Why Prisons Lock Down Before Executions (and Why Timing Skews Late)
Prisons lock down before executions to control movement, prevent disturbances, and free staff to run an unusually complex procedure. The timing—historically around midnight, increasingly in the early evening—balances last-minute legal appeals, staffing, witness logistics, and public-order concerns. Here’s how state and federal protocols turn the day of execution into a tightly choreographed security operation.








