(AP) — The latest on the confusion over Oklahoma's supply of lethal injection drugs, which prompted Gov. Mary Fallin to issue a last-minute execution stay for Richard Glossip (all times local): Glossip was set to die Wednesday, but Gov. Mary Fallin halted the execution after the Department of Corrections said it had received a shipment of potassium acetate, rather than the potassium chloride listed in the state's protocols. A spokesman for Oklahoma's governor says she could issue a temporary stay of the lethal injection of two inmates scheduled for this month, after a drug mix-up by prison officials forced her to delay an execution that was supposed to take place this week. Weintz admitted those executions might not go forward given that the Department of Corrections received potassium acetate instead of potassium chloride for Richard Gossip's execution, which had been scheduled for Wednesday.