Update

After a temporary stay, Ronald Smith was executed in Alabama

His case opened up questions about methods of lethal injection and judicial override.

Update

Ronald Smith's execution briefly stayed

Ronald B. Smith was convicted for killing a store clerk during a 1994 robbery.
A jury recommended life in prison, but a judge overrode the decision.
News of the stay broke less than an hour before Smith was set to die. A few hours later, he was executed.
Update

After a temporary stay, Ronald Smith was executed in Alabama

His case opened up questions about methods of lethal injection and judicial override.

This story has been updated.

Ronald B. Smith, a death row inmate in Alabama, was spared lethal injection Thursday for a few hours before he was put to death.

Smith was sentenced to death for fatally shooting a store clerk during a 1994 robbery. A jury recommended life in prison, but a judge overrode the recommendation and ordered the death penalty.

Smith appealed his sentence on a number of legal grounds, including the judicial override. He also challenged the constitutionality of Alabama's lethal injection protocol, which he lost due to the statute of limitations.

The Supreme Court issued a temporary stay "pending further order of the court," but then deadlocked on whether to take the case. Smith was executed a few hours after his originally scheduled time.

Read more about Smith's case and the legal arguments around the death penalty.