An American, sentenced to death for the murder of a young girl almost 40 years ago, was executed by lethal injection on Wednesday in Arizona, which had once offered to opt for the gas chamber.
• Read also: Arizona executes first death row inmate since 2014
• Read also: Arizona offers gas chamber to death row inmate
Frank Atwood, 66, was pronounced dead at 10:16 a.m. (5:16 p.m. GMT) in Florence State Prison, the Arizona Corrections Service said in a statement.
In 1984, he kidnapped an 8-year-old girl who was riding a bicycle in the city of Tucson. His body was found seven months later in the desert.
Sentenced to capital punishment in 1987, he then brought several legal actions to no avail. His death was also delayed by the 2014 suspension of executions in Arizona following the long agony of a convict convulsing following being given the lethal substances.
The sprawling southern US state finally revived the practice last month when it executed Clarence Dixon, a Native American convicted of murdering a student thirty years earlier.
To overcome objections to the legality of lethal injections, Arizona now gives death row inmates the option of inhaling lethal gas.
Neither Clarence Dixon nor Frank Atwood have spoken, which amounts to accepting the lethal injection.
But the prospect of a reinstatement of the gas chamber shocked, especially as prison authorities plan to use hydrogen cyanide, the main element of Zyklon-B, gas associated with the Holocaust.
However, Frank Atwood’s mother was Jewish and had fled Austria in 1939 to escape the Nazis, according to the lawyer for the condemned, Me Joe Perkovich.
Seven executions have taken place in the United States since the beginning of the year.