Florida lawmaker files bill to bring back firing squads

Execution by lethal injection a problem? Florida state lawmaker Brad Drake has a solution – bring back firing squads.

Fed up with the debate over whether Florida’s current execution method constitutes cruel and unusual punishment, Drake, a Republican from Eucheeanna, filed a bill this week to give death row prisoners the choice between death by firing squad or electrocution instead, the Miami Herald reports.

"We still have Old Sparky,” he said in a statement announcing his bill, MSNBC reports. “And if that doesn't suit the criminal, then we will provide them a .45 caliber lead cocktail instead.”

Drake’s bill was inspired by a controversy over the September execution of Manuel Valle, which used a new mixture of drugs, the Miami Herald reports.

According to the Miami Herald:

The drug, pentobarbital, knocks inmates unconscious before a second drug paralyzes them and a third stops the heart.

Several activists and medical professionals, including the drug’s maker, protested its use prior to Valle’s execution, arguing that it failed to adequately sedate inmates.

"I am sick and tired of this sensitivity movement for criminals,” Drake said in his statement. “Every time there is a warranted execution that is about to take place, some man or woman is standing on a corner holding a sign, yelling and screaming for humane treatment. I have no desire to humanely respect those that are inhumane."

If that’s the case, it’s a pity Drake didn’t research execution methods more closely before attempting to reinstate firing squads.

With so many trained marksmen capable of carrying out firing squad executions properly, it’s the "most humane" and "most dignified" method of those that can be used in the United States, Deborah Denno, a professor at Fordham University law school, told MSNBC.

"I think people think of it as an antiquated procedure … without realizing it's so much more humane than what we do to kill people," she said. "Ironically, they equate it with the Wild West … (and) barbarity."

More from GlobalPost: Florida lawmaker’s high-flying jobs plan? Bring back dwarf tossing
 

Will you support The World?

Without federal support, local stations, especially in rural and underserved areas, face deep cuts or even closure. Vital public service alerts, news, storytelling, and programming like The World will be impacted. The World has weathered many storms, and we remain steadfast in our commitment to being your trusted source for human-centered international news, shared with integrity and care. We believe public media is about truth and access for all. As an independent, nonprofit newsroom, we aren’t controlled by billionaire owners or corporations. We are sustained by listeners like you.

Now more than ever, we need your help to support our global reporting work and power the future of The World.