But the Supreme Court, yesterday, granted a rare stay of execution for a prisoner in Missouri.
Miguel Paredes, 32, who spent 13 years awaiting execution, was declared dead at 1854 (2354 GMT) after a lethal injection in Huntsville, Texas, said Texas Department of Criminal Justice spokesman Jason Clark.
Paredes had been convicted of killing three members of a rival gang in 2000.
"Father please accept my soul. I am sorry," were among his last words, Clark said.
US states using the death penalty are facing critical shortages of the anesthetic pentobarbital after European firms stopped supplying it.
The shortage has prompted many states to turn to new, less regulated, pharmaceutical suppliers instead.
Death penalty opponents allege that three recent US executions -- which left inmates suffering far longer than the typical 10-minute timeframe -- amounted to a form of torture or the "cruel and unusual" punishment forbidden by the US Constitution.
In the Missouri case, a stay was granted by the Supreme Court two hours before death row inmate Mark Christeson, 35, was scheduled to be put to death. The vote by the court was 6-3.
The court agreed to study his appeal, based on the argument that his court appointed lawyers did not represent him properly by missing deadlines for filing appeals.
Christeson was convicted in 1998 of killing Susan Brouke by cutting her throat in front of her two children aged 9 and 12, drowning them in a pond as she watched, and then throwing her into the water while she was still alive.
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