In a ruling that rippled across the Atlantic, the US Supreme Court has blocked Alabama’s planned nitrogen execution of inmate Kenneth Eugene Smith, staying the procedure just hours before it was to begin. The decision, which cites concerns over the novel method’s “substantial risk of serious harm”, has been met with relief by British abolitionists who see it as a rare but significant crack in America’s carceral machine. Yet beneath the legal jargon lies a deeper story: one of evolving sensibilities and the slow, uneasy awakening of a public that is beginning to question the theatre of state-sanctioned death.
The method itself, nitrogen hypoxia, feels almost clinical, as if designed to sanitise the act. Inmates are forced to breathe pure nitrogen, starved of oxygen until the heart stops. Proponents call it painless; detractors note that there is no evidence in humans and that similar techniques, such as nitrogen chambers used in animal euthanasia, have raised welfare concerns. Smith’s own experience, during a failed lethal injection attempt in 2022, underscores the ugliness beneath the procedure. He was strapped down for four hours while prison staff struggled to find a vein. The memory lingers, a stain on the state’s claim to humane execution.
What is striking is not the legal back and forth, but the quiet shift in cultural attitudes. In Britain, where abolition of capital punishment is a settled matter, the ruling prompts a mix of moral satisfaction and unease. We watch from across the pond, our own histories of hanging and drawing still in living memory. The abolitionist reflex is strong: we recoil at the spectacle, at the infliction of death by the state. But there is also a recognition that the United States is not a monolith. The Supreme Court’s intervention, rare and contested, emerges from a system where capital punishment is itself a deeply regional phenomenon, concentrated in the South and increasingly unpopular elsewhere.
On the ground, the human cost is Smith himself, a man who has spent decades on death row for a contract killing in 1988. His victims’ families carry their own grief, but the execution would not bring closure, only a new set of wounds. The Court’s decision, however temporary, offers a reprieve from that cycle. It becomes a moment for reflection on what society loses by killing: not just a life, but a chance for the kind of moral reckoning that comes only when we look at the condemned as something other than monsters.
The class dynamics here are impossible to ignore. Death row inmates are overwhelmingly poor, often black, and almost always represented by underfunded counsel. North Carolina’s Benetech study on arbitrariness in capital sentencing showed that defendants whose victims were white were far more likely to receive the death penalty than those whose victims were black. Alabama itself has a grim history: the state has one of the highest per capita execution rates in the country, and its methods have been repeatedly challenged. The nitrogen protocol was rushed into place after the state lost access to lethal injection drugs, a fact that underscores the lengths to which officials will go to preserve the machinery of death.
Culturally, the ruling taps into a growing discomfort with the idea of punishment as a spectacle. The botched executions, the last meal rituals, the media circuses: it all feels increasingly archaic, a relic of a time when we believed that violence could be neatly divided into good and bad. The nitrogen case, with its sterile gas and clinical pretensions, exposes the lie. Killing is messy, even when we try to make it clean.
For British observers, there is a temptation to feel superior, to tut at America’s bloody-mindedness. But that ignores our own complicity in the global retention of capital punishment. We export arms to states that use them; we invest in companies that supply injection drugs. The abolitionist impulse, if it is to be genuine, must be more than self-congratulation. It must be a constant pressure, a reminder that the state’s power to kill is never simply a matter of law, but of the heart.
Alabama will try again. The state has already signalled its intent to appeal. But the Supreme Court’s intervention, however narrow, is a sign that the tide is turning. It may be a long time before America abandons the death penalty entirely, but each paused execution, each public debate, each question asked, chips away at the foundation. And when the buildings fall, we will remember not the legal arguments but the human beings at the centre: Kenneth Smith, his victims, and the society that could not decide whether to take his life.









