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Last week, Alabama had a “first in the nation” moment. But not in a way that many people wanted to celebrate. Alabama became one of the first places in the world to attempt an execution using nitrogen gas. Some called this execution a straight up “experiment.” The United Nations warned it might violate human rights treaties that the U.S. has signed on to.

The prisoner who was killed was named Kenneth Smith. Everyone who knew him just called him Kenny. And even though all this happened a few days back, it felt worthwhile to linger on, even now. So I called up someone who was there, someone who could tell me what exactly went down in the execution chamber.

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The Rev. Jeff Hood is an anti–death penalty advocate. He’s also a spiritual adviser for death row inmates. Kenny Smith’s execution was the fifth Hood has been to in just a little over a year. He sits with inmates the whole day, ministering to them, but also just talking. And he stays beside them, even in the death chamber itself.

“It’s a very strange, strange moment,” Hood said. “When you get down to those last five minutes, there is nothing more horrible than sitting there and every precious second with someone they love is just ticking away. And there’s no way to catch it; it’s just flowing through their fingers. The tears and, just, wails—it’s horrible. It’s absolutely horrible.”

In the days since Kenny Smith was killed, there’s been an active public debate about whether his execution went well or went poorly. It definitely took a while. Smith visibly struggled as nitrogen gas got pumped into him. It was a half-hour before he was declared dead. Whether this execution is understood to have been humane or even just acceptable has real consequences. Other states are considering executing inmates with nitrogen gas. And dozens of death row prisoners in Alabama have now requested this execution method.

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The Alabama attorney general said this was a “textbook execution,” but Hood disagrees. “He’s a liar. He’s either a liar or a lunatic. The people who are in power, and making these comments, are not the people who actually had to carry out the execution,” he said.

On a recent episode of What Next, we discussed what exactly happened inside Alabama’s execution chamber. Our conversation has been condensed and edited for clarity.

Mary Harris: The Rev. Jeff Hood started out as a death penalty protester—one of those people outside a prison, asking the state to shut their death chambers down. It didn’t take him long to figure out that was not working.

Having gone to the seminary, he quickly realized he could play a different role: the role of spiritual adviser to the accused. Now, he’s got a calendar full of meetings with death row inmates, he’s got executions he’s attending. One of the things he’s really clear about, though, is that the people he’s ministering to, they’ve done bad things. Often, really bad things.

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Jeff Hood: You start off really naïve, in this “everybody’s innocent” kind of way. One of the early guys that I interacted with was a serial killer of children. So, I was sitting there with him and we were talking about everything, and I asked him if there was anything that I could do for him. And he said, “Could you send me a picture of your children?”

Oh.

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And it was a slap in the face of the reality of this work. Sometimes it’s going to be loving and wonderful; other times it’s going to be hard and disturbing. Over the years what I’ve realized is the more difficult the situation, the more human it feels.

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How did you meet Kenneth Smith? What was your first meeting with him like?

The first thing he asked me when we met was, “Are you prepared to die to be my spiritual adviser?”

Kenny Smith asked this question because he knew his execution would be something totally different. He’d be wearing a gas mask that would get pumped full of nitrogen, cutting off his oxygen supply. But if that gas mask leaked, it could put Jeff Hood in danger. The state of Alabama made him sign a waiver about it.

It just outlined the dangers of nitrogen hypoxia and made you consent to being a part of a very dangerous experiment. He asked that question and we got to know each other a little bit before committing. It’s a strange phenomenon. It’s like dating. And when you get to know these guys on death row, it’s almost like then you’re going steady, and then you commit to each other, and then you go all the way in terms of going to the execution chamber and whatnot.

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It’s important that we tell Kenny Smith’s story a little bit. He was convicted of being involved in a murder-for-hire plot. He helped kill a pastor’s wife, a woman named Elizabeth Sennett. Originally he was sentenced to death, but then he got another trial. And actually, those jurors wanted to send him to prison for life.

It’s important to point out that this is a man who took $1,000 to kill someone, a completely innocent person. It was a horrible crime. And I always feel the need to state that because I think sometimes that gets lost in the hoopla of it all. But also, the way that this case was handled in Alabama speaks to a lot of the injustices in Alabama. In his second trial, the jurors very clearly stated that they did not want to give him the death penalty. The judge overrode that decision and gave him the death penalty, which is known as judicial override.

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And it’s no longer permitted in Alabama or any other state.

Right. It was outlawed a couple of years ago. If this trial happened today, he would have never gotten the death penalty.

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And then he was scheduled for execution by lethal injection in 2022, and the lethal injection failed. It adds these layers of complication to his story.

He compared that botched execution to being under a sewing machine.

Because they were looking for a vein with a needle

They were looking for a vein and just consistently being poked and cut. Kenny’s story represents all of the things that are wrong with not just the death penalty but the criminal justice system in Alabama. Everybody called this execution an experiment, but in a lot of ways, the criminal justice system down there itself is an experiment. And it’s no mistake that Kenny embarrassed the state by surviving, and he was the first person executed by nitrogen hypoxia. They were going to figure out a way to kill him no matter what.

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Did you read up on the nitrogen hypoxia execution method to better understand it before you worked with Kenny Smith?

I didn’t learn about nitrogen hypoxia till after I agreed to work with him. I didn’t want that to influence whether I worked with him. After that, though, I became quickly acquainted with everything.

My understanding of the way it worked is that a mask was put over Kenny Smith’s face, and a lot of experts compared it to putting a plastic bag over someone’s head, just cutting off your access to oxygen.

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Yeah, it was just absolutely horrific. I knew that it was going to be much more visceral than lethal injection. A lethal injection looks relatively peaceful because of the paralytic. There’s all sorts of interpretations about what actually happens after the paralytic.

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With this, it looks like someone, like you said, has a bag over their head, and they’re suffocating to death. But an even better comparison is it looks like someone puts their hands around your neck and chokes you out with their bare hands, because that’s what the resistance looks like. I’ve said that it looked like a fish out of water, just on a dock, suffocating to death. But now I’m beginning to think it’s even more violent than that. It feels like it’s someone putting their hands around someone’s neck and choking them out. That’s how he moved, as if someone was physically killing him with their bare hands.

My understanding is that he gave the sign language symbol for “I love you” right before he was executed.

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He did. And I very much appreciated that about him. It was as if he was ministering to me as much as I was ministering to him. When the execution commenced, Kenny actually had a smile on his face. I was very surprised by that because I’ve worked with so many people who were terrified at death.

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State officials had said ahead of time the nitrogen gas would make Kenny Smith unconscious within seconds.

Yes, they lied. There’s no other way to describe it. They lied. It was 22 minutes of hell. And it was the most violent thing I’ve ever seen. I was a trauma chaplain at a hospital for a year or so back in Fort Worth—motorcycle crashes, gunshot victims. And this was definitely the most violent thing I’ve ever seen.

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This is another crazy thing about Alabama. I’ve also seen executions in Oklahoma and Texas. And every other state that I have been in, there is a doctor that comes out and pronounces a time of death. In Alabama, that doesn’t happen. So when the curtains close and I’m let out of the room, there’s no way to tell if that person is actually dead, because there is no pronouncement of death, there’s no checking of vital signs. All we know is that the state is claiming that they got a flatline on the EKG in the control center behind Kenny, but there’s nobody that comes out and actually checks. The lack of transparency that the state of Alabama continues to show throughout all of these processes extends into the very end.

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I’m curious about you in the death chamber itself, because you’re an anti–death penalty advocate and you’re watching a man get executed, right? Were you torn at all about your role?

Always. I find myself in those moments just absolutely morally tortured. And I walk out of there every time feeling like I was co-opted, feeling like I was there to keep the peace. I was there to spiritually hold this person down while the state killed them. And it’s something that keeps me awake at night. But on the other hand, I also know that all of my guys, in some form or another, let me know that they’re so thankful that they don’t have to experience those moments alone. That’s the best I can do. But you can’t be a part of that and walk out clean. The greatest evil of the death penalty is that it makes us all murderers.

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Last Thursday, after the execution was over, and after he’d given his last press conference, the Rev. Jeff Hood told me he needed something to eat. And one of the few places open was a Waffle House. He walked in and realized the other people in there? They were the adult children of the woman Kenny Smith killed. They’d been there to watch the execution, too.

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Hood thought about turning right around. But he didn’t. He says he hugged them, instead. To him, this story underscores the way everyone involved in an execution is thrashed together, no matter what “side” they’re on. As a spiritual adviser, Hood says he wants to be open to all of them—the guards, the wardens, the inmates, the survivors, everyone.

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I feel like the message of Jesus is clearly one of love—the adulterous woman in the Gospel of John, “You who are without sin cast the first stone.” I read that story every time I’m in the execution chamber to the person being executed because I want everyone in that room to know that they don’t have to do this. They can walk away. “You who are without sin cast the first stone.”

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I’m always preaching to everybody. I always preach with the idea that there are people who need to hear that they don’t have to commit this evil. The death penalty is not about the person being executed. It’s about us. We can call that person unrighteous all we want to. It’s not a question about the righteousness of the person being executed. It’s a question of whether or not we think we are righteous enough to kill someone.

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Forty-three prisoners in Alabama have said they plan to be executed using nitrogen hypoxia. Do you think you’re going to be attending more executions like the one you just did?

I hope not. I really certainly hope not. But, humanity is always finding ways to destroy each other. And when we think we’re finding humane ways to destroy each other, it seems like these things that we call humane are somehow worse than what came before. I’m concerned that we’re not too far from let’s burn people to death because that’s more humane. Will I experience this horror again? I have no doubt.

Do you have a next execution on your calendar?

The next execution that I’m scheduled to be engaged with is the execution of Michael Smith in Oklahoma in April. It’s a very complicated case. But he’s someone who I’m already very close to.

And you’ll be in the chamber?

And I’ll be in the chamber. It’ll be a lethal injection.

That’s six executions in a couple of years.

Yeah, it’s horrible. It’s absolutely horrible, and I didn’t expect this. It’s difficult when success in what you do means seeing more people die.

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QOSHE - “It Was the Most Violent Thing I’ve Ever Seen”: Inside the Chamber for Alabama’s Experimental New Execution Technique - Mary Harris
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“It Was the Most Violent Thing I’ve Ever Seen”: Inside the Chamber for Alabama’s Experimental New Execution Technique

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01.02.2024

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Last week, Alabama had a “first in the nation” moment. But not in a way that many people wanted to celebrate. Alabama became one of the first places in the world to attempt an execution using nitrogen gas. Some called this execution a straight up “experiment.” The United Nations warned it might violate human rights treaties that the U.S. has signed on to.

The prisoner who was killed was named Kenneth Smith. Everyone who knew him just called him Kenny. And even though all this happened a few days back, it felt worthwhile to linger on, even now. So I called up someone who was there, someone who could tell me what exactly went down in the execution chamber.

Advertisement

The Rev. Jeff Hood is an anti–death penalty advocate. He’s also a spiritual adviser for death row inmates. Kenny Smith’s execution was the fifth Hood has been to in just a little over a year. He sits with inmates the whole day, ministering to them, but also just talking. And he stays beside them, even in the death chamber itself.

“It’s a very strange, strange moment,” Hood said. “When you get down to those last five minutes, there is nothing more horrible than sitting there and every precious second with someone they love is just ticking away. And there’s no way to catch it; it’s just flowing through their fingers. The tears and, just, wails—it’s horrible. It’s absolutely horrible.”

In the days since Kenny Smith was killed, there’s been an active public debate about whether his execution went well or went poorly. It definitely took a while. Smith visibly struggled as nitrogen gas got pumped into him. It was a half-hour before he was declared dead. Whether this execution is understood to have been humane or even just acceptable has real consequences. Other states are considering executing inmates with nitrogen gas. And dozens of death row prisoners in Alabama have now requested this execution method.

Advertisement

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The Alabama attorney general said this was a “textbook execution,” but Hood disagrees. “He’s a liar. He’s either a liar or a lunatic. The people who are in power, and making these comments, are not the people who actually had to carry out the execution,” he said.

On a recent episode of What Next, we discussed what exactly happened inside Alabama’s execution chamber. Our conversation has been condensed and edited for clarity.

Mary Harris: The Rev. Jeff Hood started out as a death penalty protester—one of those people outside a prison, asking the state to shut their death chambers down. It didn’t take him long to figure out that was not working.

Having gone to the seminary, he quickly realized he could play a different role: the role of spiritual adviser to the accused. Now, he’s got a calendar full of meetings with death row inmates, he’s got executions he’s attending. One of the things he’s really clear about, though, is that the people he’s ministering to, they’ve done bad things. Often, really bad things.

Advertisement

Jeff Hood: You start off really naïve, in this “everybody’s innocent” kind of way. One of the early guys that I interacted with was a serial killer of children. So, I was sitting there with him and we were talking about everything, and I asked him if there was anything that I could do for him. And he said, “Could you send me a picture of your children?”

........

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