Special Report: How the Trump administration secured a secret supply of execution drugs


  • World
  • Friday, 10 Jul 2020

The headquarters of testing firm DYNALABS are seen in St Louis, Missouri, U.S., July 9, 2020. Picture taken July 9, 2020. REUTERS/Lawrence Bryant

(Reuters) - If the Trump administration carries out the first federal execution since 2003 on Monday, as scheduled, it will mark the culmination of a three-year campaign to line up a secret supply chain to make and test lethal-injection drugs, a Reuters investigation has found.

Intent on enforcing the death penalty, President Donald Trump’s Department of Justice had started building the network of contractors it would need by May 2017, federal procurement records show. Since then, it has pursued a new drug protocol that could survive legal challenges through firms whose identities it has fought to keep hidden. Without the secrecy, the government has argued in court filings, its ability to procure the drugs would be “severely impaired” because the companies are not willing to supply or test execution drugs if they are publicly identified.

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