Hanging was the method of execution in Nebraska until the execution of Albert Prince in 1913. After Prince's execution, a new law was passed requiring the use of the
electric chair. Allen Grammer was the first person executed by electrocution in Nebraska (his partner in crime, Alson Cole, would be executed 13 minutes later). In 1959, the state electrocuted
Charles Starkweather, who killed 11 people in a two-month murder spree. On February 8, 2008, the Nebraska Supreme Court declared in
State v. Mata that electrocution constitutes a "cruel and unusual punishment" under the Nebraska Constitution. The state legislature subsequently approved a bill to change its method of execution to lethal injection, which was signed by governor
Dave Heineman on May 28, 2009. Nebraska was the last state to adopt lethal injection as its execution method. The first execution in these states using the method was carried out on August 14, 2018. A total of 38 individuals have been executed in Nebraska, including four after 1976, when the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of capital punishment in
Gregg v. Georgia. In August 2018,
Carey Dean Moore was executed by
lethal injection for the murders of cabdrivers Maynard Helgeland and Reuel Van Ness Jr. in 1979.
Sodium thiopental issue In 2011 and 2012, state officials imported
sodium thiopental on two occasions from suppliers based in India and Switzerland. The suppliers said they discovered only after delivering the drugs that these would be used in executions, prompting them to demand the return of the chemicals. The state refused, and engaged in a legal battle with the United States
FDA and the suppliers to keep them. Since the drugs expired in 2013 and became unusable, the state was unable to carry out any execution until it found another way to obtain the chemicals. The state later replaced thiopental with fentanyl as an execution drug. ==2015 repeal==