Gregory Dickens, et al v. Janice Brewer, et al
Filing
FILED OPINION (PROCTER R. HUG, DOROTHY W. NELSON and M. MARGARET MCKEOWN) AFFIRMED. Judge: MMM Authoring. FILED AND ENTERED JUDGMENT. [7640883]
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FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
GREGORY SCOTT DICKENS; DONALD
EDWARD BEATY; CHARLES M.
HEDLUND; ROBERT WAYNE
MURRAY; THEODORE WASHINGTON;
TODD SMITH,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
JANICE K. BREWER; CARSON
MCWILLIAMS, Warden, ASPF;
ROBERT STEWART, Warden,
ASPCE; UNKNOWN EXECUTIONERS,
in their official capacities as
Employees, Contractors and/or
Agents of the ADC; CHARLES L.
RYAN,
Defendants-Appellees.
No. 09-16539
D.C. No.
2:07-cv-01770NVW
OPINION
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of Arizona
Neil V. Wake, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted
December 10, 2010—San Francisco, California
Filed February 9, 2011
Before: Procter Hug, Jr., Dorothy W. Nelson, and
M. Margaret McKeown, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge McKeown
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COUNSEL
Steven A. Rosenstein and Allen W. Burton, O’Melveny &
Myers LLP, New York, NY; John M. Sands, Robin C. Konrad and Dale A. Baich, Federal Public Defenders, Pheonix,
Arizona, for the plaintiffs-appellants.
Kent E. K Cattani and Jeffrey A. Zick, U.S. Attorney’s
Office, Pheoniz, Arizona, for the defendant-appellees.
OPINION
McKEOWN, Circuit Judge:
I.
INTRODUCTION
Like most states that impose the death penalty, Arizona
uses a three-drug lethal injection protocol. Under the protocol,
executions are carried out through the sequential administration of three chemicals—sodium thiopental, pancuronium
bromide and potassium chloride. The problems that can arise
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from the use of such a protocol are well known: if the sodium
thiopental is not administered correctly, the inmate will be
improperly anesthetized during the execution and will experience tremendous pain and suffering from the administration
of the pancuronium bromide and potassium chloride. Arizona’s protocol contains a number of safeguards intended to
ensure proper anesthetization. In this appeal, we are asked to
decide whether, despite these safeguards, Arizona’s protocol
creates an unconstitutional risk that an inmate will be improperly anesthetized and thus experience extreme pain and suffering while dying.
The appellants—Gregory Dickens, Donald Edward Beaty,
Charles M. Hedlund, Michael Emerson Correll, Robert
Wayne Murray, Theodore Washington, and Todd Smith
(referred to collectively as “Dickens”)—are death row
inmates in Arizona. In 2007, Dickens brought an action under
42 U.S.C. § 1983, asserting that Arizona’s execution protocol
violates the Eighth Amendment because of the risk of
improper anesthetization. The district court granted summary
judgment in favor of Arizona, holding that the protocol contains sufficient safeguards to protect against improper anesthetization and thus is constitutional under the standard set
forth by the three-Justice plurality in Baze v. Rees, 553 U.S.
35 (2008)—not giving rise to a “substantial risk of serious
harm” and not “sure or very likely to cause” serious pain and
suffering.
On appeal, the heart of Dickens’s argument is not that the
safeguards in Arizona’s protocol are inadequate. Dickens does
argue that Arizona should be required to adopt some additional safeguards. His central assertion, however, is that evidence gathered during discovery raises issues of fact as to
whether Arizona will follow the protocol and ensure that the
existing safeguards are properly implemented. Because the
protocol’s safeguards are adequate under the Baze standard
and because there is no material issue of fact regarding compliance with the protocol, we affirm.
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II.
A.
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BACKGROUND
LETHAL INJECTION IN ARIZONA
Arizona has mandated execution by lethal injection since
1992.1 From 1992 to 2000, Arizona executed twenty inmates.
Then there was a six- year hiatus—Arizona did not conduct
any executions from 2000 to 2006. In 2007, Arizona executed
one inmate, Robert Comer, on May 22, 2007.
Arizona uses a three-drug lethal injection cocktail that consists of three chemicals—sodium thiopental, pancuronium
bromide and potassium chloride—administered sequentially.
Sodium thiopental is a fast-acting barbiturate that anesthetizes
the inmate and permits the other chemicals to be administered
without causing pain. Pancuronium bromide is a paralytic
neuromuscular blocking agent that causes complete paralyzation and suffocation. Potassium chloride induces cardiac
arrest. It is uncontested on this record that, if an inmate is not
properly anesthetized by the sodium thiopental at the start of
the execution, he will experience significant pain and suffering from the administration of the pancuronium bromide and
potassium chloride. If the sodium thiopental is administered
properly, however, there is no risk of pain during the execution.
Until 2007, Arizona did not have any written procedures
for preparing and administering the lethal injection chemicals.
Execution procedures were maintained solely “through practical exercises and training.” In the months leading up to
Comer’s execution in May 2007, Arizona began revising its
execution procedures and drafting a written execution protocol. After Comer’s execution, Arizona further revised the procedures, eventually producing a written protocol dated
November 1, 2007.
1
Inmates sentenced to death prior to November 23, 1992 may choose
between execution by lethal injection or by lethal gas. Absent an election,
lethal injection is used.
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During the course of this litigation, Arizona agreed to
amend the November 1, 2007 protocol to address some concerns raised by Dickens. Among other amendments, Arizona
agreed to conduct license and background checks on all members of the medical team that assists with executions, and to
no longer employ certain medical team members who Dickens argued were incompetent. Arizona also added training and
experience requirements for medical team members. The
amendments are set forth in a Joint Report submitted to the
district court on April 9, 2009.
The district court considered the constitutionality of the
November 1, 2007 protocol, as amended by the Joint Report
(the “Protocol”), and our analysis on appeal is similarly constrained. We have not considered—and express no opinion on
—any amendments to the Protocol or any provisions that
were not addressed by the district court.2
B.
ARIZONA’S LETHAL INJECTION PROTOCOL
Under the Protocol, an execution is carried out by two
teams—the Special Operations Team (“SOT”) and the Medical Team. SOT’s primary duty is to administer the chemicals.
It consists of at least seven medically trained individuals and
a team leader; all members must undergo a screening panel
and individual interview prior to joining SOT. SOT members
must participate in at least ten execution rehearsals per year,
and, if a Warrant of Execution issues, train weekly up until
the execution.
The Medical Team, which has at least two members, is
responsible for inserting the intravenous (IV) catheters
2
Arizona never provided the district court with an integrated copy of the
Protocol (the November 1, 2007 protocol as amended by the Joint Report).
On appeal, we directed Arizona to submit a copy of the Protocol. The version of the protocol that Arizona submitted, however, contains several provisions that were not before the district court.
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through which the chemicals are injected, preparing the chemicals and supervising their administration, and monitoring the
inmate. Members of the Medical Team (“MTMs”) must be
medically trained personnel, such as physicians, physician
assistants, nurses, or emergency medical technicians; they
must have at least one year of current and relevant professional experience in their assigned duties. MTMs’s professional qualifications, training, experience, professional
licenses and certifications are checked prior to hiring. Licensing and criminal history reviews are conducted before hiring,
annually and upon the issuance of a Warrant of Execution.
The MTMs responsible for inserting the IVs and any MTMs
without medical licenses must participate in at least ten
rehearsals per year with SOT. All MTMs must participate in
at least two rehearsals prior to participating in an actual execution.
According to the Protocol, the chemicals must be administered through IV catheters inserted in the inmate’s peripheral
veins. The MTMs who place the peripheral lines must have
at least one year of current and regular experience with the
procedure. If it is not possible to place peripheral lines, an
MTM can place a percutaneous central line in the femoral
vein in the inmate’s thigh. The MTM who places the central
line must have at least one year of current and regular experience with the procedure.
The MTMs and the SOT Leader directly observe the
inmate throughout the administration of the chemicals, and
monitor the inmate’s face with a high-resolution, color video
camera. A microphone is attached to the inmate’s chest so
that the teams can speak to and hear the inmate during the
execution. The warden remains in the execution chamber
throughout the procedure to observe the IV lines and notify
the MTMs of any problems.
After the sodium thiopental is administered, the MTMs
confirm that the inmate is unconscious by “sight and sound”
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using the camera and microphone, and an MTM enters the
execution chamber to physically confirm unconsciousness. If
the inmate is conscious, the Director of the Arizona Department of Corrections may order the SOT members to administer an additional dose of sodium thiopental, and the MTMs go
through the same steps to verify unconsciousness. The SOT
members cannot administer the pancuronium bromide until
the MTMs have confirmed that the inmate is unconscious and
at least three minutes have elapsed from the commencement
of the administration of the sodium thiopental. The IV lines
are flushed with heparin/saline between each injection, to
ensure that they are clean and functioning properly.
C.
DISTRICT COURT PROCEEDINGS
In his original complaint filed in 2007, Dickens asserted
that the Protocol carries an unconstitutional risk of inflicting
extreme pain and suffering because it does not adequately
protect against the risk that he will be insufficiently anesthetized prior to administration of the pancuronium bromide and
potassium chloride.
In 2008, while Dickens’s suit was in the discovery phase,
the United States Supreme Court issued its decision in Baze,
in which a plurality held that Kentucky’s lethal injection protocol is constitutional because it does not carry a “substantial
risk of serious harm.” Id. at 49-50 (internal quotation and citation omitted). Following the Baze decision, Arizona moved
for summary judgment, arguing that the Protocol is similar to
the Kentucy protocol and thus constitutional under the substantial risk standard. Arizona also agreed to the amendments
discussed above.3
3
Specifically, the five amendments agreed to in the Joint Report are: (1)
The default means for administering the chemicals will be peripheral IV
lines, rather than a central line to the femoral vein, and the peripheral lines
will be placed by individuals with at least one year of current and relevant
experience with the procedure; (2) a false line—a second IV line that emp-
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In opposition to Arizona’s motion, Dickens argued that the
Protocol’s safeguards are inadequate, and that questions of
fact remained as to whether Arizona would follow the Protocol when carrying out an execution. Dickens also posited that
Arizona should be required to adopt a one-drug protocol, consisting of one, very large dose of sodium thiopental, which
guarantees death without the risk of pain and suffering.
The district court granted Arizona’s motion for summary
judgment. The court held that the Protocol, which included
the amended procedures, provides the same or greater protection than Kentucky’s protocol and thus does not create a substantial risk of serious harm in violation of the Eighth
Amendment.
III.
A.
ANALYSIS
THE BAZE STANDARD
[1] In Baze, the Supreme Court held that Kentucky’s threedrug lethal injection protocol does not violate the Eighth
Amendment. The Justices, however, were not unanimous in
the rationale for their decision. Seven Justices issued four
opinions upholding the protocol, while two dissented. Chief
Justice Roberts authored the plurality opinion, which was
joined by Justices Kennedy and Alito. The plurality held that
the Kentucky protocol is constitutional because it contains
ties into a bucket—will not be used; (3) the clinical concentration of
sodium thiopental will be 2.5%; (4) Arizona will conduct licensing and
background checks on all MTMs prior to participation in an execution,
annually after contracting, and upon issuance of a Warrant of Execution;
and (5) two individuals previously hired for the Medical Team—Dr. Alan
Doerhoff and an individual known as MTM #3—will not participate in
any future executions in Arizona. Arizona also added the requirements
that all MTMs participate in at least two trainings prior to participating in
an execution, and that MTMs have at least one year of current and relevant
professional experience.
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sufficient safeguards to prevent improper anesthetization, and
thus does not give rise to a “substantial risk of serious harm”
and is not “sure or very likely to cause” serious pain and suffering. Baze, 553 U.S. at 49-50. Justice Thomas, joined by
Justice Scalia, concurred in the judgment but stated that an
execution protocol is unconstitutional only if it is “deliberately designed to inflict pain,” which Kentucky’s protocol is
not. Id. at 94.
Justice Stevens also concurred in the judgment, but did not
articulate a standard for assessing the protocol’s constitutionality. Rather, Justice Stevens expressed his belief that the
death penalty is unjustified, but stated that he was bound by
the Court’s existing framework for evaluating the protocol’s
constitutionality. Id. at 78-87. Under that framework and on
the basis of the evidence before him, Justice Stevens concluded that Kentucky’s protocol did not violate the Eighth
Amendment. Id. at 87.
Justice Breyer concurred in the judgment but adopted the
standard articulated by Justice Ginsburg in her dissent: a
method of execution is unconstitutional if it poses an untoward, readily avoidable risk of inflicting severe and unnecessary pain. Id. at 107. Justice Breyer found that the evidence
did not establish that the Kentucky protocol posed such a risk.
Id. Justices Ginsburg and Souter dissented on the ground that
the case should be remanded to the district court for further
consideration of whether the safeguards prevented an unnecessary risk of pain. Id. at 114.
Faced with the Justices’s divergent views, we turn to the
Supreme Court’s decision in Marks v. United States, 430 U.S.
188 (1977), for guidance. In Marks, the Court explained that
when it issues a “fragmented” decision,” the holding of the
Court may be viewed as that position taken by those Members
who concurred in the judgments on the narrowest grounds.”
Id. at 193. When applying the Marks rule, we look for “ ‘a
legal standard which, when applied, will necessarily produce
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results with which a majority of [the Justices] from that case
would agree.’ ” United States v. Williams, 435 F.3d 1148,
1157 (9th Cir. 2006) (quoting Planned Parenthood v. Casey,
947 F.2d 682, 693 (3d Cir. 1991)). Where the Justices issue
three or more opinions, the “narrowest grounds” principle
identifies as authoritative “the opinion of the Justice or Justices who concurred on the narrowest grounds necessary to
secure a majority.” See Casey, 947 F.2d at 694 n.7.
Dickens argues that we should follow Justice Stevens’s
opinion because he concurred on the narrowest grounds—the
facts of the case and existing precedent. This approach misapprehends the Marks rule. Justice Stevens’s concurrence is not
the narrowest concurrence necessary to secure a majority.
This honor belongs to the plurality. If an execution protocol
is found constitutional under the plurality’s substantial risk
standard, Justices Thomas and Scalia will concur in the judgment, because their standard for constitutionality is broader—
a protocol that does not present a substantial risk of serious
pain likely is not deliberately designed to inflict such pain. If
the protocol is found unconstitutional under the plurality’s
standard, then Justices Breyer, Ginsburg, Souter, and likely
Stevens would concur in the judgment because their standards
for constitutionality are narrower—a protocol that presents a
substantial risk of serious pain likely also presents an unnecessary risk of serious pain. The plurality’s standard, therefore,
is the narrowest necessary to secure a majority in any given
challenge to a method of execution.
[2] Every circuit court that has considered a challenge to
a lethal injection protocol following Baze has analyzed the
protocol under the plurality’s substantial risk standard. See
Raby v. Livingston, 600 F.3d 552, 557 (5th Cir. 2010);
Nooner v. Norris, 594 F.3d 592, 598-99 (8th Cir. 2010); Jackson v. Danberg, 594 F.3d 210, 219-22 (3d Cir. 2010) (finding
the plurality’s opinion controlling under the Marks rule);
Cooey v. Strickland, 589 F.3d 210, 220 (6th Cir. 2009); Clemons v. Crawford, 585 F.3d 1119, 1125-26 (8th Cir. 2009);
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Harbison v. Little, 571 F.3d 531, 535 (6th Cir. 2009); Emmett
v. Johnson, 532 F.3d 291, 298 (4th Cir. 2008); see also Morales v. Cate, 623 F.3d 828, 829 (9th Cir. 2010) (noting that
whether California’s lethal injection protocol is constitutional
depends on whether it creates a “substantial risk of serious
harm”). In October 2010, the Supreme Court itself applied the
plurality’s standard when vacating a temporary restraining
order barring an execution in Arizona because the sodium
thiopental to be used had been obtained from a foreign source.
See Brewer v. Landrigan, 131 S. Ct. 445 (2010). Citing the
Baze plurality, the Court held that the execution could proceed because there was no evidence that the drug was “ ‘sure
or very likely to cause serious illness and needless suffering.’ ” Id. (citing Baze, 553 U.S. at 50) (emphasis omitted).
We are, therefore, in good company in holding that the Baze
plurality’s substantial risk standard is the controlling standard
for assessing the constitutionality of an execution protocol.
B.
CONSTITUTIONALITY OF THE PROTOCOL
We next turn to Dickens’s argument that questions of fact
remain as to the Protocol’s constitutionality, even under the
substantial risk standard. We begin by noting what Dickens is
not arguing: by and large, Dickens is not arguing that the Protocol’s safeguards are inadequate. Although Dickens urges
that Arizona should be required to adopt some additional safeguards, the heart of his argument is that questions of fact
remain as to whether Arizona will follow the Protocol and
ensure that its existing safeguards are implemented properly.
Dickens claims that evidence obtained during discovery suggests that Arizona is incapable of—or not interested in—
hiring competent individuals to serve on the execution teams
and adhering to the Protocol’s procedures during an execution. If Arizona does not follow the Protocol, Dickens contends, there is a substantial risk that he will be inadequately
anesthetized when the pancuronium bromide and potassium
chloride are administered.
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Baze does not foreclose Dickens’s argument. Baze creates
a safe harbor for lethal injection protocols that are substantially similar to Kentucky’s protocol; the plurality states that
such protocols do not create a substantial risk of serious harm.
Id. at 61. Arizona’s Protocol falls within this safe harbor—it
incorporates even more safeguards against maladministration
than Kentucky’s protocol, including requirements that the
Medical Team monitor the inmate with a microphone and
camera and physically confirm unconsciousness. See Baze,
533 U.S. at 55 (describing the safeguards in the Kentucky
protocol). Dickens, however, asks us to look beyond the Protocol’s facial constitutionality to consider whether there is a
substantial risk that it will be implemented in an unconstitutional manner. In Baze, the plurality specifically stated that
there was no evidence of improper implementation of Kentucky’s protocol. Id. at 46. Dickens asserts that there is such
evidence here, and we must evaluate the Protocol in light of
Dickens’s evidence. This is an important inquiry. If a court
could never look beyond the facial constitutionality of an execution protocol when presented with evidence of improper
administration, states could simply adopt constitutionally sufficient protocols similar to Kentucky’s and then flout them
without fear of repercussion.
[3] Nonetheless, to succeed on his argument, Dickens
faces an uphill battle. Most of the evidence Dickens cites
comes from events occurring before Arizona adopted the Protocol and its safeguards. For the evidence to affect our analysis, Dickens must raise issues of fact as to whether there is a
substantial risk that he will be improperly anesthetized despite
the Protocol’s safeguards, including those added through
amendment. See, Baze 553 U.S. at 56 (“In light of [the protocol’s] safeguards, we cannot say that the risks identified by
petitioner are so substantial or imminent as to amount to an
Eighth Amendment violation.”). In addition, the evidence
must show more than a single accident or mistake or failure
to follow the Protocol. Although we do not discount in any
way a singular violation or mistake, Baze held that “an iso-
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lated mishap alone . . . while regrettable, does not . . . give
rise to a substantial risk of serious harm.” Id. at 50 (internal
quotations and citations omitted).
Overcoming these evidentiary hurdles is not an impossible
task, but it is a difficult one. See id. at 53 (plaintiffs must meet
the “heavy burden of showing that Kentucky’s procedure is
cruelly inhumane”) (internal quotations and citation omitted).
Indeed, since Baze, every circuit court that has considered a
challenge to a lethal injection protocol has upheld the challenged protocol, despite evidence of past problems carrying
out executions. See Raby, 600 F.3d at 558-61 (evidence of
problems with inserting IVs and monitoring); Nooner, 594
F.3d at 601, 608 (evidence that inmates may have been conscious during second injection); Jackson, 594 F.3d at 212-13,
229 (evidence that wrong amounts of chemicals were administered and that personnel did not check equipment and attend
training); Cooey, 589 F.3d at 217-18, 224, 233-34 (evidence
of problems inserting IV); Clemons, 585 F.3d at 1125, 1128
(past employment of incompetent medical team personnel);
Harbison, 571 F.3d at 537, 539 (evidence of hiring personnel
with drug and mental health problems, and insufficient training); Emmett, 532 F.3d at 303, 306-08 (evidence of inadequate doses of sodium thiopental and problems with IV lines).
1.
Competence of Execution Team Members
Dickens argues that past missteps in hiring and training
raise an issue of fact as to whether Arizona will hire competent team members in the future. The evidence Dickens points
to is Arizona’s hiring of two unqualified MTMs—Dr. Alan
Doerhoff and an individual known as MTM #3—and its failure to interview and screen a current member of the SOT and
an MTM known as MTM #1. Arizona hired Doerhoff to serve
on the Medical Team for the Comer execution in May 2007.
Doerhoff is a physician and licensed surgeon who lives in
Missouri; he has assisted with executions in several states and
for the federal government. At the time Arizona hired Doerh-
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off, he had testified in a case challenging Missouri’s execution protocol that he is dyslexic, has problems with numbers,
knowingly “improvised” the doses of lethal injection drugs,
adhered to no set protocol, and kept no records of procedures.
Following Doerhoff’s testimony, Missouri publicly
announced that it would no longer use him in executions.
Arizona hired MTM #3 in February 2008. During discovery, Dickens learned that MTM #3 did not attend medical
school, had his nursing license suspended, and did not have
any other medical licenses. When he was hired for the Medical Team, MTM #3 owned an appliance business. He has
been treated for post-traumatic stress disorder from service in
Iraq, and has been arrested multiple times. As one of the
amendments to the November 1, 2007 protocol, Arizona
agreed never to use Doerhoff or MTM #3 in future executions.
[4] We do not question the challenges to Doerhoff and
MTM #3, nor do we reject the claim that a Medical Team
made up of individuals like them could undermine the Protocol. At the time that Doerhoff and MTM #3 were hired, however, there were neither formal experience and training
requirements nor routine background and license checks on
MTMs. These requirements are all amendments to the
November 1, 2007 protocol that were adopted through the
Joint Report. It is undisputed that neither Doerhoff nor MTM
#3 would have been hired under the current Protocol. But the
fact that Arizona hired unqualified MTMs before the Protocol
was in place does not create an issue of fact as to whether Arizona will do the same when operating under the Protocol.4 See
4
At her deposition—taken before the protocol was amended to add the
background check requirement—the former Director of the Arizona
Department of Corrections, Dora B. Schriro, stated that Arizona conducted
background checks on potential MTMs. Dickens argues that Arizona
failed to follow this procedure when it hired Doerhoff and MTM #3, and
thus that there is a question of fact as to whether Arizona will conduct the
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Raby, 600 F.3d at 560 (evidence of past failure to follow protocol did not “rise to the level of constitutional significance”
because “the Execution Procedure mandates . . . that sufficient
safeguards are in place to reduce the risk of pain below the
level of constitutional significance”); Jackson, 594 F.3d at
226 (evidence of failure to follow former procedures does not
“suggest the existence of conditions that are sure or very
likely to cause serious illness and needless suffering”) (internal citation and quotation omitted); Clemons, 585 F.3d at
1128 (“The mere allegation Missouri employed [Doerhoff] in
the past simply does not support the prisoners’ allegations
Missouri will employ ‘incompetent’ and ‘unqualified’ personnel in the future.”).
[5] During discovery, Dickens also learned that Arizona
failed to interview and screen MTM #1 and a current member
of the SOT. When MTM #1 was hired in 2007, there were no
interview or screening requirements for MTMs. Arizona was
required to interview and screen the SOT member, and it
failed to do so. One, isolated failure to follow a procedure
does not create an “objectively intolerable risk of harm,” particularly where there is no evidence that the SOT member is
unqualified for his job or that any problems have arisen from
his participation on SOT. See Baze, 553 U.S. at 50 (“[A]n isolated mishap alone . . . while regrettable, does not suggest . . .
a substantial risk of serious harm.”) (internal quotation and
citation omitted); Raby, 600 F.3d at 560 (possibility that warden had not screened execution team members did not raise
checks in the future. At the time the two were hired, however, there was
no formal, written requirement that Arizona conduct licensing and background checks. The fact that Arizona failed to follow an informal, unwritten policy when it hired Doerhoff and MTM #3 does not raise a question
of fact as to whether Arizona will follow a formal, written policy in the
future.
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issue of fact where no evidence that the team members lacked
required qualifications).5
2.
Implementation of Execution Procedures
Dickens also contends that there were problems with
administering the chemicals during Comer’s execution. The
records from Comer’s execution indicate that the chemicals
were administered more quickly than planned. The checklist
setting forth each step of the execution states that the administration of the sodium thiopental should take approximately
two minutes and forty-five seconds. The execution records,
however, reflect that it took less than two minutes to administer. In addition, the SOT members administering the chemicals did not flush the line with heparin/saline between two of
the injections. MTM #1 caught the error before the second
injection and instructed the SOT members to flush the line.
[6] Although we agree with Dickens that it is critical for
Arizona to follow the procedures set forth in the Protocol
when conducting an execution, the evidence from Comer’s
execution—undertaken before the Protocol was in place—is
insufficient to cast doubt on Arizona’s ability or willingness
to do so. Even construing the evidence in the light most favorable to Dickens, there is no indication that Arizona failed to
follow the procedures in place at the time of the execution.
Absent any evidence that Arizona failed to adhere to execution procedures in the past, it would be pure speculation to
conclude that Arizona might fail to follow the Protocol in the
future or even that a material issue of fact has been raised
5
In January 2009, when the parties filed their appeal briefs, Arizona did
not have a complete Medical Team in place. MTM #3 was let go and
MTM #1 is deployed overseas with the military. Dickens argues that the
incomplete Medical Team makes it impossible to assess whether Arizona
is capable of hiring competent MTMs. The Protocol, however, sets forth
the standards under which Arizona must hire future MTMs. These standards are adequate and the evidence does not suggest that Arizona will fail
to adhere to them in future hiring.
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with respect to the effect of past compliance. See Emmett, 532
F.3d at 304 (“[S]peculation and building of inferences [of
improper administration] . . . is wholly insufficient to create
a genuine issue of material fact that Virginia has a history of
failing to properly administer full doses of thiopental . . . .”).
[7] Since Comer’s execution, Arizona also has adopted
additional safeguards to reduce the risk of improper anesthetization. Team members must undergo extensive training, the
MTMs must physically confirm unconsciousness and SOT
must wait three minutes before the pancuronium bromide is
injected. Even if the evidence suggested that Arizona’s past
execution procedures created a substantial risk of harm, that
evidence, alone, would not establish an issue of fact as to
whether such a risk exists under the Protocol. See Nooner,
594 F.3d at 602 (“[E]ven if [Arkansas] engaged in a ‘series
of abortive’ execution attempts under previous protocols, the
record does not establish a genuine issue of material fact
about whether the Inmates will remain conscious . . . under
the current protocol.”).
Finally, without dismissing the significance of any problems that might have occurred during Comer’s execution, we
are bound by Baze to hold that “an isolated mishap . . . while
regrettable, does not suggest . . . a ‘substantial risk of serious
harm.’ ” Baze, 553 U.S. at 50 (quoting Louisiana ex rel. Francis v. Resweber, 329 U.S. 459, 842 (1947) (upholding a second attempt to electrocute a prisoner after the first attempt
failed)).
3.
Other Alleged Inadequacies in the Protocol
Dickens’s remaining complaints regarding the adequacy of
the Protocol’s safeguards are unpersuasive. Dickens argues
that Arizona should be required to add three safeguards to the
Protocol: a requirement that an MTM have experience monitoring anesthetic depth (the depth of an inmate’s unconsciousness following administration of the sodium thiopental); a
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requirement that all MTMs be screened for medical and psychological problems; and a requirement that at least one
MTM have experience placing a percutaneous central line, in
case it is necessary to resort to this back-up procedure during
an execution.
[8] Baze counsels that “an inmate cannot succeed on an
Eighth Amendment claim simply by showing one more step
the State could take as a failsafe for other, independently adequate measures.” Baze, 553 U.S. at 60-61. Where an execution protocol contains sufficient safeguards, the risk of not
adopting an additional safeguard is too “remote and attenuated” to give rise to a substantial risk of serious harm. Id. at 5859. The Protocol contains more safeguards than the Kentucky
protocol and there is no evidence that Arizona will fail to follow it in future executions. Accordingly, the risk that Dickens
will be improperly anesthetized if Arizona fails to adopt the
additional safeguards is too remote and attenuated to raise
questions of fact as to the Protocol’s constitutionality. Id.; see
also Harbison, 571 F.3d at 537-38 (failure to require physical
consciousness check and evidence of hiring personnel with
drug problems and PTSD did not render protocol unconstitutional where there were sufficient safeguards to ensure proper
anesthetization); Nooner, 594 F.3d at 604 (requirement that
alternative central line be placed by licensed physician was
sufficient to address risk that unqualified personnel will place
line); Jackson, 594 F.3d at 227 (“[B]y speculating about what
[the] officials might do in what the record intimates to be the
very unlikely hypothetical scenario in which the backup IV
line cannot be established, the Plaintiffs have failed to show
the degree of imminence Baze requires.”).
Dickens also challenges the Protocol’s failure to provide
formal procedures for amendment. If Arizona amends the
Protocol to modify the current safeguards, Dickens—or
another affected death row inmate—may be able to challenge
the constitutionality of the amended protocol. The notion that
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Arizona might adopt and use a new, unconstitutional protocol
can only be dismissed as rank speculation.
C.
AVAILABILITY OF THE ONE-DRUG PROTOCOL
[9] We cannot embrace the claim that the Protocol is
unconstitutional because a one-drug approach is a proven
alternative. Under Baze, the failure to adopt an alternative
protocol establishes an Eighth Amendment violation only if
the current protocol creates a substantial risk of serious harm
that the alternative protocol will reduce. Baze, 553 U.S. at 52.
“[A] condemned prisoner cannot successfully challenge a
State’s method of execution merely by showing a slightly or
marginally safer alternative [exists].” Id. at 51 (internal quotation and citation omitted). Here, we have determined that the
Protocol does not create a substantial risk of serious harm,
and thus Arizona cannot be required to adopt a one-drug protocol, even if there is evidence that the protocol is safer and
feasible.
AFFIRMED.
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