethal injection drug combination has never been tried on any prisoner in the United States and amounts to cruel and unusual punishment.

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — An appellate court said Wednesday that it won't halt the upcoming lethal injection of an Alabama inmate who had asked to be put to death with nitrogen gas.

The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals denied an execution stay for 46-year-old Christopher Lee Price. He is scheduled to be executed by injection Thursday for the 1991 stabbing death of pastor Bill Lynn during a robbery.

Prosecutors said Lynn was at his Fayette County home with his wife assembling Christmas presents on Dec. 22, 1991, when the house's power was cut. Lynn was killed with a knife and sword when he went outside to check the fuse box, prosecutors said.

Attorneys say Price was a high school senior at the time of the slaying,

A judge sentenced him to death.

Alabama has authorized nitrogen as an execution method but has not used it.

Price's attorneys argued the state planned to use a drug combination that has been linked to problematic executions while agreeing to execute other inmates by nitrogen hypoxia.

Appellate judges said Price did not have an equal protection claim because all inmates had an opportunity to select nitrogen as their preferred execution method and Price missed that deadline.

The judges agreed with Price's attorneys that nitrogen was an available alternative, but said he had not shown nitrogen hypoxia will significantly reduce the risk of pain.

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