Wednesday,  April 30, 2014 • Vol. 16--No. 286 • 24 of 31

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police should be able to make unlimited cellphone searches without first getting warrants.

• 10. COURT: KNOX DELIVERED FATAL BLOW HERSELF
• The next step could be an appeal to another Italian court. If those judges confirm the American's conviction, a long extradition fight for Knox is expected.

AP News in Brief
Oklahoma halts execution of inmate writhing on gurney; man dies later of heart attack

• McALESTER, Okla. (AP) -- Oklahoma prison officials halted an inmate's execution on Tuesday after a new drug combination left the man writhing and clenching his teeth on the gurney, before he later died of a heart attack.
• Clayton Lockett, 38, was declared unconscious 10 minutes after the first of the state's new three-drug lethal injection combination was administered. Three minutes later, though, he began breathing heavily, writhing, clenching his teeth and straining to lift his head off the pillow.
• The blinds were eventually lowered to prevent those in the viewing gallery from watching what was happening in the death chamber, and the state's top prison official eventually called a halt to the proceedings. Lockett died of a heart attack a short time later, the Department of Corrections said.
• "It was a horrible thing to witness. This was totally botched," said Lockett's attorney, David Autry.
• The problems with the execution are likely to fuel more debate about the ability of states to administer lethal injections that meet the U.S. Constitution's requirement they be neither cruel nor unusual punishment. That question has drawn renewed attention from defense attorneys and death penalty opponents in recent months, as several states scrambled to find new sources of execution drugs because drugmakers that oppose capital punishment -- many based in Europe -- have stopped selling to prisons and corrections departments.
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