If a government action has become so controversial, so troublesome for participants, so in violation of ethics codes, and so problematic that for-profit businesses won't touch it… maybe you should reconsider doing it any more, rather than granting legal and professional immunity and making the whole proceeding all sooper-sekret.
Just a thought, Ohio.
Ohio Could Pass the Country’s Most Extreme “Secret Executions” Bill | Mother Jones
A new law could make it almost impossible to know what really happens in the death chamber.
When you can't justify it, you try to hide it, I guess.
Wait… why is Colorado dark blue on that?
I can't find much info, +Kingsley Lintz — there's a reference here (http://www.abajournal.com/magazine/article/states_keep_mum_on_where_lethal_injection_drugs_are_made/) to Colorado, but nothing that indicates secrecy in sourcing.
Colorado has not executed anyone since the late 90s. There are three men currently on death row.
Thank you for looking. That's more than I turned up.