Community Corner

Gov. DeWine Delays More Executions

Gov. Mike DeWine on Friday delayed three more executions.

Cleveland Jackson, 42, of Lima, was scheduled for execution in January. His and two others' executions have been delayed until 2023. Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction photo.
Cleveland Jackson, 42, of Lima, was scheduled for execution in January. His and two others' executions have been delayed until 2023. Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction photo. (Ohio Capital Journal)

By
Marty Schladen
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Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine on Friday delayed three more executions, extending a more than two-year period during which nobody has been put to death by the state.

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The governor announced the reprieves for the convicted murderers, citing the difficulty the state has had in obtaining drugs from manufacturers who contend that they’re not meant for use in the death chamber:

  • Cleveland Jackson was scheduled to be executed on Jan. 13, but now is slated to die on June 15, 2023.
  • James O’Neal was scheduled to be executed on Feb. 18, but now is slated to die on Aug. 16, 2023.
  • Melvin Bonnell was scheduled to be executed on March 18, but now is scheduled to die on Oct. 18, 2023.

Ohio in recent years has had several problematic executions, including that of Dennis McGuire in 2014. The convicted killer gasped and choked for an extended period and lingered for 28 minutes after the death drugs were administered.

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The last person to die in the Ohio death chamber was Robert Van Hook, who also gasped and choked before succumbing on July 18, 2018.

When he came into office, DeWine delayed his first execution, that of Warren Keith Henness, days after news coverage of a U.S. magistrate’s finding that Ohio’s execution protocol was similar to waterboarding.

A federal appellate court subsequently declared the method to be constitutional. But DeWine also has faced resistance from drug makers, who have threatened to stop selling Ohio their products for any purpose if Ohio insists on using their products to execute people.


This story was originally published by the Ohio Capital Journal. For more stories from the Ohio Capital Journal, visit OhioCapitalJournal.com.

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