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Oklahoma asks to delay executions after getting wrong drug

McALESTER, Okla. (AP) - Oklahoma's attorney general on Thursday asked a court to delay all scheduled executions while the state reviews how it received the wrong drug as it prepared to lethally inject an inmate.

Attorney General Scott Pruitt said Oklahoma needed time to sort out why its Department of Corrections received a shipment of potassium acetate rather than potassium chloride for Richard Glossip's execution that was to occur Wednesday. Pruitt's move came hours after Gov. Mary Fallin said she was confident the state could resolve its problems in time for an execution set for next week.

"The Office of the Attorney General needs time to evaluate the events that transpired on Sept. 30, 2015, ODOC's acquisition of a drug contrary to protocol, and ODOC's internal procedures relative to the protocol," Pruitt's office said in its request to the state Court of Criminal Appeals.

Pruitt asked for an indefinite stay.

Benjamin Cole is set for execution Oct. 7 and John Marion Grant on Oct. 28. Glossip is now scheduled to die Nov. 6.

State officials said they became aware Wednesday that Oklahoma's drug supplier had shipped it potassium acetate rather than potassium chloride, the third of three drugs administered under the Department of Corrections' guidelines. State protocols adopted following the flawed execution of Clayton Lockett last year directed that the warden of the Oklahoma State Penitentiary "verifies execution inventory" two days prior to an execution.

"Certainly it raises a lot of the same questions raised by the Lockett execution, which is whether this department is competent to carry out its own procedures," said Jen Moreno, a staff attorney with the Death Penalty Clinic at the University of California's Berkeley Law School. "Minutes before the execution is supposed to start, that's when they realize they don't have the right drugs?"

Oklahoma had planned to execute Glossip, 52, whom prosecutors said arranged for a handyman to kill their boss, motel owner Barry Van Treese, at the Best Budget Inn in Oklahoma City on Jan. 7, 1997. Fallin granted a stay of execution about an hour after the U.S. Supreme Court had cleared the way for the punishment to move forward by rejecting Glossip's claim that the handyman had set him up.

"She's extremely frustrated that the state was unable to deliver closure to the Van Treese family," Fallin spokesman Alex Weintz said Thursday. "The family has certainly waited long enough for justice and has been through the wringer with this entire process."

After Lockett writhed on a gurney and struggled against his restraints during his execution on April 29, 2014, prison officials concluded that an intravenous line at Lockett's groin wasn't properly set and he didn't receive a full dose of deadly chemicals. It rewrote its guidelines and assured federal courts from Oklahoma City to Washington that its procedures were sound.

"That new protocol came out last September," Moreno said. "For one year, this department has said they have fixed their problems and they have everything together and they're prepared and they've reviewed and changed and made revisions, and then this happens."

The Oklahoma Board of Corrections was gathering for a previously set meeting Thursday in McAlester. Corrections Director Robert Patton was expected to discuss Glossip's case with the panel.

Fallin's office said corrections officials discovered the drug mix-up Wednesday morning, and then her office, the attorney general and prison officials discussed what to do in the afternoon. Separately, the U.S. Supreme Court was weighing Glossip's plea for a hearing based on claims that his co-defendant had lied.

As the hours passed, it wasn't clear whether Oklahoma tried to find the correct drug - the death warrant was good until midnight - or whether it was waiting for the Supreme Court to grant Glossip a reprieve. An hour after justices said the execution could continue, Fallin issued a stay so the state could look into whether potassium acetate could be used as a substitute or whether a batch of potassium chloride could be found.

Fallin, at a Capitol news conference in Oklahoma City on another topic, said she wasn't ready to talk about her level of confidence in the prisons department.

"I don't think we should be pointing fingers right now because we don't have details about who did what," Fallin said. "What we do need to make sure is that we have the protocols in place, that we follow those protocols and that we make sure that we uphold the law."

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Associated Press writer Tim Talley contributed to this report from Oklahoma City.

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Follow Sean Murphy at www.twitter.com/apseanmurphy

Kim Van Atta, left, a friend of death row inmate Richard Glossip, celebrates with death penalty opponent Sister Helen Prejean, right, outside the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester, Okla, Wednesday, Sept. 30, 2015, after Glossip's scheduled execution was postponed. Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin postponed an inmate's scheduled execution Wednesday, saying a drug that the state Department of Corrections had received to carry out a lethal injection didn't match those listed in the agency's protocols. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki) The Associated Press
Richard Glossip’s sister, Nancy Ogden, left and her grandson Kevin Glossip embrace outside Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester, Okla., Wednesday, Sept. 30, 2015. Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin postponed at the last minute Wednesday the execution of the inmate who claims he's innocent, after prison officials said one of the three drugs they had received to carry out the lethal injection didn't match state guidelines. (Kevin Harvison/The McAlester News-Capital via AP) MANDATORY CREDIT The Associated Press
Karin Stafford, of Oklahoma City, joins a crowd of peaceful protestors who gathered in front of the Governor's Mansion in Oklahoma City, Okla., on Wednesday, Sep. 30, 2015, to keep a silent vigil as the scheduled time drew near for the execution of convicted killer Richard Glossip, currently detained at the state penitentiary in McAlester. Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin postponed at the last minute Wednesday the execution of Glossip who claims he's innocent, after prison officials said one of the three drugs they had received to carry out the lethal injection didn't match state guidelines. (Jim Beckel /The Oklahoman via AP) LOCAL STATIONS OUT (KFOR, KOCO, KWTV, KOKH, KAUT OUT); LOCAL WEBSITES OUT; LOCAL PRINT OUT (EDMOND SUN OUT, OKLAHOMA GAZETTE OUT) TABLOIDS OUT; MANDATORY CREDIT The Associated Press
Missionary Edna Osborne, 61, joins peaceful protestors who gathered in front of the Governor's Mansion in Oklahoma City, Okla., on Wednesday, Sep. 30, 2015, to keep a silent vigil as the scheduled time drew near for the execution of convicted killer Richard Glossip, currently detained at the state penitentiary in McAlester. Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin postponed at the last minute Wednesday the execution of Glossip who claims he's innocent, after prison officials said one of the three drugs they had received to carry out the lethal injection didn't match state guidelines. (Jim Beckel /The Oklahoman via AP) LOCAL STATIONS OUT (KFOR, KOCO, KWTV, KOKH, KAUT OUT); LOCAL WEBSITES OUT; LOCAL PRINT OUT (EDMOND SUN OUT, OKLAHOMA GAZETTE OUT) TABLOIDS OUT; MANDATORY CREDIT The Associated Press
Family members of death row inmate Richard Glossip, from left, sister Kathy Wokaty, sister Nancy Ogden, niece Debra Ogden, niece Billie Jo Ogden Boyiddle and daughter Ericka Glossip-Hodge, stand together outside the Oklahoma State Penitentiary, in McAlester, Okla, Wednesday, Sept. 30, 2015, after the scheduled execution for Glossip was stayed. Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin postponed an inmate's scheduled execution Wednesday, saying a drug that the state Department of Corrections had received to carry out a lethal injection didn't match those listed in the agency's protocols. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki) The Associated Press
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