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Supreme Court blocks Alabama from executing inmate with nitrogen gas

June 15, 2026

The Supreme Court blocked Alabama from executing a death row inmate using nitrogen gas, the first time the nation's highest court has prevented a state from using the method.

Jeffrey Lee, who remains under a death sentence, will not be executed under Alabama's planned nitrogen hypoxia protocol at this time. The decision preserves Lee's capital punishment but rejects the specific execution method the state sought to employ.

Alabama had moved to use nitrogen gas as an execution technique after the state struggled to obtain drugs traditionally used in lethal injections. Nitrogen hypoxia would cause death by depriving the condemned person of oxygen, a method no U.S. state had previously used for executions.

The court's intervention represents a significant moment in the ongoing legal disputes over execution methods. States have faced mounting difficulties acquiring execution drugs, leading some to explore alternative approaches. Alabama's proposal to use nitrogen gas drew scrutiny from legal experts and death penalty opponents who questioned whether the method would constitute cruel and unusual punishment.

Lee's case now faces an uncertain timeline. While the execution has been delayed, he remains on death row with his sentence intact. The specific grounds for the Supreme Court's action and whether the decision sets a precedent for future nitrogen gas execution attempts remain subjects of legal analysis.

The ruling occurs amid broader national debate over capital punishment methods. Several states have adopted or considered alternative execution approaches in response to pharmaceutical companies refusing to supply lethal injection drugs. Nitrogen gas emerged as one such alternative, with proponents arguing it could provide a reliable execution method when other options became unavailable.

Alabama has not yet announced how it plans to proceed with Lee's case or whether it will pursue other execution methods.

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