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On April 24, 2026 the U.S. Department of Justice announced it will expand federal execution protocols to include firing squads, electrocution and gas asphyxiation and readopt singleâdrug lethal injections using pentobarbital.
The move, ordered by Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, rescinds parts of a Bidenâera moratorium and directs the Federal Bureau of Prisons to modify procedures and streamline internal reviews to speed capital cases.
The DOJ said the changes respond to shortages of drugs used in lethal injections and invoke methods allowed by some states, citing Alabamaâs 2024 nitrogen asphyxiation protocol.
The report authorized seeking death sentences in multiple federal cases and criticized the previous administrationâs review of execution science.
Legal experts note that condemned prisoners can still mount Eighth Amendment âcruel and unusual punishmentâ challenges, and the adoption of older and new methods is likely to prompt litigation.
The announcement comes after President Trump signed an executive order to prioritize capital punishment and follows commutations by the prior administration that left three men on federal death row.
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Key practical barriers â professional opposition from medical bodies and documented psychological harm to executioners â could substantially complicate federal plans to expand execution methods. Those operational stresses, plus known botch risks for injections, increase the likelihood of litigation and delays.







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