© 2026. The Trustees of Indiana University
Copyright Complaints
1229 East Seventh Street, Bloomington, Indiana 47405
News, Arts and Culture from WFIU Public Radio and WTIU Public Television
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Indiana lawmakers consider firing squad for state executions

Sen. Mike Young (R-Indianapolis) authored the firing squad bill.
Lauren Chapman / IPB FILE PHOTO
Sen. Mike Young (R-Indianapolis) authored the firing squad bill.

Indiana law currently allows the use of lethal injection for executions. A new measure proposes the use of firearms as another method.

A Corrections and Criminal Law committee heard public testimony on a bill that would allow the use of a firing squad for executions. Sen. Mike Young (R-Indianapolis) authored the bill and said it’s not a question about the legality of the death penalty.

“The question here is, what do we do if we only have one option in which to carry out a legal order by the courts in the state of Indiana,” Young said.

The drug that the state currently uses for executions is called pentobarbital. It is expensive, has a limited shelf life and can be difficult to obtain.

A handful of other states have instituted firing squads as a means of execution.

Indiana currently has four inmates determined competent for execution.

Zachary Stock with the Indiana Public Defender Council spoke against the proposal. He said the move would not offset the larger cost burden of capital punishment that lies in the legal system.

“Trading expensive drugs for inexpensive bullets is not going to meaningfully reduce the cost of execution,” Stock said.

Others that spoke against the move included representatives from the Catholic Church and the Death Penalty Policy Project.

Samantha Bresnahan is ACLU of Indiana Senior Policy Specialist took issue with lack of transparency.

“Executions are among the most serious acts a government can undertake, yet Senate Bill 11 would allow this method to be implemented behind a veil of secrecy, blocking disclosure and preventing relevant information from being introduced and examined in court,” Bresnahan said.

The bill also details the logistics of how a squad would execute a person. Four officers would fire weapons with live ammunition and one would fire a weapon with a blank round. The identity of the officers would also be shielded.

The bill will receive amendments before the committee takes a vote.

Copyright 2026 WFYI Public Media

Related Content

WFIU/WTIU News is an independent newsroom rooted in public service.

“Act Independently” is one of the basic creeds of journalism ethics, and we claim it proudly. The WFIU/WTIU News facilities are located on the campus of Indiana University, which does hold our broadcast license and contribute funding to our organization. However, our journalists and senior news leaders have full authority over journalistic decisions — what we decide to cover and how we tell our stories. We observe a clear boundary: Indiana University and RTVS administrators focus on running a strong and secure organization; WFIU/WTIU journalists focus on bringing you independent news you can trust.