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PRIVACY

Death row inmate thought he was 'in the afterlife' during botched execution attempt

Thomas Creech, 73, was sentenced to death for fatally beating prisoner David Jensen back in 1981, but when he was wheeled into the execution chamber at Idaho Maximum Security prison in February, things didn't go to plan

Thomas Creech with his wife LeAnn(Idaho Department of Correction, via Federal Defender Services of Idaho)

A death row inmate who was part of a botched execution has opened up on the harrowing ordeal.

73-year-old Thomas Creech is one of the few people to have survived a death penalty execution and currently resides in an Idaho prison for nearly five decades after being convicted for five murders committed in three different states. He was scheduled for execution by lethal injection in February but it did not proceed as planned due to several complications.

Medics battled for almost an hour to administer the lethal drug into Creech's veins at Idaho Maximum Security prison, situated outside Boise. Their trials initially failed on his arms, then hands, and they even endeavoured on his legs before calling everything off.

READ MORE: Death row killer put to death mouths final three words to family moments before execution

Thomas Creech was due to be killed in February, but medics couldn't find a suitable vein for the lethal injection (KIVI/ABC News)

It became a harrowing episode for the murder convict, who is strongly implicated in committing more crimes. Opening up for the first time since the botched occasion, the death row convict shared his dreadful ordeal by telling the New York Times: "The worst ones was when they got down to my ankles. I was thinking the whole time that this is really it. I'm dead. This is my day to die."

Creech's situation throws light on an increasingly disturbing pattern of bungled executions across the US prisons. It could be attributed to several factors, including inept or untrained executioners, challenges in procuring lethal injections, along with the ageing captive population on death row.

Creech revealed the fear-stricken moments he was plunged into, caused by the repeated needle pricks that brought him close to mortality each time. The pain intensified with every jab, but it was his wife's presence nearby that gave him strength during his nervy phase.

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