Pye already lost a previous appeal on the grounds that Georgia, at the time a death warrant was signed for him, had not fulfilled certain requirements to restart executions created as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic. Those requirements included the return of normal visitations at state prisons.

Pye’s lawyers argued that after the state decided he would be executed, they were still having issues getting in contact with him: “This is not normal or consistent with access to and availability to counsel that was previously possible, and it is unacceptable.”

The last execution in Georgia was in January 2020.

Other states have resumed executions in recent years, but efforts to use a primary method of lethal injection have grown increasingly harder as drugmakers have pulled back on access to the ingredients for executions.

Idaho attempted its first execution in 12 years last month but had to abandon the procedure after prison staff members could not establish an IV line on the inmate’s legs or arms. His lawyers called it a “badly botched execution attempt.” No new date was immediately set.

In January, Alabama, which has had difficulties obtaining lethal injection drugs, carried out the first execution in the country using nitrogen gas. Other states, including Louisiana, are eyeing the use of the controversial method with their own protocols.

But Georgia has said it has been able to procure the sedative pentobarbital to carry out death sentences by lethal injection.

Pye was convicted in Spalding County in the death of ex-girlfriend Alicia Yarbrough. Prosecutors said Pye, another man and a teenager went to her home, stole jewelry and abducted her as she was watching her baby. They took her to a motel and raped her, and Pye later shot her multiple times, according to court filings.

The teenager agreed to a plea deal, and the other defendant received five consecutive life prison sentences.

During the sentencing phase of Pye’s trial, in which he was given the death penalty, prosecutors suggested in closing arguments that he might kill a prison guard to escape. Lawyers attempted to appeal the punishment, citing the speculative remarks, but the state Supreme Court upheld the sentence in 1998.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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