But the judge said since then, the five states have approved using a single barbiturate-only procedure and that at least 18 people have been executed in that manner.
The Kentucky ruling, along with actions by a handful of states to switch to single-drug executions, is "giving momentum to the argument that this is a more humane, safer protocol," said Richard Dieter, director of the Death Penalty Information Center in Washington.
Dieter said a consensus could be building toward a one-drug method as opposed to the three-drug protocol.
A spokeswoman for Kentucky Attorney General Jack Conway said on Thursday he would not comment on the ruling until it is reviewed by state officials including the Department of Corrections. Governor Steve Beshear also noted the ruling was under review but declined further comment.
Kentucky last carried out an execution in 2008. The state has executed only three people since the death penalty was reinstated in the United States in 1976.
(Editing By Andrew Stern and Greg McCune)
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