Ohio House to consider lethal injection drug bill


COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The names of companies that provide Ohio with lethal injection drugs would be shielded under a proposal the state House is poised to vote on today.

Some lawmakers have said the bill is needed to restart executions in the state. But prosecutors who want a condemned child killer executed in February say the legislation will undoubtedly lead to court challenges, and they’re confident the procedure won’t happen as scheduled.

The bill is among several the House planned to vote on as lawmakers finish work for the two-year legislative session.

The Senate passed the lethal injection drug bill last week. If the House approves it, the measure would go to Republican Gov. John Kasich.

Shielding the names of companies that provide lethal injection drugs is necessary to obtain supplies of the drugs by protecting drugmakers from harassment, according to bill supporters.

Opponents say concerns about such harassment are overblown and it’s naive to think the bill can truly protect companies’ names from being revealed.

The anonymity for companies — which would last 20 years — was requested by lawmakers after prosecutors said executions wouldn’t happen in Ohio without such protection. It’s aimed at compounding pharmacies that mix doses of specialty drugs.

In addition, the bill creates a committee to study “the manner and means” of how executions are carried out. At issue is whether other methods already ruled constitutional — such as the electric chair — should be considered. The state abolished electrocution as an option more than a decade ago.

The bill also shields the names of participants in Ohio executions.