As President Donald Trump's days in the White House wane, his administration is racing through a string of federal executions.
Five
executions are scheduled before President-elect Joe Biden's 20 January
inauguration - breaking with an 130-year-old precedent of pausing executions
amid a presidential transition.
And if all
five take place, Mr Trump will be the country's most prolific execution
president in more than a century, overseeing the executions of 13 death row
inmates since July of this year.
The five
executions are to begin this week, starting with 40-year-old Brandon Bernard
and 56-year-old Alfred Bourgeois. They are both scheduled to be put to death at
a penitentiary in Terre Haute, Indiana.
Attorney
General William Barr has said his justice department is simply upholding
existing law. But critics have said the move is concerning, coming just weeks
before Mr Biden - who has said he will seek to end the death penalty - takes
office.
"This is
really outside the norm, in a pretty extreme way," said Ngozi Ndulue,
director of research at the non-partisan Death Penalty Information Center.
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