White House speaks out on Oklahoma execution

Obama: death penalty still merited

The White House says a botched execution of Oklahoma death row inmate Clayton Lockett fell short of the humane standards required when the death penalty is carried out.

Officials halted Lockett's execution Tuesday when he convulsed violently and tried to lift his head after a doctor declared him unconscious. He later died of an apparent heart attack.

White House spokesman Jay Carney says President Barack Obama believes evidence shows the death penalty doesn't effectively deter crime. But he says Obama believes some crimes are so heinous that the death penalty is merited. He says the crimes in Lockett's case are indisputably heinous.

But Carney says the U.S. has a fundamental standard that the death penalty must be carried out humanely. He says everyone would recognize that this case fell short.