Dr. Death

The Supreme Court upheld the use of lethal injection this week, timed nicely with the Pope’s visit. In 1990 Susan Lehman profiled Fred Leuchter, a designer of execution devices:

The Leuchter company’s lethal-injection system, at $30,000, is the cheapest execution system the company sells. (Prices do not include installation.) The Leuchter electrocution system costs $35,000, and a Leuchter gallows would run about $85,000. More and more states are opting for Leuchter’s $100,000 "execution trailer," which comes complete with a lethal-injection machine, a steel holding cell for the inmate, and separate areas for witnesses, chaplain, prison workers, and medical personnel. Leuchter’s gas chambers cost nearly $200,000.

Despite Leuchter’s personal preference, lethal injection is gaining popularity in states that allow capital punishment.

Soon after he had mastered electrocution technology, a northern state, one of the first to switch to lethal injection, called Leuchter for advice. He went back to the library and brushed up on pharmacology and chemistry. From the results of tests done on pigs and rabbits he calculated the dosages of sodium pentothal, potassium chloride, and pancuronium bromide (a synthetic curare) needed for lethal injection of human beings. Then he invented a computer-controlled machine to inject inmates lethally without rupturing their veins or otherwise causing undue discomfort.

Four states have Leuchter-designed lethal-injection machines, though Leuchter has never seen one used. (Indeed, he has never witnessed an execution.) But he is certain that his system will help prison wardens avoid mishaps like the one that occurred in 1988 in Texas, when, during a manual injection procedure, a tube attached to the inmate’s arm burst, causing lethal chemicals to spray across the death chamber toward the assembled witnesses. 

Errol Morris’s film on Leuchter, Dr. Death, is well worth a viewing if you have the time.