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Tennessee Aborts Execution Attempt After Struggling to Find Vein

May 21 (Reuters) – Tennessee ⁠prison ⁠officials aborted their attempt ⁠to execute a man convicted of murders ​on Thursday after failing to find a suitable vein for ‌a lethal injection.

Tennessee Governor Bill ‌Lee later granted a one-year reprieve from execution ⁠to ⁠Tony Carruthers, 57, who was sentenced to death after ​he was found guilty of kidnapping and murdering three people in 1994.

After Carruthers was taken to the execution chamber at a ​maximum-security prison in Nashville, prison officials spent more than ⁠an ⁠hour trying to establish ⁠an ​intravenous line before calling off the execution and returning him to ​his cell, according ⁠to an Associated Press reporter present as a media witness.

Prison officials were able to set up a primary intravenous line, the Tennessee Department of Correction said in ⁠a statement, but struggled to establish a “backup line” required by ⁠the state’s lethal injection protocol.

“I am granting Tony Von Carruthers a temporary reprieve from execution for one year,” Lee said in a statement.

Carruthers becomes at least the seventh man to survive his execution date in the U.S. after a botched lethal injection attempt, according to the abolitionist group Reprieve.

“Lethal injection is ⁠touted as a humane, ‘medical’ method of execution. Bloody and prolonged execution attempts like this one expose the gruesome reality,” Matt Wells, Reprieve’s U.S. deputy director, said ​in a statement.

(Reporting by Jonathan Allen in ​New YorkEditing by Bill Berkrot)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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