Updated November 21st, 2019 at 20:47 IST

Judge temporarily stops 1st federal execution in 16 years

A federal judge in the District of Columbia has temporarily halted the first federal execution in 16 years as a lawsuit on how the government intends to carry it out continues.

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A federal judge in the District of Columbia has temporarily halted the first federal execution in 16 years as a lawsuit on how the government intends to carry it out continues.

U.S. District Judge Tanya S. Chutka said on Thursday the public is not served by “short-circuiting” legitimate judicial process. She said it is better that every effort is made to ensure that the most serious type of punishment is imposed lawfully.

Death row inmates challenged the procedures the government intends to use to carry out executions.

Danny Lee, of Yukon, Oklahoma, was the first person scheduled to be executed, on Dec. 9. Lee was convicted in the 1996 deaths of an Arkansas family as part of a plot to set up a whites-only nation in the Pacific Northwest.

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Published November 21st, 2019 at 20:07 IST