On January 31, 2024, less than a week after the state conducted its
first execution via nitrogen gas inhalation, the Alabama Attorney General’s Office filed a motion to the
Alabama Supreme Court, seeking approval to schedule a date of execution for Jamie Mills. Unlike the previous execution of Kenneth Eugene Smith, the state asked to carry out the death sentence of Mills via the primary method of lethal injection. In the same state, another lethal injection execution was scheduled for July 18, 2024. On March 21, 2024, the Alabama Supreme Court approved the death warrant on Mills, and directed the state's governor
Kay Ivey to schedule his execution date. U.S. District Judge
Scott Coogler dismissed Mills's appeal on May 20, 2024, after he found that the claims made by Mills, including those in relation to the plea bargain of Mills's wife, could not aid him in escaping the death sentence, and noted that his arguments had been repeatedly rejected in previous appeals. Chief U.S. District Judge
Emily C. Marks rejected Mills's separate petition for a
stay of execution, describing it as "inexplicable and inexcusable" and deplored the practice of filing last-minute appeals and requests for stay of execution when the facts of the case had been repeatedly upheld, stating that such abuse of court processes should be stopped. The
11th Circuit Court of Appeals rejected a follow-up appeal from Mills on May 28, 2024, after finding "no reasonable jurist could conclude that the district court abused its discretion", and allowed the execution to move forward. On the same date when the ruling was made, several opponents of capital punishment, including representatives of
Death Penalty Action, submitted a petition to Governor Ivey for clemency, with hopes of commuting Mills's death sentence to life without parole. The
U.S. Supreme Court would hear Mills's final appeal on the date of his execution, and similarly rejected it, clearing the way for Mills's execution to proceed. ==Execution==