Crime | Charles Warner Okla. Stays Next Execution After Inmate's Botched Death Charles Warner gets 6-month reprieve By Newser Editors and Wire Services Posted May 8, 2014 12:17 PM CDT Copied This June 29, 2011 file photo shows Clayton Lockett, who died in a botched execution, April 29, 2014. (AP Photo/Oklahoma Department of Corrections, File) Oklahoma's attorney general has agreed to a six-month stay of execution for a death row inmate scheduled to die next week while an investigation is conducted into last week's botched lethal injection. In a filing today with the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals, Attorney General Scott Pruitt's office said it will not object to a 180-day stay of execution while the investigation is under way. The inmate, Charles Warner, was scheduled for execution last week on the same night as Clayton Lockett in what would have been the state's first double execution since 1937. But Gov. Mary Fallin issued a two-week stay of execution for Warner after Lockett's execution went awry. Warner's attorneys asked for at least a six-month stay of execution while the investigation is being conducted. Read These Next Sources say Tommy Lee Jones' daughter was found dead at 34. Trump's take on his health, despite iffy signs: 'Perfect.' NASA shuts research library, resulting in loss of records. Woman, 77, goes overboard on New Year's cruise. Report an error