Johnson v. Hutchinson et al
Filing
9
FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW: The Court determines that defendants are entitled to judgment in their favor on plaintiffs' claim one under the Eighth Amendment and on plaintiffs' claim two under the Eighth Amendment and the Equal Protection Clause. The Court determines that plaintiffs are entitled to judgment in their favor, in part, and that defendants are entitled to judgment in their favor, in part, on plaintiffs' claims three and four under the First Amendment and th e right to counsel under 18 U.S.C. § 3599. The Court orders relief consistent with the terms of this Order. Specifically, the Court memorializes the 62 Joint Execution Viewing Policy entered into by the parties prior to the April 2017 executio ns and followed during the April 2017 executions, and, per the parties' on-the-record representations, the Court directs the parties, absent good cause, to abide by the Joint Execution Viewing Policy [Docketed in Lead Case 4:17-cv-00179 KGB and all member cases]. Signed by Judge Kristine G. Baker on 5/31/2020. (jbh)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DIVISION OF ARKANSAS
CENTRAL DIVISION
JASON MCGEHEE, et al.
v.
PLAINTIFFS
Case No. 4:17-cv-00179 KGB
ASA HUTCHINSON, et al.
DEFENDANTS
FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
This matter came before the Court for a bench trial (Dkt. Nos. 186-193). Plaintiffs Stacey
Johnson, Bruce Ward, Terrick Nooner, and Don Davis,1 as well as intervenor-plaintiffs Justin
Anderson, Ray Dansby, Gregory Decay, Kenneth Isom, Alvin Jackson, Latavious Johnson,
Timothy Kemp, Brandon Lacy, Zachariah Marcyniuk, Roderick Rankin, Andrew Sasser, Thomas
Springs, and Mickey Thomas (collectively, “plaintiffs”) (Dkt. No. 111), were represented by
counsel and presented proof (Dkt. No. 194). Defendants Asa Hutchinson, who is sued in his
official capacity as Governor of Arkansas, and Wendy Kelley, who is sued in her official capacity
as Director of the Arkansas Department of Correction (“ADC”) (collectively, “defendants”), were
represented by counsel and presented proof (Dkt. No. 195).
Plaintiffs bring claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 challenging defendants’ method of
execution, performance of consciousness checks during executions, and viewing policy during
executions (Dkt. No. 117). Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a), the Court makes
the following specific findings and conclusions. The Court determines that defendants are entitled
to judgment in their favor on plaintiffs’ claim one under the Eighth Amendment and on plaintiffs’
claim two under the Eighth Amendment and the Equal Protection Clause. The Court further
1
On November 14, 2017, the parties jointly filed a notice of commutation, confirming that the
Governor commuted Jason McGehee’s sentence from death to life without parole, thereby
rendering the claims as to Mr. McGehee moot (Dkt. Nos. 100; 170, Stipulations, ¶ 3).
determines that plaintiffs are entitled to judgment in their favor, in part, and that defendants are
entitled to judgment in their favor, in part, on plaintiffs’ claims three and four under the First
Amendment and the right to counsel under 18 U.S.C. § 3599.
I.
Procedural History
The Court has jurisdiction over this matter pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1343(a)(3).
On March 27, 2017, plaintiffs initiated this case by filing a complaint and motion for preliminary
injunction (Dkt. Nos. 2, 3).2 In response to the complaint, defendants filed a motion to dismiss
and responded in opposition to the motion for preliminary injunction (Dkt. Nos. 26, 28). The
Court conducted a hearing on the motion for preliminary injunction at which plaintiffs and
defendants were represented by counsel and presented proof (Dkt. Nos. 34–36, 38–40, 46–52).
This Court entered an order granting, in part, and denying, in part, defendants’ motion to dismiss
plaintiffs’ initial complaint in this matter (Dkt. No. 53). The Court also entered a Preliminary
Injunction Order (Dkt. No. 54). The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals issued an order vacating this
Court’s preliminary injunction, see McGehee v. Hutchinson, 854 F.3d 488, 490 (8th Cir. 2017)
(per curiam), from which a motion for stay of execution of sentence of death and petition for writ
of certorari was taken. The United States Supreme Court denied the stay of execution of sentences
of death and denied the petition for writ of certorari. See McGehee v. Hutchinson, 137 S. Ct. 1275
(2017).
While the appeal of the Preliminary Injunction Order to the Eighth Circuit was pending,
the parties jointly proposed an execution viewing policy (“Joint Execution Viewing Policy”) (Dkt.
2
Each of the named plaintiffs identified in the initial complaint filed a separate action in this
Court. On March 30, 2017, the Court entered an Order consolidating the pending cases into the
McGehee case and directed that all filings be made in the McGehee case going forward (Dkt. No.
8).
2
Nos. 62, 63). Plaintiffs moved later to clarify the policy, and defendants opposed the motion (Dkt.
Nos. 73, 75). The Court denied plaintiffs’ motion to clarify the jointly agreed to viewing policy
(Dkt. No. 76).
The Court was available by telephone to all counsel during each of the four April 2017
executions that proceeded. For reasons not related to this litigation, the other executions set for
April 2017 did not proceed. On April 20, 2017, then-separate plaintiff Ledell Lee filed an
emergency motion for injunction, which defendants opposed (Dkt. Nos. 70, 71). The Court was
prepared to rule orally on Mr. Lee’s motion at 11:50 p.m., as his execution progressed. Mr. Lee
was pronounced dead at 11:56 p.m. on April 20, 2017. By written order entered the next day, the
Court denied Mr. Lee’s motion for reasons set out in the Order (Dkt. No. 72).
On April 24, 2017, then-separate plaintiffs Jack Jones and Marcel Williams3 were
executed. Mr. Jack Jones was executed first. After Mr. Jack Jones’ execution but prior to the
commencement of Mr. Marcel Williams’ execution, Mr. Marcel Williams filed an emergency
motion to stay his execution based on allegations arising from events that occurred during Mr.
Jack Jones’ execution. Plaintiff Marcel Williams’ Emergency Motion to Stay Unconstitutional
Execution, Williams v. Kelley, No. 5:17-CV-00103-KGB (E.D. Ark. Apr. 24, 2017), ECF No. 36.
This Court temporarily stayed Mr. Marcel Williams’ execution until defendants could respond in
opposition to the motion. Defendants opposed the motion. Opposition to Plaintiff Marcell
3
Mr. Marcel Williams filed in his own case an individual as-applied challenge under 42 U.S.C.
§ 1983 based on Eighth Amendment claims. See Williams v. Kelley, No. 5:17-CV-00103-KGB
(E.D. Ark. July 21, 2017). On April 21, 2017, the Court conducted a preliminary injunction
hearing with respect to these as-applied challenges and entered a written order denying the request
for preliminary injunctive relief, which the Eighth Circuit affirmed on April 24, 2017. See
Williams v. Kelley, 854 F.3d 998 (8th Cir. 2017). Mr. Marcel Williams filed a petition for writ of
certiorari in the Supreme Court, which was denied. See Williams v. Kelley, 137 S. Ct. 1284 (2017).
Several docket entries relevant to matters addressed in this Order appear in Mr. Marcel Williams’
individual case.
3
Williams’ Emergency Motion to Stay Execution, Williams, No. 5:17-CV-00103-KGB, ECF No.
38. The Court conducted a hearing on the motion, denied the emergency motion, and lifted the
temporary stay of execution. Mr. Marcel Williams was executed that night.
On April 27, 2017, then-separate plaintiff Kenneth Williams was executed. After Mr.
Kenneth Williams’ execution, plaintiffs filed an emergency motion for relief order to preserve
evidence (Dkt. No. 78). Defendants opposed the motion (Dkt. No. 81). The Court conducted a
hearing and then issued a written Order granting plaintiffs’ motion (Dkt. Nos. 82, 83).
On June 21, 2018, plaintiffs filed an amended complaint that is the operative complaint in
this matter (Dkt. No. 117). Defendants filed an answer (Dkt. No. 121). Defendants also filed a
motion for summary judgment directed to certain counts in the amended complaint, which
plaintiffs opposed (Dkt. Nos. 144, 150). The Court granted, in part, and denied, in part, defendants’
motion for summary judgment with respect to certain claims prior to the bench trial (Dkt. No. 181).
Prior to trial, defendants filed a trial brief, to which plaintiffs responded (Dkt. Nos. 157,
166). Defendants submitted proposed findings of fact (Dkt. No. 169). The parties submitted
jointly stipulated facts (Dkt. No. 170). The Court conducted an eight-day bench trial (Dkt. Nos.
186–93). After the bench trial concluded, the parties filed post-trial briefing for the Court’s
consideration (Dkt. Nos. 198–200, 203–205).
II.
Findings Of Fact
1.
The Court considers the evidence that was received with regard to the motion for
preliminary injunction and that would be admissible at the bench trial as a part of the trial record.
See Fed. R. Civ. P. 65(a)(2). Pursuant to Rule 65(a)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,
this evidence was not required to be repeated at trial for the Court to consider it, even though the
4
Court did not advance the trial on the merits and consolidate it with the preliminary injunction
hearing.
2.
Except when pertinent for the analysis set forth in this Order, the Court does not
repeat all of its findings of fact set forth in the Preliminary Injunction Order (Dkt. No. 54).
3.
The Court adopts the parties’ pre-trial stipulations (Dkt. No. 170).
A.
4.
Parties
Plaintiffs, with the exception of Mr. McGehee, whose sentence was commuted
from death to life imprisonment by Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson, are death-sentenced
inmates currently incarcerated at the Varner/Varner Supermax Unit (“Varner Unit”) of the ADC,
in Lincoln County, Arkansas, which is in the Eastern District of Arkansas and under defendants’
supervision and control.
5.
Defendants Governor Hutchinson and Director Kelley, who are sued in their
official capacity, are responsible for taking, and required by Arkansas law to take, certain actions
specific to setting, setting the logistical procedures for, conducting, and, if necessary, suspending
executions in Arkansas. See Ark. Const. art. 6, § 18; Ark. Code Ann. §§ 5-4-617, 16-90-502, 1690-506, 16-90-507.
B.
6.
Executions In Arkansas Generally
In 1983, the Arkansas General Assembly phased out electrocution as a means of
executing inmates and adopted lethal injection as the primary method of execution through the
Arkansas Method of Execution Act (“MEA”). See Ark. Code Ann. § 5-4-617. The current version
of the Arkansas MEA provides two options for execution by lethal injection: “(1) [a] barbiturate;
or (2) Midazolam, followed by vecuronium bromide, followed by potassium chloride.” Ark. Code
Ann. § 5-4-617(c).
5
7.
The State carried out four Midazolam executions in April 2017. Ledell Lee was
executed on April 20, 2017, Jack Jones and Marcel Williams were executed on April 24, 2017,
and Kenneth Williams was executed on April 27, 2017 (Dkt. No. 170, Stipulations, ¶ 2).
8.
Prior to the 2017 Arkansas executions, the then-current version of the Arkansas
MEA took effect on April 6, 2015. The Court recited the history of legal challenges to the MEA
in its Preliminary Injunction Order (Dkt. No. 54, at 3–7).
9.
Prior to the 2017 Arkansas executions, Director Kelley adopted and made public a
written document regarding lethal-injection protocol for executions using Midazolam (“the
Arkansas Midazolam Protocol”) (Dkt. No. 2-2, Ex. 1).4
10.
The Arkansas Midazolam Protocol became final on August 6, 2015. The protocol
calls for executions to be performed as follows: First, the prisoner will be injected with 500
milligrams (“mg”) Midazolam. At least five minutes after administration of the Midazolam has
begun, the ADC Deputy Director or the ADC Deputy Director’s Designee (“the Designee”) will
check the prisoner’s consciousness using “all necessary and medically-appropriate methods.” If
the Deputy Director or designee determines that the prisoner remains conscious, the prisoner will
be injected with another 500 mg Midazolam. Once the ADC Deputy Director or Designee
determines that the prisoner is unconscious, the prisoner will be injected with 100 mg vecuronium
bromide followed by 240 milliequivalents (“mEq”) potassium chloride. The parties stipulate to
admit the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol as a trial exhibit (Dkt. No. 170, Stipulations, ¶ 1).
11.
The parties do not dispute that vecuronium bromide is a paralytic intended to
paralyze the condemned individual and that potassium chloride is intended to stop the condemned
4
In certain filings and during the proceedings in this case, counsel and the parties have referred
to the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol as “Attachment C.”
6
individual’s heart and to cause death. The parties in this litigation dispute the role that Midazolam
plays in the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol.
C.
12.
General Scientific And Medical Evidence Relevant To Executions
When discussing relevant medical concepts, the Court understands that there is a
distinction between awareness, which is the ability to perceive an event, and amnesia, which is the
inability to remember or recall later the event (Dr. Van Norman).5
13.
There is general medical consensus that Midazolam is effective in an overwhelming
majority of individuals, but not all individuals, at rendering individuals unable to remember or
recall later (Dr. Van Norman; Dr. Antognini; Dr. Buffington).
14.
Memory and pain are not the same thing; it is possible to experience pain but not
to remember it (Dr. Antognini).
15.
Midazolam has an anxiolytic effect; in other words, it reduces or inhibits anxiety
(Dr. Buffington).
16.
The science with respect to the study of Midazolam and its effects continues to
evolve (Dr. Van Norman; Dr. Antognini).
17.
According to plaintiffs’ expert Gail Van Norman, M.D., who is a professor of
anesthesia and pain medicine at the University of Washington, there is general medical consensus
that Midazolam has a “ceiling effect,” which is the phenomenon in which a drug reaches a
maximum effect, so that increasing the drug dosage does not increase its effectiveness (Dr. Van
Norman). At the preliminary injunction hearing, defendants’ expert Joseph Antognini, M.D.,
admitted to testifying under oath previously that, at a clinical dose, he would expect to see what
5
The Court cites generally to the witness or witnesses upon whose testimony the Court
relies in making certain factual findings; the final transcript of the bench trial is not yet available.
7
he termed, “the knee in the curve” (i.e., the ceiling effect), and conceded that the academic
literature supports a ceiling effect (Dkt. No. 54, at 62). However, at the bench trial, defendants’
experts Daniel Buffington, Ph.D., who is a clinical pharmacologist and toxicologist and also a
licensed pharmacist, and Charles Kokes, M.D., the Chief Medical Examiner of the Arkansas State
Crime Laboratory, do not concede this (Dr. Buffington; Dr. Kokes).
18.
Even if Midazolam has a ceiling effect, there are no human studies of Midazolam
that involve doses likely necessary to test a ceiling effect or that involve doses comparable to the
dose required by the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol (Dr. Stevens; Dr. Buffington).
19.
It is unclear whether any ethics committee would approve studying in humans a
dose of Midazolam large enough to examine a true ceiling effect (Dr. Antognini).
20.
There is no general medical consensus on the dose of Midazolam at which a ceiling
effect is exhibited (Dr. Van Norman; Dr. Stevens).
21.
The Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”)-approved dose of Midazolam is 0.6
mg per kilogram (“kg”), which equates to 60 mg per 220 pounds. The recommendations on the
FDA-approved package insert for Midazolam vary, depending on factors such as whether the
patient is premedicated and the age of the patient (Dr. Antognini).
22.
According to Dr. Antognini, a typical induction dose of Midazolam in a clinical
setting is 0.2 to 0.3 mg per kg, which he anticipates would last 15 to 20 minutes and maybe more
(Dr. Antognini).
23.
Scientific studies report the use of Midazolam alone prior to performing
colonoscopies, tracheal intubation, bronchoscopy, urological procedures, and dental procedures
(Dr. Antognini).
8
24.
The generally accepted use of Midazolam in a clinical setting has evolved over time
(Dr. Van Norman; Dr. Antognini). Currently, the generally accepted use of Midazolam is as a preoperative sedative agent in the pre-operative holding area. In the past, Dr. Van Norman trained in
cardiac anesthesia beginning in the late 1980s and early 1990s by using a combination anesthetic
that included a high-dose benzodiazepine in combination with a high-dose narcotic, plus a muscle
paralytic agent. At some point in her practice, Midazolam was the high-dose benzodiazepine used.
At some point in her practice, the use of Midazolam in this manner was discontinued (Dr. Van
Norman).
25.
In this protocol under which Dr. Van Norman trained, according to Dr. Van
Norman, a high-dose narcotic was used because Midazolam has no clinically significant analgesic
(i.e., pain relief) properties, and the narcotic was administered for pain relief (Dr. Van Norman).
26.
Dr. Antognini agrees that Midazolam is not a potent analgesic (Dr. Antognini).
27.
According to Dr. Van Norman, she does not use Midazolam as the solo drug to
produce general anesthesia for a surgical procedure and does not know of any reputable
anesthesiologist who would do so today (Dr. Van Norman).
28.
Dr. Antognini maintains that Midazolam can be used to induce general anesthesia
but that he would not want to use it for a prolonged procedure (Dr. Antognini).
29.
The American Society of Anesthesiologists makes a clinical recommendation that
benzodiazepines, such as Midazolam and diazepam, not be used for general anesthesia (Dr.
Antognini).
30.
Dr. Antognini agrees that there are currently available better drugs than
benzodiazepines to induce general anesthesia, but he maintains that does not mean that
benzodiazepines could not be used in that way (Dr. Antognini).
9
31.
Dr. Van Norman described studies that, by using the isolated forearm technique,
have demonstrated that, even if individuals are prevented by benzodiazepines and Midazolam in
general from remembering things, these types of drugs may not necessarily be good at preventing
people from being aware of and experiencing them in the moment (Dr. Van Norman).
32.
According to Dr. Van Norman, a lack of movement by plaintiffs during the
Arkansas Midazolam Protocol would not necessarily indicate a lack of awareness. Midazolam has
the potential to reduce responsiveness, and any movement may be masked by the introduction of
the paralytic agent (Dr. Van Norman).
33.
There is general medical consensus that, in medical practice, healthcare providers
titrate drugs like Midazolam based on the healthcare providers’ evaluation of the level of
consciousness in patients and that those consciousness checks rely on clinical observations of how
patients are responding, not on any machines or monitors that can be applied to patients because
no machines or monitors exist that reliably provide this information (Dr. Van Norman; Dr.
Antognini).
34.
Researchers and clinicians developed a way to measure the depth of general
anesthesia using the technique of electroencephalograms (“EEG”). The EEG recordings are
processed on a computer with a method called bispectral analysis (“BIS”). BIS gives a single
number on a scale from 100, which indicates completely awake and alert, to 0, which indicates
coma and EEG burst suppression (Dkt. No. 2-2, Exhibit 16, at 32).
35.
The BIS, although helpful, is not a perfect monitor or 100% accurate in regard to
determining consciousness or unconsciousness during surgery (Dr. Antognini).
10
36.
The EEG, although helpful, does not necessarily relay all of the information an
anesthesiologist would need to know about how a patient is responding clinically to an anesthetic
drug (Dr. Antognini).
37.
Dr. Van Norman described for the Court a scientific study involving halothane and
Midazolam in which researchers examined “PRST response,” which according to Dr. Van Norman
looks at blood pressure, heart rate, and whether the person is sweating or tearing as examples of
consciousness because the subjects of the study were paralyzed and unable to respond in other
ways (Dr. Van Norman; Pls.’s Ex. 31).
38.
Typically, if an individual is awake and experiencing pain, it is expected that his
heart rate and blood pressure will be higher (Dr. Antognini).
39.
Clinical techniques that are used in operating rooms across the nation to assess
intraoperative consciousness include checking for purposeful movement, response to commands,
open eyes, eyelash reflex, pupillary responses, perspiration, and tearing (Dr. Van Norman).
40.
Although Dr. Van Norman described the Isolated Forearm Technique as a reliable
way to assess awareness under anesthesia, even she concedes that she has never used the technique
in her practice and that it is not the standard of care in the United States for monitoring awareness
during surgical procedures (Dr. Van Norman).
41.
In medical practice, patients are given a paralytic drug prior to some procedures to
prevent the patient from moving and particularly when the surgeon needs deep muscle relaxation
for the purpose of technically performing the surgery (Dr. Van Norman).
42.
In medical practice, patients are strapped down to the operating table so that the
patient does not move or fall, especially when the operating table is tilted mechanically for the
procedure (Dr. Van Norman).
11
43.
The American Society of Anesthesiologists, an educational, research, and scientific
association of physicians organized to raise the standards of medical practice of anesthesiology as
well as to improve patient care, produces a Continuum of Depth of Sedation Chart. According to
the Chart, to be in a state of deep sedation and analgesia, the individual must purposely respond
following repeated or painful stimulation, with a notation that withdrawal from painful stimulation
is not considered a purposeful response. To be in a state of general anesthesia, according to the
Chart, the individual is unarousable even with painful stimulus (Dr. Van Norman; Defs.’ Ex. 82).
44.
According to the FDA-approved package insert, known side effects of Midazolam
include involuntary movements and muscle tremors (Dr. Antognini; Dr. Buffington).
45.
Midazolam can in some cases, but not all, cause an individual to stop breathing
from either the “central” mechanism, meaning the drive to breathe just stops, or it can cause airway
obstruction, resulting from the tongue falling back, the airway muscles collapsing in a way, and
the individual being unable to maintain his or her airway (Dr. Antognini; Dr. Buffington).
46.
It is not uncommon with benzodiazepines like Midazolam for individuals to
experience partial airway obstruction, which can lead to feelings of air hunger and suffocation and
can often arouse an individual out of sedation to breathe a little harder or to make harder respiratory
efforts to get air in (Dr. Van Norman).
47.
It is generally understood that upper airway obstruction is not an indicator or denier
of consciousness. An individual can be obstructed and be fully awake or be obstructed and fully
asleep (Dr. Van Norman).
48.
If an individual is aware of the airway obstruction, it is anticipated that the
individual will be aroused and breathe on his or her own to maintain the airway but that does not
occur when an individual has achieved a certain level of anesthesis or sedation (Dr. Antognini).
12
49.
Midazolam can cause cerebral hypoxia, which means an individual can get
respiratory depression and then can stop breathing due to airway obstruction. Cerebral hypoxia,
which results from a lack of oxygen in the brain, can lead to unconsciousness (Dr. Antognini).
50.
An individual unconscious from hypoxia would not feel any type of stimulus or
perceive the stimulus (Dr. Antognini).
51.
Coughing is a reflex response; it does not indicate consciousness or awareness (Dr.
Antognini; Dr. Buffington).
52.
It is generally accepted that it would be very difficult to kill an otherwise healthy
individual with a benzodiazepine like Midazolam alone (Dr. Van Norman; Dr. Stevens).
53.
Dr. Buffington, however, believes that this discussion about the potentially lethal
effects of benzodiazepines alone is more complicated, given that Midazolam, according to the
package insert from the FDA, indicates that airway obstruction, apnea, and cardiopulmonary arrest
can occur and result in central nervous system depression (Dr. Buffington).
54.
By examining the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol, Dr. Van Norman is unable to say
at what point any individual would experience extreme suffering and, instead, claims that that will
vary from person to person (Dr. Van Norman).
55.
Dr. Van Norman conceded that she has no direct scientific data to support the
proposition that any inmate experienced severe pain and suffering during an execution (Dr. Van
Norman).
D.
56.
Pharmacology Of Midazolam
Craig Stevens, Ph.D., has his doctorate in pharmacology, is a professor of
pharmacology, and testified on behalf of plaintiffs (Dr. Stevens).
13
57.
Dr. Stevens testified as to how the drugs in the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol work
mechanically (Dr. Stevens).
58.
Dr. Stevens does not believe that Midazolam produces general anesthesia, which
he defines as unconscious, unaware, and, most importantly, insensate to pain ready for surgical
cuts (Dr. Stevens).
59.
Dr. Buffington opines that a 500-mg dose of Midazolam, as outlined in the
Arkansas Midazolam Protocol, is sufficient and appropriate based on its pharmacologic properties
to render an inmate to a sufficient degree of sedation, consistent with industry standards to be
insensate or unaware of pain (Dr. Buffington).
60.
Dr. Buffington has observed Midazolam used as the sole anesthetic agent for
selective painful medical procedures that are short in duration, such as interventions or surgeries
like colonoscopies, resetting bone, bone fractures, inner ear surgery, laser in-situ keratomileusis
(“LASIK”) eye surgery, Mohs surgery in dermatology, bone grafts, tonsillectomies, and
vasectomies (Dr. Buffington).
61.
According to Dr. Buffington, when Midazolam has been given to an individual, due
to the FDA reported side effects of Midazolam, reported physical movement or sound is not
indicative of pain (Dr. Buffington).
62.
Dr. Stevens opined that Midazolam and benzodiazepines have a ceiling effect
because the mechanism of action requires available gamma-Aminobutyric acid (“GABA”) in the
human body for the benzodiazepine to bind to and to produce the drug’s intended effect. Dr.
Stevens maintains that it is generally accepted that there is a finite amount of GABA in the human
body. Thus, injecting more Midazolam, with no available GABA, will not have the intended
effect, according to Dr. Stevens (Dr. Stevens).
14
63.
Dr. Buffington maintains that individuals do not run out of or deplete their supply
of GABA; the body constantly reproduces it (Dr. Buffington).
64.
Dr. Buffington further maintains that, if the FDA dose and package insert recognize
the ability of Midazolam to induce anesthesia, he does not find relevant any discussion of a ceiling
dose or effect. At the lower dose, the drug had its effect, according to Dr. Buffington (Dr.
Buffington).
65.
Dr. Stevens also addressed the mechanisms of action for the other two drugs in the
Arkansas Midazolam Protocol, vecuronium bromine and potassium chloride, as well as for
barbiturates, pentobarbital, secobarbital, and the potent synthetic opioid fentanyl (Dr. Stevens).
E.
66.
Execution Eyewitnesses’ Testimony
The Court heard testimony from numerous witnesses to the most recent Arkansas
executions and to certain past executions in other states, describing their observations; this
testimony was offered by both plaintiffs and defendants.
67.
With respect to executions outside of Arkansas, at the bench trial, the Court
received testimony from Lisa Lagos, who works in the Federal Defender Capital Habeas Unit in
the Southern District of Ohio and who witnessed Ronald Phillips’ execution in Ohio in July 2017,
under the then-current Ohio lethal-injection protocol; Santino Coleman, who, while working as a
Federal Defender in the Middle District of Alabama, witnessed Torrey McNabb’s execution in
Alabama in October 2017, under the then-current Alabama lethal-injection protocol; and Steven
Hale, who is a reporter in Tennessee and who witnessed Billy Ray Irick’s execution in August
2018, under the then-current Tennessee lethal-injection protocol.
1.
Witness Will Jones
15
68.
Will Jones, who is a lawyer in the Special Investigation Division of the Arkansas
Attorney General’s Office, testified about what he witnessed during Mr. Lee, Mr. Jack Jones, and
Mr. Marcel Williams’ executions in April 2017 under the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol (Will
Jones).
69.
He observed the Designee touch Mr. Lee’s eyeball, as well as engage in other
actions, such as squeezing Mr. Lee’s hands, checking his sternum, and squeezing his trapezius, as
part of the consciousness check, and Mr. Will Jones observed no reaction from Mr. Lee (Will
Jones).
70.
Mr. Will Jones testified to the same observations during Mr. Jack Jones’ execution,
including the touching of his eyeball with no visible reaction from Mr. Jack Jones (Will Jones).
71.
Mr. Will Jones also testified to observing a consciousness check during Mr. Marcel
Williams’ execution with no movement by Mr. Marcel Williams following it (Will Jones).
72.
Mr. Will Jones admitted to having no formal training in what a consciousness check
should look like and based his testimony on his own understanding and observations (Will Jones).
73.
Further, Mr. Will Jones explained that he was not sure if the sternum part of the
check was to check consciousness near the start of the execution or to check breathing and for
signs of life at the end of the execution (Will Jones).
2.
74.
Witness Kim Hammer
Kim Hammer is an Arkansas State Senator in the first year of his first term. Prior
to serving as an Arkansas State Senator, Senator Hammer served in the Arkansas House of
Representatives for eight years (Hammer).
16
75.
Senator Hammer works as a church pastor and part-time chaplain for hospice. In
that capacity, for approximately 24 years, Senator Hammer has witnessed individuals at the end of
life (Hammer).
76.
Senator Hammer witnessed the executions of Mr. Jack Jones and Mr. Marcel
Williams in April 2017 under the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol. He testified to observing similar
consciousness checks during both executions and recalled seeing no movement from either Mr.
Jack Jones or Mr. Marcel Williams after that time (Hammer).
77.
Senator Hammer was unaware that the second drug in the Arkansas Midazolam
Protocol is a paralytic and that Mr. Jack Jones and Mr. Marcel Williams were administered a
paralytic as a part of their executions (Hammer).
78.
Senator Hammer did not testify to sternum rubs or trapezius pinches being
performed during either of the executions he witnessed because he did not recall whether they
were performed or not; he recalled the palm check and eyelid check (Hammer).
3.
79.
Witness Phyllis Hendrix
Phyllis Hendrix, prior to her retirement, served as Chief Deputy of the White
County, Arkansas, Prosecutor’s Office (Hendrix).
80.
She witnessed Mr. Marcel Williams and Mr. Jack Jones’ execution; she was not
involved in investigating or prosecuting either individual at any time (Hendrix).
81.
She described a consciousness check that involved the Designee listening to Mr.
Marcel Williams’ breathing, touching his face, and checking his eyes by looking into them,
although she does not recall the Designee physically touching Mr. Marcel Williams’ eyes
(Hendrix).
82.
She observed no response from Mr. Marcel Williams to these checks (Hendrix).
17
83.
She further observed that Mr. Marcel Williams was at peace and did not appear to
suffer any pain throughout the entire process (Hendrix).
84.
She offered no direct testimony about consciousness checks during Mr. Jack Jones’
execution and offered no testimony about sternum rubs or trapezius pinches during consciousness
checks (Hendrix).
85.
Ms. Hendrix was unaware that the second drug in the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol
is a paralytic and that Mr. Jack Jones and Mr. Marcel Williams were administered a paralytic as a
part of their executions (Hendrix).
4.
86.
Witness Jacob Rosenberg
Jacob Rosenberg, who was a local reporter in April 2017, witnessed and described
Mr. Marcel Williams’ execution under the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol (Rosenberg).
87.
Based on his observations of Mr. Marcel Williams during the first few minutes of
the execution and what he expected to occur during the execution, he believed that a second dose
of Midazolam would have been administered to Mr. Marcel Williams, but Mr. Rosenberg
admittedly has no personal knowledge of whether a second dose was given (Rosenberg).
5.
88.
Witness Jami Giani
Jami Giani, who was a lawyer with the Federal Defender Capital Habeas Unit in
Little Rock, Arkansas, at the time, witnessed and described Mr. Marcel Williams’ execution under
the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol (Giani).
89.
According to Ms. Giani, Mr. Marcel Williams declined to make a final statement,
and his execution commenced at 10:16 p.m. (Giani).
90.
Ms. Giani, who questioned Director Kelley and heard her prior testimony at the
preliminary injunction hearing before this Court about what a consciousness check should involve,
18
questioned whether one was performed during Mr. Marcel Williams’ execution, after having
observed the execution (Giani).
91.
Ms. Giani saw the Designee touch Mr. Marcel Williams’ neck, arms, and hands
with what appeared to be light touches at approximately 10:19 and 10:20 p.m.; saw him lean down
to Mr. Marcel Williams’ ear and speak into it with what appeared to be soft tones; and saw him
touch Mr. Marcel Williams’ eyelashes. She recalled the Designee on the right side of Mr. Marcel
Williams, on the side with the intravenous (“IV”) lines (Giani).
92.
She testified to observing slight head movements from Mr. Marcel Williams from
time to time (Giani).
93.
Ms. Giani recalled the Designee placing a pulse oximeter on Mr. Marcel Williams’
finger at 10:21 p.m. and removing it at 10:22 p.m. during the execution (Giani).
94.
Ms. Giani heard Mr. Marcel Williams cough at 10:25 p.m. and saw the Designee
touch his eyelashes, hand, and arm again with what appeared to her to be soft touches (Giani).
95.
Then, at 10:28 p.m., Ms. Giani saw Mr. Marcel Williams’ eye open and observed
his iris and pupil actually moving (Giani).
96.
Ms. Giani still saw eye movement at 10:29 p.m.; saw what she believed to be the
Designee touching Mr. Marcel Williams’ eyelashes again at 10:31 p.m., with Mr. Marcel
Williams’ eye still open; and then saw the Designee pull out a stethoscope to check Mr. Marcel
Williams and ask to call the coroner (Giani).
97.
Ms. Giani cannot testify if the cough, slight head movements, and eye movements
she saw were voluntary or involuntary (Giani).
6.
Witness Kelly Kissel
19
98.
At the time of the April 2017 executions, Kelly Kissel was news editor and
supervisory correspondent at the Associated Press in Little Rock, Arkansas (Kissel).
99.
From August 1994 to April 2017, Mr. Kissel witnessed 10 executions in Arkansas
and Oklahoma, two of which were conducted under the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol: (1) Mr.
Marcel Williams and (2) Mr. Kenneth Williams (Kissel).
100.
During the April 2017 executions, Mr. Kissel did not see the medical technicians
place the IV lines, and it was not announced when each of the execution drugs had been injected
and were starting to flow (Kissel).
101.
In Arkansas, there is no audio from the execution chamber to the witness room after
the execution commences (Kissel).
102.
These practices with respect to placement of IV lines, administration of execution
drugs, and audio from the execution chamber were consistent with other Arkansas executions Mr.
Kissel witnessed in the past (Kissel).
103.
Mr. Kissel, who has lost a portion of his hearing and consequently developed the
ability to read lips, testified that, after a consciousness check, the individual who conducted the
check mouthed, “I don’t know.” Mr. Kissel is unaware to what the individual was referring or
what question prompted this response (Kissel).
104.
During Mr. Marcel Williams’ execution, Mr. Kissel observed that Mr. Marcel
Williams appeared to have more labored breathing for a period of time as compared to what Mr.
Kissel remembered from past executions that did not involve Midazolam (Kissel).
105.
During Mr. Kenneth Williams’ execution, Mr. Kissel observed heavy breathing
from Mr. Kenneth Williams; then, three to five minutes after the execution commenced, the upper
portion of Mr. Kenneth Williams’ body lurched forward approximately 15 times in quick
20
succession, hitting the gurney and the leather straps, banging very quickly; and then the upper
portion of his body lurched forward another five additional times in slower movements (Kissel).
106.
Although there was no audio from the execution chamber to the witness room after
the execution commenced, Mr. Kissel heard the thrashing noise of Mr. Kenneth Williams’ upper
body and heard a groan or moan (Kissel).
107.
Mr. Kissel did not interpret the groan or moan as evincing pain; it did not sound
painful (Kissel).
108.
Mr. Kissel observed consciousness checks. Based on his testimony, those did not
draw his particular notice, and he was not able to offer detailed testimony about the checks (Kissel).
7.
109.
Witness Trent Garner
Trent Garner, an Arkansas State Senator since 2016, testified as to what he
witnessed during Mr. Kenneth Williams’ execution under the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol
(Garner).
110.
Senator Garner is a combat veteran, and he was a gunshot victim during a violent
crime (Garner).
111.
Senator Garner testified that, approximately two to three minutes after the curtain
to the execution chamber opened, Mr. Kenneth Williams lost consciousness in that his already
slurred speech stopped and there was no movement, no eye movement, no speech, and no action
(Garner).
112.
Senator Garner testified that, for approximately 10 to 15 seconds, Mr. Kenneth
Williams appeared to have involuntary muscle spasms during which his chest rose two to three
inches a few times, had more than a pronounced heavy breathing for approximately 10 to 15
seconds, but expressed no pain or grimacing on his face, made no noise to indicate pain, did not
21
reach his arms up to the restraints, and did not move his legs in a way to fight the restraints
(Garner).
113.
After that, Senator Garner observed Mr. Kenneth Williams breathe heavily with
almost a snore for approximately two to three minutes with no other kind of movement (Garner).
114.
Then, Senator Garner observed the consciousness checks but did not recall any of
the precise movements made by the Designee. He described the movements of the Designee as
clinical and testified that he observed no response from Mr. Kenneth Williams (Garner).
8.
115.
Witness Tammy Harrelson
Tammy Harrelson, who worked as Chief Counsel for the Arkansas Office of
Medicaid Inspector General at the time she testified, described what she observed as an execution
witness during Mr. Kenneth Williams’ execution under the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol
(Harrelson).
116.
At the time of the April 2017 executions, Ms. Harrelson worked for the Arkansas
Attorney General’s Office in the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit (Harreslon).
117.
At some point earlier in her career, Ms. Harrelson worked as a prosecutor in Pulaski
County, Arkansas (Harrelson).
118.
Ms. Harrelson had no investigatory or prosecutorial responsibility for any cases
against Mr. Kenneth Williams (Harrelson).
119.
She did have prosecutorial responsibility for the capital conviction of Mr. Marcel
Williams and testified against clemency at his clemency hearing (Harrelson).
120.
She also had prosecutorial responsibility for prior non-capital convictions of Mr.
Lee (Harrelson).
22
121.
In addition, while she has no formal medical training, Ms. Harrelson worked
previously as a plaintiffs’ attorney, suing nursing homes, and, in that capacity, reviewed medical
records and documents to assess the condition of her clients (Harrelson).
122.
Ms. Harrelson testified that, as a prosecutor, she was involved in putting someone
on death row, so it was important to her that the punishment be done clinically, professionally, and
with as little pain as possible (Harrelson).
123.
Further, given her prior experience as a plaintiffs’ attorney, she believed that she
knew what to look for during the execution to observe pain (Harrelson).
124.
As a result, she was really looking for signs and symptoms of pain during the April
2017 executions but saw none (Harrelson).
125.
During Mr. Kenneth Williams’ execution, Ms. Harrelson observed him make his
final statement, speak in religious tongues, and then go silent, just breathing and appearing
unconscious (Harrelson).
126.
After approximately two or three minutes from the start of the execution, Ms.
Harrelson saw Mr. Kenneth Williams’ upper body begin to spasm. This lasted between 10 and
15 seconds. Then, Mr. Kenneth Williams continued to breathe heavily but did not spasm again
(Harreslon).
127.
After that, she observed a consciousness check, specifically recalling someone
sticking a finger into Mr. Kenneth Williams’ eye but not recalling other steps taken. Mr. Kenneth
Williams did not respond to that (Harrelson).
128.
Then, she observed Mr. Kenneth Williams’ breathing slow and then stop. After
that, he was pronounced dead (Harrelson).
23
129.
The movements Ms. Harrelson described as involuntary muscle spasms did not
involve Mr. Kenneth Williams’ whole body, so she did not believe them to be the result of a grand
mal seizure. The movements were rhythmic and did not appear voluntary or like Mr. Kenneth
Williams was trying to move (Harrelson).
130.
During the time Mr. Kenneth Williams was spasming, Ms. Harrelson did not
observe any facial grimacing, clenching of fists, or any signs or symptoms that she was taught to
look for when someone is unconscious and you are looking for signs and symptoms of pain
(Harrelson).
131.
According to Ms. Harrelson, Mr. Kenneth Williams did not respond to the
consciousness checks (Harrelson).
9.
132.
Witness Eric Motylinski
Eric Motylinski, a lawyer with the Federal Defender Capital Habeas Unit in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was appointed 16 days prior to Mr. Kenneth Williams’ scheduled
execution to represent him.
133.
Mr. Motylinski testified that, a few days prior to his scheduled execution, Mr.
Kenneth Williams agreed to the placement of stents due to a concern with finding a suitable vein
for purposes of the execution and that the procedure to place the stents took almost an hour. Mr.
Kenneth Williams suffered from sickle cell anemia, which can sometimes make it difficult to find
a vein (Motylinski).
134.
Mr. Motylinski was present during Mr. Kenneth Williams’ execution and testified
about the procedures of the Joint Execution Viewing Policy that were followed (Motylinski).
135.
Mr. Motylinski testified that, after it was announced that the execution would
commence and audio to the execution chamber was turned off, he saw Mr. Kenneth Williams’
24
chest rise up and down, his head move back and forth, his jaw clench, and his cheek muscles move.
He observed this for a minute or less (Motylinksi).
136.
Then, about a minute later, he described Mr. Kenneth Williams moving his head,
heaving, choking, coughing, and moaning. Mr. Motylinksi said it appeared that Mr. Kenneth
Williams began to convulse up against the straps repeatedly and rhythmically, forcefully hitting
the straps. This occurred for approximately one minute (Motylinski).
137.
Mr. Motylinski then observed labored breathing from Mr. Kenneth Williams after
these movements stopped (Motylinski).
138.
Mr. Motylinski grew concerned; conferred with the other lawyer-witness present,
Cassandra Belter; and stepped outside of the witness room to make a phone call regarding these
events. He was out of the witness room from 10:57 until approximately 11:01 p.m. (Motylinski).
139.
He returned to the witness room after making the phone call, observed what he
believed to be a consciousness check, and then witnessed Mr. Kenneth Williams be pronounced
dead (Motylinski).
10.
140.
Witness Cassandra Belter
Ms. Belter, also a lawyer, works as an investigator with the Federal Defender Office
in the Capital Habeas Unit in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She, along with Mr. Motylinski,
represented Mr. Kenneth Williams at the time of his execution (Belter).
141.
She witnessed Mr. Kenneth Williams’ execution. She heard his last statement at
around 10:51 p.m. (Belter).
142.
The execution then commenced at 10:53 p.m. (Belter).
143.
At that time, Ms. Belter saw Mr. Kenneth Williams’ eyes and mouth close and his
raised thumb drop. There was no movement (Belter).
25
144.
Then, later that same minute, Ms. Belter saw Mr. Kenneth Williams’ head begin to
bob or rock forward and backward, and then his chest began to rise basically at the same beat as
his head. These movements appeared to be syncopated and as fast as the beat of a heart (Belter).
145.
Through the next minute, Ms. Belter observed that the movements grew stronger
and more violent, and Mr. Kenneth Williams appeared to be convulsing and hitting the restraints.
Ms. Belter has observed convulsions before; she did not recall whether Mr. Kenneth Williams’
head was restrained (Belter).
146.
At 10:55 p.m., according to Ms. Belter, Mr. Kenneth Williams groaned in pain. His
breathing was audible, and he gasped as it grew stronger. Then, it sounded like he was choking
(Belter).
147.
The noise was loud, unpleasant to hear, and in conjunction with his movements,
which is why Ms. Belter used the term “pain” (Belter).
148.
At approximately 10:56 or 10:57 p.m., Mr. Motylinski left the witness room to
make a call, and Ms. Belter stayed to witness the execution (Belter).
149.
She said that, when Mr. Motylinksi left the room, Mr. Kenneth Williams was still
convulsing and gasping. Then, Mr. Kenneth Williams’ chest movements started to slow, but his
head continued to bob (Belter).
150.
At approximately 10:58 p.m., it appeared to Ms. Belter that a consciousness check
started, with men in the room interacting with Mr. Kenenth Williams by touching his eye (Belter).
151.
Mr. Kenneth Williams’ head continued to move, and his mouth opened, according
to Ms. Belter (Belter).
152.
The pace of these movements changed over time (Belter).
26
153.
Then, the same man who had been interacting with Mr. Kenneth Williams moved
to the left of Mr. Kenneth Williams and began manipulating or pushing on his shoulder, at which
point, apparently in response, Mr. Kenneth Williams groaned in pain, according to Ms. Belter
(Belter).
154.
This was the second time that Mr. Kenneth Williams made a sound that indicated
pain to Ms. Belter (Belter).
155.
Mr. Kenneth Williams’ head and chest continued to move until approximately
10:59 p.m., when movement stopped, according to Ms. Belter (Belter).
156.
At around 11:01 p.m., Mr. Motylinski returned to the room. It appeared to Ms.
Belter that another consciousness check was performed, and Mr. Kenneth Williams was
pronounced dead (Belter).
F.
157.
Cummins Unit Warden William Straughn
William Straughn, Warden of the Cummins Unit of the ADC from 2015 through
the date he testified in this matter, described his involvement in executions as an employee of the
ADC since 1982 (Warden Straughn).
158.
The execution chamber is, and has always been during Warden Straughn’s
employment, at the Cummins Unit.
He has participated in various ways throughout his
employment in preparation for and the carrying out of executions (Warden Straughn).
159.
Director Kelley conferred with Warden Straughn before the April 2017 executions
were set. Giving due consideration to the preparation time necessary and the stress and demands
placed on ADC staff, Warden Straughn suggested that the executions be scheduled as they were,
two executions per night with a few nights in between the scheduled executions (Warden
Straughn).
27
160.
According to Warden Straughn, he proceeded as required by ADC policy in
preparing ADC staff to carry out the executions in April 2017 (Warden Straughn).
161.
Warden Straughn assembled the necessary staff to carry out the duties and
responsibilities for each execution. Staff were not required to participate, but no staff member
opted out of participation. Warden Straughn met with every staff member to let them know what
to expect (Warden Straughn).
162.
Staff practice for executions, going through the entire process to ensure staff are
familiar with it and so that the process can go as smoothly as possible (Warden Straughn).
163.
Condemned inmates are not involved in these practices (Warden Straughn).
164.
Warden Straughn obtains information on the physical characteristics of each
condemned inmate and, if necessary, plans and prepares staff to address those characteristics
during the process. For example, Mr. Marcel Williams was a very large man, while one of Mr.
Jack Jones’ legs had been amputated (Warden Straughn).
165.
Condemned inmates are not always housed in the Cummins Unit. As a result, prior
to the April 2017 executions, it was necessary to transfer the condemned inmates to the Cummins
Unit (Warden Straughn).
166.
During and immediately after the transfer, Warden Straughn met with each
condemned inmate and explained what would happen, who would be responsible for certain duties,
and who to contact with questions. Warden Straughn’s goal was to make the process as peaceful
as possible for the condemned inmate and staff; he believed that knowing what was going to
happen in the days and hours leading up to the execution aided in that. After the condemned
inmate arrived at the Cummins Unit, each day before he left for the day, Warden Straughn met
28
with the condemned inmate to check on how the day went; sometimes he met with condemned
inmates multiple times during the day (Warden Straughn).
167.
Warden Straughn also explained to the condemned inmate step-by-step what would
happen when staff on the restraint team came to take him from his cell at the Cummins Unit to the
execution room, and Warden Straughn was present during that entire process when it actually
occurred (Warden Straughn).
168.
Warden Straughn was present when the IV team member installed the IVs for all
but Mr. Marcel Williams, but he did not install the IVs himself (Warden Straughn).
169.
The IV team had difficulty installing the IVs for Mr. Marcel Williams and requested
assistance. During that time, Director Kelley excused everyone from the execution room while
Mr. Marcel Williams’ IVs were placed. Warden Straughn returned to the execution room after
Mr. Marcel Williams’ IVs were placed (Warden Straughn).
170.
Warden Straughn was in the execution room during Mr. Lee, Mr. Jack Jones, Mr.
Marcel Williams, and Mr. Kenneth Williams’ executions. Warden Straughn opened the curtain to
the execution room at the start. After each condemned inmate was afforded time to make a
statement, Warden Straughn announced when each execution commenced, which was the signal
to proceed with the chemicals (Warden Straughn).
171.
Warden Straughn testified that, for Mr. Lee, Mr. Jack Jones, and Mr. Marcel
Williams, he observed a consciousness check that included a rubbing of the chest or sternal rub,
someone speaking to the condemned inmate, and someone checking his eye area. Warden
Straughn saw no reaction from any of the condemned inmates (Warden Straughn).
172.
A tongue depressor also was used with Mr. Jack Jones to check him during the
execution (Warden Straughn).
29
173.
For Mr. Marcel Williams, one of his hand restraints was left loose due to the fact
that an IV was placed in his hand, according to Warden Straughn (Warden Straughn).
174.
For Mr. Kenneth Williams, Warden Straughn was present, Mr. Kenneth Williams
made his statement, and the execution started while he was still talking. He quit midsentence.
Between the commencement of the execution and the consciousness check that Warden Straughn
observed, he also observed Mr. Kenneth Williams’ chest area, upper abdomen area, raising and
lowering like someone was breathing very heavily. He recalled hearing no sound during that time.
He recalled no facial or expression changes on Mr. Kenneth Williams, and he observed no
movements of Mr. Kenneth Williams’ during that time (Warden Straughn).
175.
After the consciousness check of Mr. Kenneth Williams and until he was declared
deceased, Warden Straughn observed no movement or reaction from him (Warden Straughn).
176.
Logs are kept for each execution; Warden Straughn does not take notes himself
during the executions and has no reason to question the logs (Warden Straughn).
177.
Warden Straughn met with staff following Mr. Lee and Mr. Kenneth Williams’
executions; no staff member asked to be, and no staff member was, removed from the execution
team after Mr. Lee’s execution (Warden Straughn).
178.
Warden Straughn reports to ADC Chief Deputy Director Dale Reed. Director
Kelley, Chief Deputy Director Reed, the Designee, and the Recorder also were in the execution
room during the April 2017 executions (Warden Straughn).
179.
According to Warden Straughn, cell phones are not permitted in the visitation room
because the ADC does not want anything to be recorded or videoed or to be disturbing to the
victims or witnesses (Warden Straughn).
30
180.
According to Warden Straughn, the microphone to the viewing area has always
been cut off at some point during executions and witnesses in the viewing room have never been
allowed to observe placement of IVs into condemned inmates (Warden Straughn).
181.
Correctional officers have their own training and are required to be proficient to
ADC standards on firing certain weapons, including a .22 caliber rifle and a 12-gauge shotgun
(Warden Straughn).
182.
If the method of execution were firing squad, Warden Straughn has concerns about
an appropriate space and having staff fire the weapons, witnesses view the execution, and someone
designated to clean up and dispose of the remains (Warden Straughn).
G.
183.
ADC Deputy Director Dale Reed
Dale Reed, who has worked for the ADC for 45 years and served as Chief Deputy
Director of the ADC at the time of the April 2017 executions, explained the role that he played in
the April 2017 executions (Reed).
184.
Deputy Director Reed attends meetings and practices and completes specific duties
that he is called upon to perform prior to each execution. He does not set the schedule for
executions, meetings, or practices. He was not involved in creating the execution protocol,
obtaining execution drugs, or selecting the execution team (Reed).
185.
He was present for Mr. Lee, Mr. Jack Jones, Mr. Marcel Williams, and Mr. Kenneth
Williams’ executions in April 2017 under the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol (Reed).
186.
Deputy Director Reed observed consciousness checks with each condemned inmate
and recalls those being the same steps for each check and each inmate (Reed).
187.
Deputy Director Reed testified inconsistently as to when he observed Mr. Kenneth
Williams’ movement where he appeared to breathe really hard and his chest came up like a
31
coughing movement but with no noise. Deputy Director Reed initially testified that these
movements occurred after the consciousness check, but then changed his testimony to be
consistent with his prior sworn affidavit asserting that these movements occurred after the
execution started but before the consciousness check (Reed).
188.
Deputy Director Reed admitted that he did not write his prior sworn affidavit but
did read it and agree with its contents before he signed (Reed).
H.
189.
ADC Deputy Director Designee
The Court received confidential, under seal testimony from a highly confidential
witness who served as the Designee for the 2017 Arkansas executions under the Arkansas
Midazolam Protocol. The Designee described the consciousness checks called for by the Arkansas
Midazolam Protocol and described how those checks were conducted in the most recent Arkansas
executions (Highly Confidential Witness).
190.
The Court heard testimony from the Designee about each step of the consciousness
checks as developed by the Designee, when the consciousness checks were conducted in relation
to when the Midazolam injection was started and completed, and that the same consciousness
checks were given to each individual during each of the four executions in Arkansas in 2017
(Highly Confidential Witness).
191.
At various points, the Designee was holding the hand of the condemned individual
and watching the condemned individual intently from 18 to 24 inches away, at the most. When it
began, each consciousness check involved brushing the eyelashes, giving verbal commands at
varying volumes from a whisper to a normal voice, listening to breathing sounds, checking for
pulse by placing fingers on the carotid artery and checking a pulse oximeter, pinching the ear lobe,
32
pinching or squeezing the trapezius muscle, touching the eyeball, and then rubbing the sternum, in
that order and for each individual (Highly Confidential Witness).
192.
The Designee testified that there was no change in the reading from the pulse
oximeter during the administration of Midazolam, during the five-minute period after it, or during
the consciousness checks. Instead, for each individual, the changes in the pulse oximeter readings
started sometime during the administration of the next two drugs in the Arkansas Midazolam
Protocol (Highly Confidential Witness).
193.
After the conclusion of the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol, the Designee completed
a second round of consciousness checks, used a stethoscope to check for heartbeat, and determined
that the pulse oximeter reading was zero (Highly Confidential Witness).
I.
194.
ADC Director Kelley
Director Kelley spoke with each condemned individual in the days leading up to
the execution, asked if a member of the IV team could inspect his arms for IV placement in advance
of the execution, and offered each condemned individual the option of having a central line placed
prior to the execution, if the individual was concerned about IV placement, among other matters.
Director Kelley testified about what she recalled from her discussions with each of the condemned
individuals (Director Kelley).
195.
Director Kelley was in the execution room when each of the four condemned
individual was escorted into the room in April 2017 and remained in the room for the duration of
the executions (Director Kelley).
196.
Director Kelley testified that, prior to each execution in April 2017, each
condemned individual was offered a sedative, that a prescription for a sedative was written for
33
each individual, and that she specifically knew that Mr. Jack Jones took the sedative (Director
Kelley).
197.
Director Kelley conceded that she did not know whether the availability of a
sedative for each condemned individual was called for or disclosed in the written Arkansas
Midazolam Protocol, but she explained, “It’s always been done.” (Director Kelley).
198.
Director Kelley explained that, during the execution, an individual serving as a
recorder stands behind the podium (“the Recorder”), and Director Kelley stands next to that
individual. She and the Recorder both have pens and hand write to fill in blanks on a log, although
some of the blanks on the log are filled in prior to events in the execution room because those
blanks relate to a meal and shower (Director Kelley).
199.
After the execution is over, she returns to her office. ADC Internal Affairs
Administrator Raymond Naylor brings the handwritten version of the log to Director Kelley’s
office, and the handwritten notes are typed up in Director Kelley’s assistant’s office. The log and
the handwritten notes are reviewed to make certain they match; the log is given to the media
(Director Kelley).
200.
Director Kelley testified that the times written on the logs were identical to the
times handwritten on the notes. Director Kelley further testified that, after each execution, she and
the other responsible individuals did their best to make sure that everything was clear on the log
and reflected accurately what happened (Director Kelley).
1.
201.
Director Kelley’s Description Of Leddel Lee’s Execution
Director Kelley was present for the placement of the IV lines into Mr. Lee and
recalled no problem with placement of the lines (Director Kelley).
34
202.
Director Kelley asked Mr. Lee if he had any final words, and Mr. Lee did not
audibly respond. Director Kelley then approached Mr. Lee so that she was basically leaning over
him face-to-face, asked a second time while making eye contact with Mr. Lee, and determined that
Mr. Lee probably could not talk because he appeared to her to be so scared. As a result, she stepped
back, nodded to the Warden, and the Warden announced that the execution was ready to proceed
(Director Kelley).
203.
At that point, Director Kelley understands the Midazolam was administered. This
is her understanding because they previously practiced this sequence of events; the executioner
was told to administer the Midazolam; the Midazolam was already drawn into syringes; and the
syringes were already connected to the IV lines. The executioner only had to push the drug
(Director Kelley).
204.
In addition, Director Kelley testified that the Designee had a habit of raising his
hand to his microphone on the headset he wore when speaking to the executioner. The Designee
raised his hand to the microphone when Midazolam was started during each execution, according
to Director Kelley (Director Kelley).
205.
From that time, Director Kelley watched the clock in the execution room to ensure
that five minutes passed before the consciousness check happened (Director Kelley,).
206.
Director Kelley watched the Designee conduct the consciousness check. She
testified that she observed the Designee’s hand go near Mr. Lee’s ear and neck, the Designee touch
one of Mr. Lee’s eyeballs, and the Designee’s hand go under the sheet to do a sternum rub (Director
Kelley).
207.
Director Kelley observed no movement and heard no response or sounds from Mr.
Lee, other than his breathing (Director Kelley).
35
208.
According to Director Kelley, Mr. Lee’s execution went as it was supposed to go
(Director Kelley).
2.
209.
Director Kelley’s Description Of Jack Jones’ Execution
Mr. Jack Jones opted to have a central line installed prior to the night of the
execution (Director Kelley). Mr. Jack Jones’ attorney, Jeff Rosenzweig, offered testimony with
respect to this decision and these events. Transcript of Hearing on Emergency Motion to Stay
Execution, Williams, No. 5:17-CV-00103-KGB (E.D. Ark. Apr. 24, 2017), ECF No. 40.
210.
Mr. Jack Jones took one prescribed dose of an unspecified sedative prior to his
execution, and he asked Director Kelley for a second dose. Director Kelley asked the medical
provider if he would prescribe an extra dose, and the medical provider did that. As a result, Mr.
Jack Jones received a second dose of the sedative (Director Kelley).
211.
Mr. Jack Jones also had a prescription for methadone, and he received his evening
dose of methadone prior to his scheduled execution (Director Kelley).
212.
Director Kelley was present when Mr. Jack Jones was escorted into the execution
room (Director Kelley).
213.
Director Kelley afforded Mr. Jack Jones the opportunity to make a final statement,
after which the Warden announced that the execution was ready to proceed and the microphone in
the execution room was turned off (Director Kelley).
214.
Director Kelley described comments that Mr. Jack Jones made to her after the
microphone was turned off, saying that she knew how he felt about her, and to the executioner,
saying that he was sorry because no man should have to do this (Director Kelley).
36
215.
From the time the execution commenced until the consciousness check was
performed, Director Kelley observed no movement from Mr. Jack Jones, although he went to sleep
and started to snore (Director Kelley).
216.
Over certain concerns with Mr. Jack Jones, the Designee prior to performing the
consciousness checks used a tongue depressor to make sure there were no problems with Mr. Jack
Jones (Director Kelley).
217.
Director Kelley observed the consciousness check being performed on Mr. Jack
Jones, the same way it had been performed on Mr. Lee (Director Kelley).
218.
Director Kelley saw no movement and heard no sounds, other than breathing that
included snoring, between the consciousness checks and the time that Mr. Jack Jones was declared
dead (Director Kelley).
3.
219.
Director Kelley’s Description Of Marcel Williams’ Execution
Plaintiffs’ counsel filed an emergency motion to stay Mr. Marcel Williams’
execution that night; the Court held a hearing and denied the motion. Pl.’s Emergency Mot. Stay
Unconstitutional Execution, Williams, No. 5:17-CV-00103-KGB (E.D. Ark. Apr. 24, 2017), ECF
Nos. 36, 39.
220.
Prior to the execution, the IV team member could not place an IV in Mr. Marcel
Williams’ left arm. Director Kelley cleared the execution room, had the executioner attempt to
place the IV, and the executioner was able to place a second IV line into Mr. Marcel Williams’
right arm. Director Kelley testified that it took approximately 40 minutes to place an IV line for
Mr. Marcel Williams prior to his execution and that his attorneys were not allowed to view that
process (Director Kelley).
37
221.
Director Kelley secured the hand restraints after this second IV line was placed and
intentionally left them loose so as not to cut off the IV line flow (Director Kelley).
222.
The log from Mr. Marcel Williams’ execution reflects the time that events occurred
after he was brought into the execution room for the second time that night, after the temporary
stay of execution was lifted, according to Director Kelley (Director Kelley).
223.
Director Kelley contrasted her impression of Mr. Marcel Williams looking like he
had made peace with what was about to occur when he was escorted into the execution room the
first time and his looking fearful when escorted into the execution room the second time (Director
Kelley).
224.
The Warden announced that the execution was ready to proceed (Director Kelley).
225.
According to Director Kelley, after the Midazolam was administered, Mr. Marcel
Williams’ breathing got heavy like he was asleep (Director Kelley).
226.
Director Kelley observed Mr. Marcel Williams’ right hand relax, after the
Midazolam was started but before the consciousness check. According to Director Kelley, this
made Mr. Marcel Williams’ hand turn a fraction of an inch, maybe, but she was concerned about
it because she had placed that restraint. Other than this, Director Kelley observed no movement
from the time the Midazolam was administered until the consciousness check was performed
(Director Kelley).
227.
Director Kelley observed the consciousness check on Mr. Marcel Williams. The
checks were done on the right side of Mr. Marcel Williams, as opposed to the left side on which
the checks were performed for each of the other condemned individuals. This was the result of
the IV placement for Mr. Marcel Williams (Director Kelley).
38
228.
Director Kelley observed no movement after the consciousness check was
performed until Mr. Marcel Williams was pronounced deceased (Director Kelley).
229.
Director Kelley saw Mr. Marcel Williams’ chest move from breathing but would
not describe it in the way that Ms. Giani did. Director Kelley saw no head movement from Mr.
Marcel Williams, nor did she see Mr. Marcel Williams open his eyes. She also testified that the
Designee used a pulse oximeter during all four April 2017 executions, placed it on each condemned
individual, and may have adjusted it slightly during the execution, but did not remove it until each
execution was complete (Director Kelley).
4.
230.
Director Kelley’s Description Of Kenneth Williams’ Execution
Prior to the execution, Director Kelley spoke to Mr. Kenneth Williams about his
last words and knew that she would hold a copy of a statement that Mr. Kenneth Williams would
read and that then the microphone would be turned off as Mr. Kenneth Williams spoke to his God.
Mr. Kenneth Williams said that he needed people to hear only his written statement (Director
Kelley).
231.
Director Kelley held up the written statement, and Mr. Kenneth Williams read it.
Then, the microphone was turned off, and he proceeded to appear to speak in tongues to his God
(Director Kelley).
232.
After the Warden announced that the execution was ready to proceed and the
Midazolam was administered, based upon Director Kelley’s observation of the Designee raising
his hand to the microphone, and the time the consciousness check was administered, Director
Kelley saw movement from Mr. Kenneth Williams (Director Kelley).
233.
She explained that Mr. Kenneth Williams was quiet for approximately one minute
after the execution started and then the trunk of his body or chest came up off the table and hit the
39
table like he was coughing, only there was no coughing sound. Director Kelley described it as
occurring during a span of approximately 10 seconds and happening approximately 15 to 20 times,
with the first few times going faster and the last few times going slower (Director Kelley).
234.
She described these movements as rhythmic and did not believe that they could
have been on purpose, based on what she observed (Director Kelley).
235.
Director Kelley saw no facial movements or facial reactions from Mr. Kenneth
Williams during this time, and she was in a position to observe this (Director Kelley).
236.
She also did not see Mr. Kenneth Williams move his head, heave, choke, cough, or
moan (Director Kelley).
237.
She did not hear any sounds from Mr. Kenneth Williams during this time, nor did
she observe Mr. Kenneth Williams gasping for air (Director Kelley).
238.
Director Kelley saw no movement, clenching, or releasing of his fists or turning of
his arms at this time (Director Kelley).
239.
She did not see any part of Mr. Kenneth Williams’ lower body move at this time
(Director Kelley).
240.
Director Kelley did not describe these actions as violent, but she did describe them
as startling.
241.
Director Kelley testified that, had the events with Mr. Kenneth Williams gone on
any longer, she would have thought that something needed to stop with the execution. However,
before that thought could formulate, the events with Mr. Kenneth Williams were over, according
to Director Kelley (Director Kelley).
40
242.
Director Kelley testified that, after the 10 seconds of rhythmic movements from
Mr. Kenneth Williams stopped, at least 2 minutes passed before the consciousness check started
(Director Kelley).
243.
Director Kelley neither saw nor heard a response from Mr. Kenneth Williams to
the consciousness checks, and she observed no movements and heard no sounds from him between
the time the consciousness checks were performed and his death was announced (Director Kelley).
244.
From the time that he was moved from death row, which is at the Varner Unit, to
the holding cell at the Cummins Unit, Mr. Kenneth Williams was monitored constantly and
observations were recorded by the ADC in a log. Further, because the holding cell is restricted
housing, medical would make rounds every day to administer medication and check on the
condemned individual, including recording or making a note of any medical injuries or issues even
if the condemned individual did not report or complain to medical (Director Kelley).
245.
Director Kelley has never seen any records to indicate that Mr. Kenneth Williams
was knocked in his head while he was in the holding cell prior to his execution (Director Kelley).
5.
246.
Director Kelley’s Handwritten Notes From The Executions
Director Kelley explained that, when she kept notes with the Recorder during the
executions, there were some instances in which she jotted down the time that the second and third
drugs in the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol were administered during an execution, but she did not
do that for all executions (Director Kelley).
247.
Director Kelley assumes that her handwritten notes are shredded after the log to be
released to the media is typed from the handwritten notes taken by her and the Recorder and three
individuals compare the information on the log to be released to the media and the handwritten
notes to ensure accuracy. (Director Kelley).
41
248.
The times that the second and third drugs in the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol are
administered are not reported on the log to be released to the media, and Director Kelley took no
steps to ensure that her handwritten notes were kept after these executions (Director Kelley).
249.
When asked whether she had plans to change her policy with respect to disclosing
or recording the time each drug in the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol is administered, Director
Kelley said that she contemplated doing that, that it could easily be done, that it was not done, and
that no one had asked that it be done (Director Kelley).
250.
Director Kelley testified that, leading up to the trial, no one had suggested to her
that the policy needed to change to inform those observing as to when a particular drug was
administered (Director Kelley).
251.
Director Kelley acknowledged that she knows when the drugs are administered and
that, in the future, this is an aspect of the policy that she might change (Director Kelley).
J.
252.
The Autopsy Of Kenneth Williams
Mr. Kenneth Williams was executed on April 27, 2017 (Dr. Cohen). Frank Peretti,
M.D., performed an autopsy of Mr. Kenneth Williams on behalf of the State of Arkansas, but did
not testify in this matter (Dr. Kokes). Then, on April 30, 2017, Joseph I. Cohen, M.D., a forensic
pathologist retained by plaintiffs, performed a second autopsy of Mr. Kenneth Williams (Dr.
Cohen).
253.
As is standard for autopsies performed by the Arkansas State Crime Laboratory,
two additional pathologists reviewed Dr. Peretti’s report. One conducted a technical review, and
the other conducted an administrative review (Dr. Kokes).
42
254.
Charles Kokes, M.D., then then-Chief Medical Examiner of the Arkansas State
Crime Laboratory, conducted the administrative review and testified on behalf of defendants (Dr.
Kokes).
255.
Dr. Cohen, who testified on behalf of plaintiffs, is licensed to practice medicine in
Arizona, California, and New York (Dr. Cohen).
256.
Dr. Cohen has worked as a forensic pathologist for 25 years, performing over 7,000
autopsies. A forensic pathologist is a medical doctor who generally performs autopsies for the
purpose of determining the cause of death. He has conducted autopsies on other individuals after
execution by lethal injection, including Clayton Lockett and Joseph Wood (Dr. Cohen).
257.
The manner of death when an execution is conducted by the State of Arkansas is
mandated by statute (Dr. Kokes).
258.
At the time of the autopsy, a high toxic level of Midazolam was in Mr. Kenneth
Williams’ system; the blood level was 1.8 micrograms per milliliter (Dr. Kokes).
259.
The State of Arkansas did not test for vecuronium or potassium chloride (Dr.
Kokes).
260.
Dr. Cohen’s opinion is that Mr. Kenneth Williams likely succumbed to the
combined respiratory depressant effects of the Midazolam and vecuronium with probable
contribution by the cardio toxic effect of potassium leading to cardiac arrest (Dr. Cohen).
261.
Dr. Cohen observed petechial hemorrhages at certain points on the underside of Mr.
Kenneth Williams’ eyelids; a contusion about two inches in greatest dimension on the right side
of his occipital scalp behind the ear and a bit lower; and that his lungs were congested and
edematous, which is heavy with water and blood (Dr. Cohen).
43
262.
Petechial hemorrhages are seen in deaths resulting from mechanical or positional
asphyxia; they can result from seizure activity and hypoxia (Dr. Cohen; Dr. Kokes).
263.
Asphyxia is a complete lack or absence of air, and hypoxia is a shortage of air or
an impediment of the passage of air from the environment into the lungs (Dr. Cohen).
264.
Dr. Cohen cannot testify at what point during the execution the petechial
hemorrhages formed (Dr. Cohen).
265.
Dr. Cohen acknowledged that hypoxia can cause seizures and that seizures cause
involuntary movements (Dr. Cohen).
266.
If a person is suffering from hypoxia or hypotension, the person is unconscious (Dr.
Kokes).
267.
Dr. Kokes is unaware of any data that shows that, if a person is experiencing agonal
breathing, he or she is feeling or experiencing pain (Dr. Kokes).
268.
Petechial hemorrhages were a non-specific finding by Dr. Cohen, meaning that the
finding can be associated with a number of underlying conditions or problems and could have been
formed in a number of different ways and for a number of different underlying reasons (Dr. Kokes).
269.
Dr. Kokes explained that formation of petechial hemorrhages requires a functioning
cardiovascular system. According to Dr. Kokes, Mr. Kenneth Williams’ petechial hemorrhages
likely formed sometime after the first dose of Midazolam was administered to him but before his
death (Dr. Kokes).
270.
The petechial hemorrhages may also have resulted from agonal breathing, which is
seen externally as irregular gasping, gurgling-type breathing (Dr. Kokes).
271.
Dr. Cohen concluded that the contusion likely occurred prior to Mr. Kenneth
Williams’ death (Dr. Cohen).
44
272.
Dr. Cohen saw no documentation that Mr. Kenneth Williams suffered an injury
prior to the start of his execution. Dr. Cohen is unable to explain with certainty how the contusion
occurred (Dr. Cohen).
273.
Dr. Kokes testified that, because Dr. Cohen never examined the contusion under a
microscope, Dr. Cohen is not able to say when Mr. Kenneth Williams suffered the contusion (Dr.
Kokes).
274.
Dr. Cohen testified that the contusion resulted from force that would be painful and
felt by a conscious or semi-conscious person (Dr. Cohen). However, Dr. Cohen is unable to
quantify any pain to Mr. Kenneth Williams, even if pain resulted from the contusion (Dr. Cohen).
275.
Further, Dr. Kokes does not agree that suffering the contusion means that Mr.
Kenneth Williams experienced pain. Dr. Kokes’ opinion is that, if Mr. Kenneth Williams suffered
the contusion at the time of the execution, it likely resulted from involuntary movement (Dr.
Kokes).
276.
Lungs that are congested and edematous are consistent with respiratory failure.
Fluid buildup in the lungs also could be caused from the dying process, terminal agonal breathing,
and the effects of the paralytic (Dr. Cohen).
277.
Dr. Kokes testified that fluid in the lungs is a common result of death resulting from
respiratory depression caused by multiple drug intoxication (Dr. Kokes).
278.
Dr. Cohen, having heard testimony of eyewitnesses to Mr. Kenneth Williams’
execution and having conducted his autopsy, could not say if the movements of Mr. Kenneth
Williams during the execution, as testified to by those witnesses, were voluntary or involuntary
(Dr. Cohen).
45
279.
According to Dr. Kokes, the movements described by witnesses to Mr. Kenneth
Williams’ execution likely were involuntary and unconscious movements, as they appeared to be
convulsions and were likely due to cerebral hypoxia resulting from several factors, including the
respiratory depression and apnea caused by excessive amounts of Midazolam and hypotension,
which is another known toxic effect of Midazolam. According to Dr. Kokes, these conditions also
can lead to involuntary sounds (Dr. Kokes).
K.
280.
Director Kelley’s Viewing Policies
On March 10, 2017, plaintiffs’ counsel sent a letter to Director Kelley requesting
disclosure of her viewing policies on the dates of the scheduled executions (Dkt. No. 2-2, Ex. 8).
Specifically, plaintiffs’ counsel sought disclosure of Director Kelley’s policies regarding
permission for plaintiffs’ counsel to witness the executions in the viewing area and the right of
plaintiffs’ counsel to bring telecommunications devices to the prison on the dates of the executions
(Id., at 1).
281.
By letter to plaintiffs’ counsel dated March 16, 2017, counsel for Director Kelley
responded to the inquiry regarding viewing policies during the executions (Dkt. No. 2-2, Ex. 9).
Counsel for Director Kelley asserted that only one attorney per inmate would be permitted in the
viewing room during each execution (Id., at 1). Counsel for Director Kelley further asserted that
plaintiffs’ counsel would not be permitted to bring cell phones or tablets inside the prison facility,
but Director Kelley would permit plaintiffs’ counsel to “bring a lap top [sic] computer so long as
the device is not equipped with photography, video, or audio recording capabilities.” (Id.). The
letter indicates that “[i]f counsel decides to return to the deputy warden’s office rather than
proceeding to the viewing area, there will be two phone lines . . . for inbound or outbound calls.”
(Id., at 2).
46
282.
On March 20, 2017, counsel for Director Kelley sent an email to plaintiffs’ counsel,
clarifying the viewing policies with regard to telephone access (Dkt. No. 2-2, Ex. 10). The email
indicates that, “[i]f the attorney chooses to go to the viewing area, she will have no access to a
phone during the execution” and that “[t]he attorney will not be allowed to leave and then return
to the viewing area. No phone access in the viewing area.” (Id.).
283.
On April 3, 2017, counsel for Director Kelley sent to plaintiffs’ counsel a letter
containing a document entitled “Execution Protocol – Legal Counsel for Inmates with Scheduled
Executions” (Dkt. No. 28-16). This letter indicated that changes had been made to the previous
viewing policies including “provisions for the second legal counsel for the inmate.” (Id., at 1). The
attached execution protocol specified that, “[a]t the request of the inmate, one additional legal
counsel will be allowed to enter the unit on the date of execution. Such counsel shall be escorted
directly to the Deputy Warden’s office and shall remain there for the duration of his or her stay at
the unit.” (Id., at 4). The execution protocol further indicated that, “[o]n the date of execution[,]
one legal counsel for the inmate shall be allowed to visit the inmate at the holding cell” and that,
when the inmate is escorted to the execution chamber, “legal counsel may choose to be escorted
to the witness room or . . . the Deputy Warden’s Office or the visitation center.” (Id., at 3).
284.
On April 6, 2017, Director Kelley signed an affidavit, a copy of which was attached
to defendants’ response to plaintiffs’ motion for preliminary injunction, filed on April 7, 2017
(Dkt. No. 28-1). In the affidavit, Director Kelley articulated different viewing policies than were
represented in the letter dated March 20, 2017. Specifically, Director Kelley provided that “legal
counsel may choose to be escorted to the witness room, or, in the alternative, choose to be escorted
to the Deputy Warden’s office or the visitation center. Legal counsel must remain in that chosen
location until the execution is complete.” (Id., ¶ 46) (emphasis added). Citing Arkansas Code
47
Annotated § 16-90-502(e)(1)(E), Director Kelley stated that, based on her investigation, “Arkansas
law and ADC policy have always allowed only one attorney for the condemned inmate to witness
an execution.” (Id., ¶ 47). Director Kelley then stated that, “at the request of the inmate, one
additional legal counsel will be allowed to enter the unit,” but that “[s]uch counsel shall be escorted
directly to the Deputy Warden’s office and shall remain there for the duration of his or her stay at
the unit.” (Id., ¶ 48). Director Kelley further stated that “[a]ll witnesses, including attorneys for
the ADC, must surrender all cell phones, tablets, cameras, computers, and other recording devices
at the ADC’s Central Office in Pine Bluff before being transported to the Cummins Unit.” (Id., ¶
50). Director Kelley explained that “[t]wo outbound phone lines will be made available at the
holding cells for the use of legal counsel. Inbound and outbound phone lines and an inbound and
outbound fax line will be made available in the Deputy Warden’s office. An outbound phone line
will also be made available in the visitation center.” (Id., ¶ 51). Finally, Director Kelley stated
that “upon request, legal counsel for the inmate will be permitted to bring a laptop computer into
the unit and immediately to the Deputy Warden’s office. Any such laptop computer shall remain
in the Deputy Warden’s office for the duration of legal counsel’s stay.” (Id., ¶ 52).
285.
During the preliminary injunction evidentiary hearing in this case in 2017, Director
Kelley testified about plaintiffs’ counsel’s access to the viewing room and outbound phone lines.
Director Kelley testified that plaintiffs’ lawyers “would have to choose between calling the Court
and advising them of something happening with [their] client or actually witnessing the
execution.” (Testimony of Hearing on Motion for Preliminary Injunction, Vol. 4, at 1218, Apr.
13, 2017). When the Court questioned Director Kelley, she testified that the viewing room is a
three-minute car ride from the Deputy Warden’s office, where the telephone is that the attorneys
can use to access the Court (Id., at 1270–72).
48
Director Kelley also answered somewhat
ambiguously when asked whether the attorneys would be able to use a telephone in a “quiet cell,”
but she asserted that “[i]deally, they would go to the front where they have a phone and a fax and
everything.” (Id., at 1271). By “front,” the Court understands Director Kelley to be referencing
the Deputy Warden’s office.
286.
Also at the preliminary injunction evidentiary hearing, Director Kelley testified
about the number of attorneys permitted to witness the executions. At that time, Director Kelley
suggested through her testimony that, because the witness room was very crowded, there was room
for only one attorney to be present in the viewing room during the execution (Id. at 1135–37).
However, Director Kelley acknowledged in her testimony that one of her predecessors permitted
two attorneys to witness executions (Id. at 1137, 1279 (“I don’t know about under Mr. [Art L.]
Lockhart, but I know under Mr. [Larry] Norris, only one attorney was present, and even, to my
knowledge, and we can ask Jeff [Rosenzweig], when Jeff was there under Mr. Lockhart and there
were two attorneys, one didn’t leave”)). Director Kelley testified that there would be 24 chairs in
the viewing room, which she explained provided seats for up to 6 of the victim’s family members,
the inmate’s attorney and spiritual advisor, and 12 citizen witnesses (Id., at 1135).
287.
When the Court questioned Director Kelley about why 12 witnesses were necessary
when the applicable statute provides for 6 to 12, Director Kelley stated that, “because I’m asking
the witnesses to stay for two executions, I think that there’s a chance that some of them won’t, and
I want to make sure I have at least six for the next one.” (Id., at 1273). The Court then asked, “If
you don’t have more than six, if you have just the number you need, you have extra chairs in the
witness room, would you entertain having lawyers come in if there’s more than one lawyer for the
inmate?” (Id.). Director Kelley and her counsel answered ambiguously and stated that she would
have to review the statute before answering that question (Id., at 1273–74). Finally, with respect
49
to the document entitled “Execution Protocol,” which was attached to a letter dated April 3, 2017,
Director Kelley testified that she had “the authority to make changes except for what the law tells
me I can’t change.” (Id. at 1281; Defs.’ Hr’g Ex. 16).
288.
After the Court entered its Preliminary Injunction Order in this case, the parties
proposed a Joint Execution Viewing Policy (Dkt. No. 62).
289.
In a series of questions asked at the bench trial in this matter, Director Kelley was
asked repeatedly about the ADC’s past policy and practice during executions. Director Kelley was
specifically asked, “Has it ever been the policy of the Department of Correction to allow more than
one attorney for the inmate inside the witness room?” She testified, “That’s never been the policy.
We did allow it in 2017.” (Director Kelley).
290.
Director Kelley was never asked what the past practice, prior to 2017, had been
regarding allowing more than one attorney for the condemned individual inside the witness room.
291.
At the bench trial in this matter, Director Kelley testified that, during the April 2017
executions, she allowed two attorney witnesses to be present for each execution, and the Deputy
Director of the ADC held a cell phone that did not have a camera provided by the attorney
witnesses and that was given to the attorney witnesses to use, if requested (Director Kelley).
292.
Director Kelley was not aware of any issues with that practice during the April 2017
executions (Director Kelley).
293.
While Director Kelley serves as Director of the ADC, if another execution is
scheduled, she testified that she does not plan to go back on the agreement that was reached in this
case (Director Kelley).
294.
Director Kelley is not opposed to the practice implemented by the parties’ Joint
Execution Viewing Policy being made a part of the ADC policy, but she would prefer that the
50
practice not be court-mandated due to concerns about a bill being considered by the Arkansas
legislature that would jam cell phones in prison housing areas due to contraband and security
issues. Director Kelley is concerned that, if the bill becomes law, then cell phones in the area
where executions are conducted might also be jammed and unusable. Further, Director Kelley
does not plan to make changes to the policy unless another execution is scheduled because she
explained that she does not work on policy that is not being used (Director Kelley).
L.
295.
Firing Squad As Potential Alternative Execution Method
The last execution by firing squad in the United States was carried out in 2010 by
the State of Utah (Dkt. No. 170, Stipulations, ¶ 5).
296.
James Williams, M.D., has a background in emergency medicine and as a SWAT
medical director and officer. He offered testimony based on his experience personally in being
shot in the chest by a friend with a .22 caliber rifle, which he described as initially not painful but
instead as a severe numb sensation that persisted for several hours. He also offered testimony
based upon his medical training, his treatment of numerous gunshot wound victims, his discussions
with other medical providers, and anecdotal evidence regarding gunshot wounds (Dr. Williams).
297.
He testified that, if a gunshot wound were delivered to the cardiovascular complex
such that the bullet transected the individual’s chest causing cessation of the circulation of blood
to the brain, the individual would potentially experience pain for 7 to 10 seconds and then, after
another 7 to 10 seconds, lose consciousness. However, Dr. Williams said the potential for pain
during that period would likely mean feeling nothing more than the sensation of a powerful blow
to the chest (Dr. Williams).
298.
Dr. Antognini agrees that it would take 7 to 10 seconds for an individual to lose
consciousness, but he believes that these individuals would experience pain between being shot
51
and losing consciousness, based on his experience treating gunshot victims in his career (Dr.
Antognini).
299.
Dr. Antognini believes that the risk that a condemned individual would experience
severe pain if Arkansas were to adopt for executions the firing squad certainly is not less, and is
probably greater, than the risk of pain under the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol (Dr. Antognini).
300.
Dr. Williams conceded that he has never treated a gunshot victim within 60 seconds
of receiving an injury to the chest, nor within 10 to 15 seconds of receiving an injury to the chest
(Dr. Williams).
301.
Dr. Williams has also never treated a gunshot victim who has received five gunshot
wounds to the chest with a .30 caliber rifle, which would be comparable to a firing squad, although
he has treated a victim shot twice in the chest with a .30 caliber rifle (Dr. Williams).
302.
Dr. Williams acknowledged that there is nothing in the medical literature that
addresses these issues (Dr. Williams).
303.
Dr. Williams could not testify that an execution by firing squad would be pain free.
In fact, Dr. Williams testified that, if shot in a bone or joint causing a fracture, the gunshot wound
would be painful, but he testified based on personal and medical experience that fractures in ribs
are less painful than fractures in other bones or joints (Dr. Williams).
304.
Joseph Cummings, a senior investigator in the Federal Defender Capital Habeas
Unit in the Eastern District of Arkansas, testified about touring the execution chamber of the Utah
State Prison and photographing and taking measurements of the entire layout and the schematics
of the layout where an execution by firing squad previously was carried out (Cummings).
52
305.
Gregory Peay, who is a Director of the Utah Department of Correction, offered
testimony through deposition about prior executions in Utah, including an execution by firing
squad (Peay)
306.
Steven Turley, who also is a Director of the Utah Department of Correction, offered
testimony through deposition about prior executions in Utah, including an execution by firing
squad (Turley).
M.
307.
Secobarbital As Potential Alternative Execution Method
The Court heard testimony from Charles Blanke, M.D., a physician licensed in
Oregon. Dr. Blanke described his academic, research, and clinical experience in the area of
medical aid in dying, which refers to a physician helping a terminally ill patient obtain a
prescription for lethal medication which if taken is intended to end the patient’s life (Dr. Blanke).
308.
Secobarbital, a barbiturate, is the drug most commonly used for medical aid in
dying. Dr. Blanke has prescribed secobarbital for use in more than 90 medical-aid-in-dying
procedures. The dose of secobarbital depends on the body mass of the patient (Dr. Blanke).
309.
Secobarbital generally comes in a capsule form.
For medical-aid-in-dying
procedures, the capsules are opened, emptied into four ounces of a liquid, and then consumed by
drinking that liquid within two minutes (Dr. Williams).
310.
In certain cases the liquid can be administered through a nasogastric or feeding
tube, inserted with the aid of the anesthetic lidocaine, which is readily available, through an
individual’s nose directly into their stomach. Dr. Blanke testified that insertion of a feeding tube
in this matter is not particularly painful (Dr. Blanke).
53
311.
Dr. Blanke has had 100 percent of his patients die from this procedure, typically by
falling asleep after consuming the liquid, falling into a coma within about five minutes, and dying
within typically 25 minutes later (Dr. Blanke).
312.
Death usually results from respiratory breathing or cardiovascular heart death (Dr.
Blanke).
313.
Secobarbital is not a paralytic (Dr. Blanke).
314.
Dr. Blanke concedes that the literature does include cases in which patients have
woken up after taking such doses, although he recited a low percentage of cases, and testified that
he is not aware of any pain being experienced by patients who have woken up (Dr. Blanke).
315.
Dr. Blanke also concedes that half of the patients take longer than 25 minutes to
die, with one reported case of a patient taking approximately four days to die (Dr. Blanke).
316.
Dr. Blanke acknowledges that determining the factors that might impact the time
between ingestion and death is an evolving area of research. There also is less data available
starting in 2010 because Oregon changed its law then to no longer require a physician to be present
for the procedure. Secobarbital costs more today than in years past, so other, less expensive drugs
are being considered and used more widely in this area (Dr. Blanke).
317.
Dr. Blanke is only aware of secobarbital coming in powder form (Dr. Blanke).
318.
Although Dr. Blanke was aware of a pharmacy that was willing to provide
secobarbital for use in executions, that pharmacy is no longer willing to provide the drug for use
in that way (Dr. Blanke).
319.
The Court heard testimony from John Kirtley, Ph.D., who serves as the Executive
Director of the Arkansas State Board of Pharmacy. He testified as to application and legal
54
requirements for pharmacies within and outside the state selling and supplying certain types of
controlled substances, including certain types of compounded controlled substances (Dr. Kirtley).
320.
According to Dr. Kirtley, injectable secobarbital would have to be compounded
(Dr. Kirtley).
N.
321.
Potential Alternative Execution Methods
Dr. Blanke testified that pentobarbital, another drug used in the past for aid in dying
purposes, is no longer readily available (Dr. Blanke).
322.
Sevoflurane gas has never been used to carry out an execution (Dkt. No. 170,
Stipulations, ¶ 4).
III.
Evidentiary Matters
There are two evidentiary matters that were raised at the bench trial and addressed by the
parties’ post-trial filings. At the outset, the Court addresses and resolves these matters before
turning to the merits of the parties’ dispute.
A.
Plaintiffs’ Request For Adverse Inference
Plaintiffs argue in their post-trial brief:
Wendy Kelley testified that she took notes of when the drugs were administered.
Astoundingly, she shredded them (or allowed them to be shredded) after the
executions. This litigation was ongoing and that information would have been
highly probative to the questions before the Court. Destruction of this record was
prejudicial to Plaintiffs. Because Kelley allowed the destructions, the Court should
infer that the evidence would have been favorable to Plaintiffs’ case. See Dillon v.
Nissan Motor Co., 986 F.2d 263, 266–69 (8th Cir. 1993).
(Dkt. No. 198, at 36 n.3).
“A court’s inherent power includes the discretionary ‘ability to fashion an appropriate
sanction for conduct which abuses the judicial process.’” Stevenson v. Union Pac. R.R. Co., 354
F.3d 739, 745 (8th Cir. 2004) (quoting Chambers v. NASCO, Inc., 501 U.S. 32, 44–45 (1991)).
55
“In order for an adverse inference instruction for spoliation to be warranted, a district court is
required to make two findings: ‘(1) there must be a finding of intentional destruction indicating a
desire to suppress the truth, and (2) there must be a finding of prejudice to the opposing party.’”
Burris v. Gulf Underwriters Ins. Co., 787 F.3d 875, 879 (8th Cir. 2015) (quoting Hallmark Cards,
Inc. v. Murley, 703 F.3d 456, 460 (8th Cir. 2013)). This is a high bar because “[a]n adverse
inference instruction is a powerful tool”; it “brands one party as a bad actor, guilty of destroying
evidence that it should have retained for use by the jury,” and “necessarily opens the door to a
certain degree of speculation by the jury, which is admonished that it may infer the presence of
damaging information.” Morris v. Union Pac. R.R., 373 F.3d 896, 900 (8th Cir. 2004). “The
district court ‘has substantial leeway to determine intent through consideration of circumstantial
evidence, witness credibility, motives of the witnesses in a particular case, and other factors.’”
Davis v. White, 858 F.3d 1155, 1160 (8th Cir. 2017) (quoting Morris, 373 F.3d at 901).
The Eighth Circuit appears to draw a distinction between the spoliation of evidence prior
to litigation and during litigation. When the destruction of evidence is alleged to have occurred
pre-litigation, “a district court must issue explicit findings of bad faith and prejudice prior to
delivering an adverse interference instruction.” Murley, 703 F.3d at 461. In contrast, when a party
is found to have destroyed evidence during litigation, “a district court is entitled to fashion
appropriate sanctions for such evasive litigation tactics—‘even absent an explicit bad faith
finding.’” Id. (quoting Stevenson, 354 F.3d at 750).
The Eighth Circuit’s decision in Stevenson is instructive. Stevenson arose out of a gradecrossing collision in which plaintiff-motorist’s vehicle was hit by a train, and his wife was killed.
See 354 F.3d at 742. The district court imposed the sanction of an adverse-inference jury
instruction against defendant-railroad because, both prior to the filing of the lawsuit and during its
56
pendency, it destroyed two types of evidence:
(1) “the tape of any recorded voice radio
communications between the train crew and dispatchers on the date of the accident,” and (2) “all
track maintenance records close in time to the accident.” Id. at 745. The railroad appealed. The
Eighth Circuit found that the district court was within its discretion when it sanctioned the railroad
for its pre-litigation destruction, pursuant to its routine document retention policy, of the taperecorded voice radio communications, reasoning that it was unreasonable and amounted to badfaith conduct for it to adhere to the policy in the circumstances of the case. See id. at 747. The
Eighth Circuit explained that:
The requisite element of prejudice is satisfied by the nature of the evidence
destroyed in this case. While there is no indication that the voice tape destroyed
contained evidence that could be classified as a smoking-gun, the very fact that it
is the only recording of conversations between the engineer and dispatch
contemporaneous with the accident renders its loss prejudicial to the plaintiffs. We
find no abuse of discretion in the district court’s decision to sanction the Railroad
through an adverse inference instruction for its prelitigation destruction of the voice
tape.
Id. at 748.
The Eighth Circuit also found that the district court was within its discretion when it
sanctioned the railroad for its destruction, pursuant to its routine document destruction policy, of
track maintenance inspection records after the commencement of litigation and the filing of
plaintiffs’ request for production of documents, reasoning that it amounted to bad faith for the
railroad to make no effort to preserve these documents from its routine document destruction
policy. See id. at 748. The Eighth Circuit elaborated: “Sanctioning the ongoing destruction of
records during litigation and discovery by imposing an adverse inference instruction is supported
by either the court’s inherent power or Rule 37 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, even absent
an explicit bad faith finding, and we conclude that the giving of an adverse inference instruction
in these circumstances is not an abuse of discretion.” Id. at 750.
57
At the same time, the Eighth Circuit determined that the district court abused its discretion
when it sanction the railroad for its pre-litigation destruction of track maintenance inspection
records, reasoning that there was no showing that it “knew that litigation was imminent when,
prior to any litigation, it destroyed track maintenance records from up to two years prior to the
accident pursuant to its document retention policy,” and that plaintiffs were not prejudiced by
destruction of these records because they would not have shown the exact condition of the track at
the time of the collision. Id. at 748–49.
Director Kelley testified that, during the April 2017 executions, an internal affairs
representative was present. Director Kelley was present, too, standing next to the internal affairs
representative. Both had pens in their hands during the executions and took notes regarding certain
events; they did this to aid in completing the log required as a part of ADC policy, to be released
after each execution. In some instances, but not all, Director Kelley wrote down what time the
second and third drugs of the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol were administered. After each
execution, the log is transported by the internal affairs representative back to Director Kelley’s
office, and she meets the representative there. Three individuals are present; they check all of the
times to make sure that everything is correct on the log. Then, the log is publicly released.
Director Kelley assumes that, after that, her notes are shredded. She testified that the
internal affairs log includes only as much information as the ADC policy requires. Director Kelley
testified at trial that she now thinks that it might be a good idea to have information regarding
when the second and third drugs of the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol are administered added to
the internal affairs log. She testified essentially that it could have been done if anybody had asked
for it to be done ahead of time.
58
To be clear, plaintiffs challenge in their operative complaint Director Kelley’s viewing
policy, claiming that plaintiffs’ counsel cannot tell when each drug is injected to ensure that the
Arkansas Midazolam Protocol is followed and to ensure plaintiffs’ right to counsel and right to
access the courts (Dkt. No. 117, ¶ 51). Specifically, in their operative complaint, plaintiffs seek
visual and audible signals of when each drug is being injected during the execution (Id., ¶ 59).
This claim and request for relief were first added to this action in June 2018, with the filing of
plaintiffs’ amended complaint (Dkt. No. 117).
However, when the April 2017 executions occurred and Director Kelley’s notes were
destroyed, the claim was still not in the case. On March 27, 2017, when plaintiffs filed their initial
complaint in this case, they did not raise this specific claim (Dkt. No. 2). Although plaintiffs
challenged Director Kelley’s viewing policy in their initial complaint, they filed suit specifically
over the number of lawyers for plaintiffs permitted to view each execution and those lawyers’
access to a telephone during each execution (Dkt. No. 2, ¶¶ 166–73). The Court granted
preliminary injunctive relief on this claim, finding plaintiffs likely to prevail on their claim that
the viewing policy then in effect likely violated plaintiffs’ right to counsel and right of access to
the courts (Dkt. No. 54, at 101). As a result, the Court directed the parties to confer on the terms
of a viewing policy to assure plaintiffs’ right to counsel and right of access to the courts for the
entire duration of all executions, stating that, if the parties failed to agree, each party could present
its proposal in writing to the Court (Id.). The parties reached an agreement on the viewing policy
that Director Kelley would follow during the April 2017 executions (Dkt. No. 62). That agreement
included no mention of information about when the second and third drugs in the Arkansas
Midazolam Protocol were administered.
59
After reaching that agreement but before the scheduled April 2017 executions, plaintiffs
filed a motion with the Court to alter the agreed upon viewing policy, requesting that plaintiffs’
counsel be permitted to view the entire execution, including the time period from when each
plaintiff entered the execution chamber to be strapped to the gurney and to have intravenous lines
affixed and not just from the time right before the execution drugs were about to flow (Dkt. No.
73). Defendants responded in opposition to the motion, and the Court denied the motion prior to
the executions (Dkt. Nos. 75, 76). Prior to the April 2017 executions, plaintiffs made no request
to modify the agreed upon viewing policy to address when the second and third drugs in the
Arkansas Midazolam Protocol were administered. Additionally, in their original complaint,
plaintiffs allege that their “right to counsel requires that their attorneys have a complete visual and
audio access to the execution from the time plaintiffs enter the chamber to the time they are
pronounced dead.” (Dkt. No. 2-2, ¶ 180). This allegation was related to Director Kelley’s alleged
shutting off of the execution chamber’s audio, which would prevent plaintiffs’ attorneys from
hearing any audible reaction plaintiffs might have to the drugs (Id.).
Further, there is no evidence in the record before the Court that, at the time of the April
2017 executions, there was a pending discovery request to defendants specifically seeking this
information or documents including this information.
On this record, considering the controlling legal authorities, the Court declines to impose
an inference that the evidence in Director Kelley’s notes of when, in some instances but not all,
the second and third drugs of the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol were administered would have
been favorable to plaintiffs’ case.
B.
Defendants’ Request To Admit Numerous Documents
60
At the preliminary injunction hearing, defendants introduced numerous exhibits through
the testimony of Dr. Buffington and Dr. Antognini by merely asking the expert witness on the
stand if he relied on the study (Transcript of Hearing on Motion for Preliminary Injunction, Vol.
3, at 624–25, Apr. 12, 2017; Vol. 4, at 979–988). Aside from citing studies as reliance materials,
the experts offered little, if any, explanation for many of these studies at that time. Many of these
exhibits were admitted at the hearing on the motion for preliminary injunction without objection
from plaintiffs’ counsel (Dkt. No. 48). Many of these studies were not listed on defendants’ exhibit
list for the bench trial (Dkt. No. 195), nor were these studies reviewed with defendants’ expert
witnesses during their testimony at the bench trial.
Beginning during Dr Stevens’ direct testimony at the bench trial, defendants objected under
Federal Rule of Evidence 803(18) to plaintiffs’ introduction into evidence of numerous treatises
and studies. Defendants asserted that the documents are hearsay and may be read into evidence,
but the documents themselves should not to be received as evidence by the Court. In response to
the objection, plaintiffs asserted that they intended to ask to admit each exhibit after the exhibit
was discussed with the witness on the stand pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence 703. Plaintiffs
explained that their experts had based their opinions in part in reliance upon the treatises and
studies marked as exhibits, used that data in considering their opinions and informing their
opinions, and that the probative value of admitting the treatises and studies as evidence would be
greater than the prejudicial effect.
The Court clarified that defendants’ position was that an expert could read word for word
the treatise or study into evidence but that the document could not be admitted under Rule 803(18),
a proposition with which defendants agreed. Further, the Court clarified that defendants had no
61
objection to the testimony being offered by the expert witness, only to the request by plaintiffs for
the Court to admit the document (Dr. Stevens).
The Court determined that, even if objectionable under Rule 803(18), Rule 703 trumped
Rule 803(18). Pursuant to Rule 703, even if inadmissible, the proponent of the opinion may
disclose the otherwise inadmissible facts or data to the jury if probative in helping the jury evaluate
the opinion and if the probative value substantially outweighs the prejudicial effect. See Fed. R.
Evid. 703. As a result, the Court received the exhibit at issue during Dr. Stevens’ testimony and
other similar exhibits as evidence offered by plaintiffs during this bench trial. The Court
recognized a continuing objection from defendants and ruled consistently on the objections.
Later during the bench trial, defense counsel represented that all counsel agreed, based
upon Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 65(a)(2), that evidence received on the motion for
preliminary injunction that would be admissible at trial becomes part of the trial record and need
not be repeated. As a result, defense counsel claimed that, for purposes of trial, all treatises and
studies referred to by defendants’ witnesses at the preliminary injunction hearing were admitted
for purposes of the bench trial (Dr. Stevens; Dr. Buffington). Defense counsel requested to
incorporate the prior testimony of Dr. Antognini and Dr. Buffington offered at the preliminary
injunction hearing and to move into evidence for purposes of the bench trial the following treatises,
studies, and articles: Defense Exhibits 5, 6, 12, 16, 25, 26, 35–42, 44–73 (argument post-bench
trial).
Plaintiffs’ counsel disagreed with the general representation regarding the parties’
purported agreement, asserting that the parties agreed prior to the bench trial to abide by Federal
Rule of Civil Procedure 65(a)(2) and preserved all objections, meaning only if an item is
admissible at trial should it become part of the trial record (Dr. Stevens). Further, plaintiffs’
62
counsel raised a number of objections to the specific defense exhibits referenced (argument postbench trial). Specifically, plaintiffs’ counsel recounted that, at the preliminary injunction hearing,
defense counsel gave the title of a treatise, study, or article; asked Dr. Antognini or Dr. Buffington
if he relied on it; and then admitted it at the hearing in many instances with no further discussion
or reference to the exhibit. Plaintiffs’ counsel observed that the treatise, article, or study cited is
hearsay under Rule 803(18), as defense counsel previously claimed, but there was no discussion
with the witness at the preliminary injunction hearing or bench trial regarding the treatise, article,
or study, nor was there a showing under Rule 703 that admission would be more probative than
prejudicial (argument post-bench trial).
Defense counsel admitted that, as a result of the Court’s ruling with respect to Rule 703
and the admission of each treatise, article, or study discussed by plaintiffs’ experts at the bench
trial, defendants were belatedly seeking to meet proof with proof (argument post-bench trial).
As an initial matter, the Court observes that the evidentiary ruling was made by the Court
during the bench trial in plaintiffs’ case-in-chief, specifically with Dr. Stevens’ testimony, before
defendants’ experts ever took the stand to testify during the bench trial, including Dr. Antognini
and Dr. Buffington. Defendants did not address this matter during their presentation of proof with
defense witnesses but certainly could have done so.
In their post-trial submission, plaintiffs withdraw their objections to the following exhibits,
having reviewed the preliminary injunction record: Defendants’ Exhibits 12, 26, 36, 40, 43, 49,
50, 51, 62, 68, 70, 73 (Dkt. No. 198, at 24–25 n.2). Plaintiffs maintain their objection to the
remaining exhibits, arguing that defendants “have made no showing that their probative value
outweighs their prejudicial effect under Rule 703.” (Id. at 25 n.2).
63
The Court has examined the preliminary injunction record in this matter, as well as the trial
record. This dispute goes to whether to admit the purportedly scientific source material on which
the experts claim to rely. Many of these studies involve BIS data. As plaintiffs acknowledge:
the experts have been using the BIS studies for two distinct purposes. The first
purpose is to show changes in brain activity relative to either the passage of time or
the injection of more [M]idazolam. This is a valid exercise and provides useful
evidence for the ceiling effect of [M]idazolam or for the duration of the drug’s
effect. The second purpose is to show that [M]idazolam itself renders a person
unaware to painful stimulus. This use is more questionable. As both Drs.
Antognini and Van Norman explained, the BIS monitor can’t reliably gauge
whether someone is unaware and ready for surgery. Moreover, Dr. Buffington was
forced to admit on cross-examination at trial that the studies he relies on don’t
exhibit general anesthesia even by the manufacturer’s stated criterion (a score
below 60 on a 100-point scale). Faced with this data, Dr. Buffington contended
that the drug generates “deep sedation” and that there’s no requirement to achieve
general anesthesia in the first place. That point undermines his earlier testimony
that midazolam will achieve a state of general anesthesia necessary to prevent the
inmates from feeling pain from the second and third drugs.
(Dkt. No. 198, at 24).
The Court is the factfinder in this bench trial. When examining all admissible record
evidence in this case, the Court is mindful of the parties’ arguments regarding the studies, the
weight to be afforded the studies, and the weight to be afforded to the expert testimony, if any,
offered in claimed reliance on the studies. Having considered the parties’ arguments and legal
authority, the Court rules on each exhibit defendants moved to admit consistent with Court’s
Exhibit A attached hereto.
IV.
Conclusions Of Law
The Court now turns to the merits of the parties’ claims.
A.
Claim 1: The Eighth Amendment Prohibition On Cruel And Unusual
Punishment And The Arkansas Midazolam Protocol
64
“[C]apital punishment is constitutional. It necessarily follows that there must be a means
of carrying it out.” Baze v. Rees, 553 U.S. 35, 47 (2008) (plurality opinion)6 (citation omitted).
The Eighth Amendment, made applicable to the states through the Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment, proscribes “cruel and unusual punishment.” U.S. Const. amend. VIII;
see also Hall v. Florida, 572 U.S. 701, 707–08 (2014) (recognizing that the Fourteenth
Amendment applies the Eighth Amendment’s restrictions on “cruel and unusual punishments” to
the states). The Eighth Amendment’s protections do not evaporate because a person commits
“heinous crimes.” Roper v. Simmons, 543 U.S. 551, 560 (2005). However, those protections
derived from the Eighth Amendment do not guarantee a pain-free execution. See Bucklew v.
Precythe, 139 S. Ct. 1112, 1124 (2019).
In the execution context, “[t]he Eighth Amendment does not come into play unless the risk
of pain associated with the State’s method [of execution] is ‘substantial when compared to a known
and available alternative.’” Id. at 1125 (quoting Glossip v. Gross, 135 S. Ct. 2726, 2738 (2015).
Thus, courts analyze Eighth Amendment challenges to a state’s method of execution under the
two-prong Baze/Glossip test. See id. at 1129 (stating that “anyone bringing a method of execution
claim alleging the infliction of unconstitutionally cruel pain must meet the Baze-Glossip test”).
Under the first prong, a method-of-execution challenger must establish that a state’s chosen
method “presents a risk that is ‘sure or very likely to cause serious illness and needless suffering,’
and give rise to ‘sufficiently imminent dangers.’” Glossip, 135 S. Ct. at 2737 (quoting Baze, 553
U.S. at 50). Stated differently, to prevail on a method-of-execution claim, “there must be a
‘substantial risk of serious harm,’ an ‘objectively intolerable risk of harm’ that prevents prison
6
In Bucklew v. Precythe, the Supreme Court noted that Glossip v. Gross, 135 S. Ct. 2726
(2015), clarified that Chief Justice John Roberts’s plurality opinion in Baze was controlling under
Marks v. United States, 430 U.S. 188 (1977). See 139 S. Ct. 1112, 1121 (2019).
65
officials from pleading that they were ‘subjectively blameless for purposes of the Eighth
Amendment.’” Id. (quoting Baze, 553 U.S. at 50). The Baze/Glossip test’s second prong requires
a method-of-execution challenger to demonstrate “a feasible and readily implemented alternative
method of execution that would significantly reduce a substantial risk of severe pain and that the
State has refused to adopt without a legitimate penological reason.” Bucklew, 139 S. Ct. at 1125
(citing Glossip, 135 S. Ct. at 2732–38, and Baze, 553 U.S. at 52).
Plaintiffs claim in count one of their amended complaint that the use of Midazolam in the
Arkansas Midazolam Protocol poses an objectively intolerable risk of substantial harm that is sure
or very likely to occur and that alternative execution methods that would avoid the risk are feasible
and readily available to the ADC (Dkt. No. 117, ¶ 26). The Court examines each prong of the
Baze/Glossip test in the light of the proof presented by the parties.
1.
Baze/Glossip First Prong
To prevail on their Eighth Amendment challenge, plaintiffs must first prove that
Arkansas’s current method of execution “entails a substantial risk of severe pain.” Glossip, 135
S. Ct. at 2731. Neither the Supreme Court nor the Eighth Circuit has provided a bright line
delimiting when a risk is substantial or what threshold of pain is sufficiently severe so as to give
rise to an “objectively intolerable risk of harm.” Id. at 2737 (quoting Baze, 553 U.S. at 50). The
Court looks to the case law for guidance.
In Baze, the Supreme Court stated that “a condemned prisoner cannot successfully
challenge a State’s method of execution merely by showing a slightly or marginally safer
alternative.” 553 U.S. at 51. The Baze Court warned that hinging an Eighth Amendment violation
on such a showing threatened “to transform courts into boards of inquiry charged with determining
‘best practices’ for executions.” Id. Under Baze, the mere fact that “an execution method may
66
result in pain, either by accident or as an inescapable consequence of death, does not establish the
sort of ‘objectively intolerable risk of harm’ that qualifies as cruel and unusual.” 553 U.S. at 50.
To illustrate this idea, the Supreme Court compared two circumstances to explain what
constitutes an objectively intolerable risk. The Court referred to its plurality decision in Louisiana
ex rel. Francis v. Resweber, 329 U.S. 459 (1947), which “upheld a second attempt at executing a
prisoner by electrocution” after a mechanical issue thwarted the first attempt. Id. The Baze Court
noted that the second attempt did not violate the Eighth Amendment because the first attempt was
“‘an accident, with no suggestion of malevolence[.]’” Id. (quoting Resweber, 329 U.S. at 463).
The Baze Court remarked that “an isolated mishap alone does not give rise to an Eighth
Amendment violation, precisely because such an event, while regrettable, does not suggest cruelty,
or that the procedure at issue gives rise to a ‘substantial risk of serious harm.’” Id. (quoting Farmer
v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 842 (1994)). In comparison, the Baze Court explained that, if the state’s
subsequent attempt to execute the prisoner had followed “a series of abortive attempts at
electrocution,” the subsequent execution “would demonstrate an ‘objectively intolerable risk of
harm’ that officials may not ignore.” Id. (first quoting Resweber, 329 U.S. at 471 (Frankfurter, J.,
concurring); then citing Brennan, 511 U.S. at 846 n.9). Stated differently, if the state attempted to
execute a prisoner using a method that had repeatedly failed, that would suggest that the state was
acting wantonly or that the procedure at issue presented a “substantial risk of serious harm.” Id.
(quoting Brennan, 511 U.S. at 842).
In Bucklew, the Supreme Court confronted an as-applied7 challenge to Missouri’s lethal
injection method of execution, a single-drug protocol using the sedative pentobarbital. See 139 S.
7
Bucklew settled the question of whether “as-applied” challenges are subject to the same
analysis as facial challenges. Mr. Bucklew conceded that Missouri’s “lethal injection protocol
[was] constitutional in most applications,” but he argued that, because of his unique medical
67
Ct. at 1120–22. There, the Supreme Court emphasized that it “has yet to hold that a State’s method
of execution qualifies as cruel and unusual,” but it accepted the possibility that a state may cross
the line and credited Baze with providing “critical guidance” in drawing this line of demarcation.
Id. at 1124, 1125.
As originally understood, the Eighth Amendment forbid as cruel only those methods that
intensified the death sentence by “superadd[ing] terror, pain, or disgrace,” to the punishment. Id.
at 1124. Thus, the Baze/Glossip test’s first prong incorporates the “available-alternative” prong to
conduct a comparative analysis to answer whether a method of execution “cruelly superadds pain
to the death sentence.” Id. at 1126 (citing Glossip, 135 S. Ct. at 2732–38, and Baze, 553 U.S. at
52). “Distinguishing between constitutionally permissible and impermissible degrees of pain . . .
is a necessarily comparative exercise”; it “isn’t something that can be accomplished by examining
the State’s proposed method in a vacuum, but only by ‘compar[ing]’ that method with a viable
alternative.” Id. (alteration in original) (quoting Glossip, 135 S. Ct. at 2737–38).
The Eighth Circuit’s analysis in Zink v. Lombardi also examines the interplay between the
Baze/Glossip test’s two prongs and provides insight into whether a State’s method of execution is
cruel and unusual. See 783 F.3d 1089, 1097 (8th Cir. 2015) (en banc). There, the Eighth Circuit
construed Baze as standing for the proposition that a state’s refusal “to adopt a readily available
alternative method of execution that would significantly reduce a substantial risk of severe pain .
. . can be viewed as ‘cruel and unusual’ under the Eighth Amendment.” Id. (citation and internal
condition, the protocol as applied to him would be cruel and unusual punishment. Bucklew, 139
S. Ct. at 1119. Mr. Bucklew argued that the Baze/Glossip test “should govern only facial
challenges, not as-applied challenges like his.” Id. at 1122. Thus, Mr. Bucklew sought a test that
divorced the “available-alternative” prong. Id. The Eighth Circuit rejected the argument, holding
that neither precedent nor history countenances a deviation from the substantive test. See id. at
1126–29.
68
quotation marks omitted). The Zink court, however, admonished against resting an Eighth
Amendment method of execution claim under the Baze/Glossip test’s first prong based “entirely
on hypothetical and speculative harms that, if they were to occur, would only result from isolated
mishaps.” Id. at 1102.
Here, all parties agree that the generally accepted use of Midazolam in a clinical setting
has evolved over time. Currently, the generally accepted use of Midazolam is as a preoperative
sedative agent in the pre-operative holding area. Although Dr. Van Norman testified that neither
she nor any reputable anesthesiologist to her knowledge would use Midazolam as the solo drug to
produce general anesthesia for a surgical procedure today, when she trained in cardiac anesthesia
beginning in the late 1980s and early 1990s, she trained by using a combination anesthetic that
included a high-dose benzodiazepine in combination with a high-dose narcotic, plus a muscle
paralytic agent. At some point in her practice, Midazolam was the high-dose benzodiazepine used.
At some point later in her practice, the use of Midazolam in this manner was discontinued. Dr.
Van Norman maintains that, in this protocol under which she trained, a high-dose narcotic was
used because Midazolam has no clinically significant analgesic properties, and the narcotic was
administered for pain relief.
The Arkansas Midazolam Protocol calls for the administration of a much higher dose of
Midazolam than the FDA-approved dose. Even if there is general medical consensus that
Midazolam has a ceiling effect, there is no such consensus on the dose of Midazolam at which a
ceiling effect is exhibited.
By examining the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol, Dr. Van Norman is unable to say at what
point any individual would experience extreme suffering and, instead, claims that that will vary
69
from person to person. Further, Dr. Van Norman conceded that she has no direct scientific data to
support the proposition that any inmate experienced severe pain and suffering during an execution.
With respect to the testimony offered by eyewitnesses to the April 2017 Arkansas
executions, the Court observes, as an initial matter, that eyewitnesses to the same executions are
not all in agreement as to what they observed. Additionally, according to the FDA-approved
package insert, Midazolam’s reported side effects include involuntary movements and muscle
tremors. Coughing is generally a reflex response; it does not have to be a conscious response.
Plaintiffs and defendants’ expert witnesses agree that Midazolam can in some cases, but not all,
cause an individual to stop breathing due to either the central mechanism, meaning that the drive
to breathe just stops, or from upper airway obstruction, resulting from the tongue falling back, the
airway muscles collapsing in a way, and the individual being unable to maintain his airway. These
events can lead to feelings of air hunger and suffocation and can often arouse an individual out of
sedation to breathe a little harder or to make harder respiratory efforts to get air in. However, it is
generally understood that upper airway obstruction is not an indicator or denier of consciousness.
In other words, nothing about the reported movements or sounds during the most recent executions
as described by the eyewitnesses, even if the Court credits all testimony as favoring plaintiffs,
pushes plaintiffs closer to meeting their burden to prove that Arkansas’s current Arkansas
Midazolam Protocol entails a substantial risk of severe pain.
In sum, based on the record before it, the Court determines that plaintiffs have failed to
meet the first prong of the Baze/Glossip test. The Court cannot conclude that plaintiffs have proven
that the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol entails a substantial risk of severe pain as a result of the use
of a 500-mg dose of Midazolam as the first drug in the three-drug protocol. See In re Ohio
Execution Protocol Litig. (Hennes), 946 F.3d 287, 290 (6th Cir. 2019) (reasoning that the use of a
70
500-mg dose of Midazolam in Ohio’s three-drug execution protocol did not violate the Eighth
Amendment, even though it could cause pulmonary edema, because there was no evidence in the
record that “a person deeply sedated by a 500 milligram dose of Midazolam is still ‘sure or very
likely’ to experience an unconstitutionally high level of pain”). Plaintiffs’ proof falls short.
2.
Baze/Glossip Second Prong
Because plaintiffs fail to meet their burden with respect to the first prong of Baze/Glossip,
plaintiffs cannot prevail on their Eighth Amendment claim. Even if plaintiffs could meet this
burden, they would still fail on the evidence before the Court to satisfy the Baze/Glossip test’s
second prong. Under this second prong, “an inmate cannot successfully challenge a method of
execution under the Eighth Amendment unless he identifies an alternative that is feasible, readily
implemented, and in fact significantly reduces a substantial risk of severe pain.” Bucklew, 139 S.
Ct. at 1121 (citation and internal quotations omitted).
The burden that the Baze/Glossip test places on an inmate “can be overstated,” as “[a]n
inmate seeking to identify an alternative method of execution is not limited to choosing among
those presently authorized by a particular State’s law.” Id. at 1128. This is so because a state’s
choice of execution protocol cannot cabin the comparative analysis the Eighth Amendment
dictates. See id. Ultimately, an inmate’s success on this prong depends on a court finding, first,
that a proposed alternative is “feasible and readily implemented”; second, that the state lacks a
“legitimate reason” for declining to adopt it; and, third, that the alternative method of execution
“would significantly reduce a substantial risk of severe pain.” Id. at 1129.
For a state death-row inmate’s proposed alternative method of execution to be “readily
implemented,” theoretical feasibility is not enough; rather, “the inmate’s proposal must be
sufficiently detailed to permit a finding that the State could carry it out ‘relatively easily and
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reasonably quickly.’” Id. (quoting McGehee, 854 F.3d at 493). For example, in Bucklew, the
Court found that a state death-row inmate’s “bare-bones” proposal to use death by nitrogen gas,
depriving the body of oxygen, instead of Missouri’s single-drug protocol for lethal injection using
the sedative pentobarbital, fell “well short” of this standard, reasoning that the inmate:
presented no evidence on essential questions like how nitrogen gas should be
administered (using a gas chamber, a tent, a hood, a mask, or some other delivery
device); in what concentration (pure nitrogen or some mixture of gases); how
quickly and for how long it should be introduced; or how the State might ensure
the safety of the execution team, including protecting them against the risk of gas
leaks.
Id. at 1129.
In addition, “the State must have access to the alternative and be able to carry out the
alternative method relatively easily and reasonably quickly.” McGehee, 853 F.3d at 493 (Arthur
v. Comm’r, Ala. Dep’t of Corr., 840 F.3d at 1268, 1300 (11th Cir. 2016)). While this is a high
burden, “it is necessary to conform to the Eighth Amendment.” Id. For example, McGehee
discussed the known “difficulty of obtaining drugs for use in lethal injection,” and specifically
noted that Arkansas made at least three unsuccessful inquiries about obtaining barbiturates in 2015.
Id. In Arthur, which the Eighth Circuit favorably cited in McGehee, the Eleventh Circuit:
expressly [held] that the fact that other states in the past have procured a
compounded drug and pharmacies in Alabama have the skills to compound the drug
does not make it available to the [Alabama Department of Corrections] for use in
lethal injections in executions. The evidentiary burden on Arthur is to show that
‘there is now a source for pentobarbital that would sell it to the ADOC for use in
executions.’
840 F.3d at 1302 (quoting Brooks v. Warden, 810 F.3d 812, 820 (11th Cir. 2016)).
“There are . . . many legitimate reasons why a State might choose, consistent with the
Eighth Amendment, not to adopt a prisoner’s preferred method of execution.” Bucklew, 139 S.
Ct. 1125 (citing Glossip, 135 S. Ct. at 2737–38, and Baze, 553 U.S. at 57, 66). And, while “[t]he
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Eighth Amendment prohibit states from dredging up archaic cruel punishments or perhaps
inventing new ones, . . . it does not compel a state to adopt ‘untried and untested’ (and thus unusual
in the constitutional sense) methods of execution.” Id. at 1130 (quoting Baze, 553 U.S. at 41). In
Bucklew, for example, the Court determined that Missouri “had a ‘legitimate’ reason for declining
to switch from its current method of execution as a matter of law,” reasoning that nitrogen hypoxia
was “an entirely new method—one that had ‘never been used to carry out an execution’ and had
‘no track record of successful use.’” Id. (first quoting Baze, 553 U.S. at 52; then quoting McGehee,
854 F.3d at 493).
At trial, plaintiffs presented proof regarding several potential alternative methods of
execution.8 Each potential alternative method fails for a different reason.
a.
Firing Squad
Plaintiffs presented evidence regarding the use of a firing squad as a potential alternative
method of execution. Plaintiffs fail to prove that execution by a firing squad in fact significantly
reduces a substantial risk of severe pain as compared to the current Arkansas Midazolam Protocol.
Plaintiffs attempted to meet this burden through Dr. Williams’ trial testimony. Even
crediting all of Dr. Williams’ testimony, he has never treated a gunshot victim within 60 seconds
8
Plaintiffs identified several potential alternative methods of execution in their amended
complaint, including: (1) firing squad, (2) injection of FDA-approved, manufactured
pentobarbital, (3) injection of compounded pentobarbital, (4) massive overdose of sevoflurane as
the sole lethal agent, (5) a three-drug protocol that substitutes etomidate for Midazolam, (6) a twodrug protocol consisting of a 100-milligran dose of diazepam followed by a 7,500-microgram dose
of fentanyl, and (7) oral administration of a 10-gram dosage of secobarbital (Dkt. No. 117, ¶¶ 35–
41). However, plaintiffs’ post-trial briefing focused only on execution by firing squad, oral
administration of secobarbital, a barbiturate, and a single-drug protocol using pentobarbital (Dkt.
No. 198, at 41–48). As a result, the Court focuses on those three methods in its analysis. To the
extent that plaintiffs persist in asserting the alternative methods of execution not addressed in their
proof, the Court determines that plaintiffs fail to meet their burden with respect to those alternative
methods on the record before it.
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of receiving an injury to the chest, nor within 10 to 15 seconds of receiving an injury to the chest;
has never treated a gunshot victim who has received five gunshot wounds to the chest with a .30
caliber rifle, which would be comparable to a firing squad, although he has treated a victim shot
twice in the chest with a .30 caliber rifle; and acknowledges that there is nothing in the medical
literature that addresses this situation. Dr. Williams could not testify that an execution by firing
squad would be pain free. In fact, Dr. Williams testified that, if shot in a bone or joint causing a
fracture, the gunshot wound would be painful, but he testified based on personal and medical
experience that fractures in ribs are less painful than fractures in other bones or joints. Overall,
this proof falls short of meeting plaintiffs’ burden under the second prong of Baze/Glossip.
b.
Secobarbital
Plaintiffs presented evidence regarding the use secobarbital as a potential alternative
method of execution. Plaintiffs fail to prove that execution by secobarbital is an alternative that is
feasible and readily implemented by the State.
Here, the Court heard testimony from Dr. Blanke. Secobarbital has never been used in an
execution, and there are no studies or medical evidence of the effect of the drug on a condemned
individual who is unwilling to die. The record evidence demonstrates that this method could take
days to be effective, and it currently falls short of demonstrating that Arkansas can obtain
secobarbital for use in executions from a willing vendor. Overall, this proof falls short of meeting
plaintiffs’ burden under the second prong of Baze/Glossip. See In re Ohio (Hennes), 946 F.3d at
291 (determining that death by secobarbital was not a feasible alternative to Ohio’s three-drug
method-of-execution protocol because secobarbital has never been used in an execution, could
take over two days to cause death or might not cause death at all, and the prisoners failed to show
74
that Ohio could obtain secobarbital with “ordinary transactional effort” (quoting In re Ohio
Execution Protocol, 860 F.3d 881, 891 (6th Cir. 2017))).
c.
Pentobarbital
Plaintiffs maintain that “[t]here’s no dispute that a single-drug pentobarbital protocol is
preferable to a three-drug [M]idazolam protocol.” (Dkt. No. 198, at 47). They assert that, within
the last four years, other states have conducted numerous pentobarbital executions (Id.). Further,
they contend that, with the new secrecy law to take effect in Arkansas, assuring that the supplier
of execution drugs will not be identified, defendants should have access to this alternative (Id., at
47–48). Plaintiffs cast additional doubt on any claim that Director Kelley will be unable to obtain
execution drugs, citing that such a claim was made in 2017 prior to defendants acquiring a supply
of drugs to use in the April 2017 executions (Id., at 48).
Plaintiffs’ own witness, Dr. Blanke, testified that pentobarbital, which was used in the past
as a drug for aiding patients in dying, is no longer available generally even for that purpose. As a
result, on this record, the Court is unwilling to conclude that plaintiffs have met their burden under
the second prong of Baze/Glossip as to pentobarbital for use in executions, at least at this time.
See McGehee, 854 F.3d at 495 (explaining that “the State must have access to the alternative and
be able to carry out the alternative method relatively easily and reasonably quickly” (citing Arthur,
840 F.3d at 1300)).
B.
Claim 2: The Fourteenth Amendment Equal Protection Clause And
Consciousness Checks
Plaintiffs argue that the ADC deviated from its written Arkansas Midazolam Protocol that
requires consciousness checks between the Midazolam administration and the other lethal drugs.
Plaintiffs assert that they “have a fundamental right under the Eighth Amendment to be free from
cruel and unusual punishment” and that the consciousness checks called for by the Arkansas
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Midazolam Protocol are “intended to guard against injection of painful drugs while the prisoner is
capable of feeling them . . .[and] is a core protection of the Plaintiffs’ fundamental right to be free
from cruel and unusual punishment.” (Dkt. No. 117, ¶¶ 43–44). Plaintiffs contend that, based on
the April 2017 executions, defendants failed to “apply the consciousness check consistently from
execution to execution” and “either did not carry out an appropriate consciousness check or
proceeded with the execution even after the condemned exhibited movements indicating
consciousness.” (Id., ¶ 45). For these reasons, plaintiffs claim that defendants’ failure to
administer properly consciousness checks, which are “purported to protect the prisoners’
fundamental right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment,” denies plaintiffs equal protection
under the law (Dkt. No. 198, at 50).
As a preliminary matter, it is not clear whether the Supreme Court or the Eighth Circuit
recognize a distinct equal protection claim separate and apart from an Eighth Amendment claim
in a method-of-execution case. Generally, “a violation of state procedural law does not itself give
rise to a due process claim,” Lee v. Hutchinson, 854 F.3d 978, 981 (8th Cir. 2017) (per curiam)
(quoting Gissendaner v. Comm'r, Ga. Dep’t of Corr., 794 F.3d 1327, 1333 (11th Cir. 2015), and
other courts have determined that the same holds true for an equal-protection claim, see In re Ohio
Execution Protocol Litig., No. 2:11-CV-1016, 2018 WL 1033486, at *17 (S.D. Ohio Feb. 22,
2018) (stating that “the Equal Protection Clause no more constitutionalizes state procedural law
than the Due Process Clause”), adhered to on reconsideration, 2018 WL 2118817 (S.D. Ohio May
8, 2018), report and recommendation adopted, 2018 WL 6529145 (S.D. Ohio Dec. 12, 2018).
In Zink, however, the Eighth Circuit considered and rejected death-row inmates’ claim that
Missouri state officials violated the Equal Protection Clause by executing prisoners while legal
activity seeking to stay their executions was pending because the practice violated the state’s
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written execution protocol. See 783 F.3d at 1109–11. The prisoners “invoke[d] the ‘fundamental
right’ strand of equal protection analysis” and argued that it was “unconstitutional for the State to
disregard a ‘core provision’ of its execution protocol, and that a prohibition on executions before
legal activity has ceased is a ‘core provision.’” Id. at 1110. The Eighth Circuit held that, even
assuming that the state officials deviated from the execution protocol in the manner alleged by the
prisoners, “the practice d[id] not violate the Constitution” because “[t]here is no ‘fundamental
right’ to avoid execution while no judicial stay is in effect but legal activity is pending.” Id. at
1110, 1111 (citing Hamilton v. Texas, 497 U.S. 1016 (1990)).
In addition, in the context of a challenge to the constitutionality of Ohio’s execution
protocol, the Southern District of Ohio rejected the state’s attempt “to transform [the inmate’s]
Fourteenth Amendment claim into a pure Eighth Amendment claim,” reasoning that the equalprotection claim:
sufficiently targets that sweeping core deviations would at least burden Plaintiff's
fundamental right by negating some of the precise procedural safeguards that this
Court and the Sixth Circuit heralded in prior discussions of Eighth Amendment
claims in this same litigation. For present purposes, it does not matter whether there
is a qualifying risk of severe pain--a conclusion rejected by the only medical expert
who testified--but only the creation of unequal treatment impacting the fundamental
protection involved.
In re Ohio Protocol Litig. (Lorraine), 840 F. Supp. 2d 1044, 1054 (S.D. Ohio 2012) (quoting
Cooey v. Kasich, 801 F. Supp. 2d 623, 653 (S.D. Ohio 2011), denying motion to vacate stay, 681
F.3d 601 (6th Cir. 2012); see also In re Ohio, 2018 WL 1033486, at *17 (stating that, “to plead an
Equal Protection claim that is distinct from a straight Eighth Amendment claim,” a prisoner “must
plead a deviation from or violation of a state law or regulation that increases the risk of an Eighth
Amendment violation where the state law itself was created to protect Eighth Amendment
77
interests,” such as an execution protocol (citing In re Ohio Execution Protocol Litig. (Wiles), 868
F. Supp. 2d 625 (S.D. Ohio April 4, 2012))).
In a similar vein, the Eleventh Circuit has recognized the plausibility of an equal-protection
claim premised on allegations that “Alabama failed to perform a required consciousness check in
a recent execution, a significant deviation from its execution protocol,” and “the veil of secrecy
that surrounds Alabama’s execution protocol.” Arthur v. Thomas, 674 F.3d 1257, 1263 (11th Cir.
2012).
Finally, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals rejected a death-row inmate’s claim that the
Arizona Department of Corrections’ execution protocol violated his right to equal protection
because the protocol gave the Arizona Department of Corrections Director discretion to make
decisions regarding the manner in which his execution would be carried out. See Towery v.
Brewer, 672 F.3d 650, 659, 661 (9th Cir. 2012). In the process, the Ninth Circuit rejected the
district court’s “broad proposition” that, “[w]here there is no Eighth Amendment violation, . . .
that necessarily means that there has been no interference with fundamental rights sufficient to
trigger strict scrutiny under the Equal Protection Clause.” Id. at 659 (citing Mass Bd. Of Ret. v.
Murgia, 427 U.S. 307, 312 (1976)). The Ninth Circuit explained that it “d[id] not need to adopt
this broad proposition to conclude that . . . there ha[d] been no showing . . . of any burden on the
right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment.” Id.
For purposes of this analysis, the Court will assume, without deciding, that the Eighth
Circuit recognizes a separate equal-protection claim in the context of a method-of-execution
challenge. Under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, a state cannot “deny
to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” U.S. Const. amend. XIV, §
1, “which is essentially a direction that all persons similarly situated should be treated alike,” Zink,
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783 F.3d at 1110 (quoting City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr., 473 U.S. 432, 439 (1985)).
“A fundamental principle of equal protection is that the Constitution only prohibits intentional or
purposeful discrimination by the state.” Klinger v. Dep’t of Corrs., 31 F.3d 727, 733 (8th Cir.
1994) (citing Pers. Adm’r of Ma. V. Feeney, 442 U.S. 256, 274 (1979)).
Because “dissimilar treatment of dissimilarly situated persons does not violate equal
protection,” the first step in an equal-protection analysis requires a determination of “whether the
plaintiff[s] ha[ve] demonstrated that [they were] treated differently than others who were similarly
situated to [them].” Klinger, 31 F.3d 727, 731 (8th Cir. 1994). Plaintiffs must first make a
threshold showing that they were treated differently than others who were similarly situated to
them. See id. at 731 (citing Barket, Levy & Fine, Inc. v. St. Louis Thermal Energy Corp., 21 F.3d
237, 242 (8th Cir. 1994)). This “inquiry focuses on whether the plaintiffs are similarly situated to
another group for the purposes of the challenged government action.” Id. (citing More v. Farrier,
984 F.2d 269, 271 (8th Cir. 1993)). To answer this question, the Court “must first precisely define
the plaintiffs’ claim.” Id.
A legislative classification or distinction that “neither burdens a fundamental right nor
targets a suspect class,” will be upheld “so long as it bears a rational relation to some legitimate
end.” Zink, 783 F.3d at 1110 (quoting Vacco v. Quill, 521 U.S. 793, 799 (1997)). When a state’s
action invades a fundamental right, however, then it will be “subjected to strict scrutiny and will
be sustained only if [it is] suitably tailored to serve a compelling state interest.” Cleburne, 473
U.S. at 440 (citing Graham v. Richardson, 403 U.S. 365 (1971), and McLaughlin v. Florida, 379
U.S. 184, 192 (1964)). The Eighth Amendment is a fundamental right because it is explicitly
guaranteed by the Constitution. See Zink, 783 F.3d at 1111 (“Fundamental rights consist of only
79
those rights that are ‘explicitly or implicitly guaranteed by the Constitution’” (quoting San Antonio
Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Rodriguez, 411 U.S. 1, 32–34 (1973))).
To analyze plaintiffs’ claim, the Court will assume, without deciding, that all plaintiffs,
with the exception of Mr. McGehee, are similarly situated to one another as condemned individuals
subject to the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol. See In re Ohio, 2018 WL 1033486, at *11 (rejecting
Ohio’s contention that plaintiffs, all of whom were subject to a sentence of death imposed by an
Ohio court and were subjected to being executed under Ohio’s execution protocol, were not
similarly situated because of their idiosyncratic physical and mental characteristics that differed
from other capital inmates). The Court’s examination then focuses on whether the ADC failed to
conduct consistent consciousness checks and whether, if it did so, that inconsistency burdens
plaintiffs’ Eighth Amendment rights.
In post-trial briefing, plaintiffs rely on proof from eyewitnesses to the April 2017
executions to support this claim (Dkt. No. 198, at 50–52). For example, Mr. Kissel purportedly
saw by reading lips the Designee say, “I don’t know,” during Mr. Marcell Williams’ execution.
(Id. at 32). Further, Ms. Belter reported hearing an audible groan from Mr. Kenneth Williams,
which plaintiffs describe as in response to the consciousness checks. Plaintiffs assert that Ms.
Belter’s testimony is supported by Mr. Kissel’s, noting that Mr. Kissel also reported hearing a
groan around the time of the consciousness check, though he couldn’t place its exact timing.
To the extent that an equal-protection claim exists in this context, plaintiffs fail to meet
their burden to succeed on such a claim. There is evidence of the type of consciousness checks
that were performed. Specifically, there is evidence that each consciousness check was performed
in the same way during the four executions in 2017, and there is evidence from some, but not all,
eyewitnesses regarding all or a portion of the acts taken with respect to these checks. There is also
80
evidence that, in medical practice, this is the type of check a healthcare provider would perform
when titrating Midazolam and observing anesthesia being administered. The record evidence as a
whole does not support plaintiffs’ equal-protection claim.
According to the FDA-approved package insert, Midazolam’s reported side effects include
involuntary movements and muscle tremors. Coughing is generally a reflex response; it does not
have to be a conscious response. Plaintiffs and defendants’ expert witnesses agree that Midazolam
can in some cases, but not all, cause an individual to stop breathing from either the central
mechanism, meaning that the drive to breathe just stops, or airway obstruction, resulting from the
tongue falling back, the airway muscles collapsing in a way, and the individual being unable to
maintain his airway. These events can lead to feelings of air hunger and suffocation and can often
arouse an individual out of sedation to breathe a little harder or to make harder respiratory efforts
to get air in. However, it is generally understood that upper airway obstruction is not an indicator
or denier of consciousness. In other words, nothing about the reported movements or sounds
during the most recent executions, as described by eyewitnesses, even if the Court credits all as
favoring plaintiffs, leads this Court to conclude that plaintiffs have met their burden on this claim
challenging the consciousness checks.
C.
Claims 3 And 4: First Amendment Right Of Access To The Courts And
Right To Counsel Under 18 U.S.C. § 3599 And The Execution Viewing
Policy
The Court addresses Claims 3 and 4 together because they involve common issues of law
and fact. These two claims relate to whether Director Kelley’s policies deprive plaintiffs of their
First Amendment right of access to the courts and their right to counsel under 18 U.S.C. § 3599.
At the outset, given the unique circumstances presented by the execution context, the Court
81
determines that any putative right to access the courts necessarily depends on the right of counsel
to petition the court on plaintiffs’ behalf and, for this reason, also addresses the claims together.
Plaintiffs assert in Claims 3 and 4 that defendants’ “prohibition on viewing and hearing the
entirety of what goes on in the execution chamber” violates their First Amendment right of access
to the courts and prevents plaintiffs’ attorneys from protecting their clients’ rights (Dkt. No. 198,
at 52). More specifically, plaintiffs maintain that Director Kelley’s previous policy, in effect at
the start of this litigation, prevented more than one attorney from witnessing the execution and
prevented that attorney from contacting co-counsel or a judge during the execution (Dkt. No. 117,
¶¶ 52, 58). Plaintiffs next contend that, by preventing plaintiffs’ attorneys from seeing and hearing
the full execution, defendants are violating plaintiffs’ rights of access to the courts. Plaintiffs assert
that the prohibition on seeing any part of the execution until the condemned individual is strapped
to the gurney and intravenous access is established fails to provide attorney access to the entire
execution and violates plaintiffs’ right of access to the courts (Id., ¶¶ 50, 57). Plaintiffs also assert
that the prohibition on determining when each drug is injected under the Arkansas Midazolam
Protocol prevents plaintiffs’ attorneys from verifying that the executioners have not materially
deviated from the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol and thereby violates plaintiffs’ rights of access
to the courts (Id., ¶¶ 51, 57).
In response, defendants assert that plaintiffs’ claims challenging the execution viewing
policy are time barred, barred by res judicata and collateral estoppel, and too speculative because
they are based on the contention “that something could go wrong during future executions and that
might possibly cause a deprivation of their legal rights.” (Dkt. No. 199, at 19). Defendants also
maintain that, in the light of the Joint Execution Viewing Policy agreed to by the parties in this
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case, plaintiffs’ execution viewing claims are moot (Id., at 19). Defendants also assert that these
claims fail on the merits (Id., at 19–21).
To examine the merits of these claims, the Court first determines whether the challenged
restriction burdens plaintiffs’ right of access to the courts and counsel. If it does, the burden then
shifts to defendants to demonstrate that the restrictions are reasonable. See Turner v. Safley, 482
U.S. 78 (1987).
1.
Number Of Lawyers With Access To Court Viewing Execution9
Plaintiffs allege that certain of Director Kelley’s proposed viewing policies deprive them
of their right to petition courts to allege actual, non-frivolous constitutional deprivations
occasioned by the method of their execution. Plaintiffs allege that, in the execution context, there
is a heightened possibility that counsel for plaintiffs may need to access the courts during the
executions themselves. Plaintiffs allege that Director Kelley’s initial viewing policies would force
plaintiffs’ counsel either to view the execution or have telephonic access to the courts, but those
9
As a threshold matter, defendants cite Arkansas Code Annotated § 16-90-502 at certain times
as their basis for limiting execution witnesses to one attorney per inmate and to prohibit audio and
video recordings of executions (Dkt. No. 27, at 79–80). To the extent that this is in dispute,
Arkansas Code Annotated § 16-90-502(e)(5)(C) expressly outlaws audio or video recordings of
executions. This Court previously determined that such a regulation does not run afoul of the First
Amendment. See Ark. Times, Inc. v. Norris, No. 5:07CV00195 SWW, 2008 WL 110853 *4 (E.D.
Ark. Jan. 7, 2008) (observing that, while the Supreme Court has recognized that the First
Amendment guarantees public access to criminal trials, an execution carried out by lethal injection
“bears little resemblance to a criminal judicial proceeding, where public participation plays an
indispensable functional role in the process itself, and where public access enables citizens to judge
whether our system of criminal justice is fair”). Counsel for plaintiffs expressly disavow any “wish
to record the executions”; rather, counsel for plaintiffs “wish only to be able to see and hear the
entire execution, to have multiple counsel watch the execution, to have access to co-counsel and
appropriate authorities in the event a problem arises.” (Dkt. No. 31, at 28–29). Therefore, the
Court will assume that, for purposes of their claims alleging deprivations of the right to counsel
and access to the courts, counsel for plaintiffs do not seek to record audio or video inside the prison
facility. Rather, the Court understands plaintiffs to seek more than one attorney to be permitted to
witness each execution, and that each attorney be guaranteed adequate telephonic access to
communicate with co-counsel and the courts.
83
initial policies would make accomplishing both impossible. The Court recites the history of
Director Kelley’s initial viewing policies as related to the April 2017 executions in its factual
findings in this Order.
These conditions, plaintiffs allege, cause an unconstitutional deprivation of their right of
access to the courts. Plaintiffs note that, given the potential exigencies inherent to the execution
process, other states’ departments of correction policies both permit multiple attorneys to witness
executions and provide for methods by which counsel may contact the courts during the course of
executions (Dkt. No. 2-2, Ex. 5). With respect to the claim arising under § 3599, plaintiffs allege
that a prospective motion for stay of execution, to be raised during the course of an execution in
order to remedy an ongoing Eighth Amendment deprivation, amounts to an “appropriate motion
and procedure” and “application for stay of execution” pursuant to the terms of § 3599(e) (Dkt.
Nos. 2-2, ¶¶ 176–178; 117, ¶¶ 52, 54–58). Therefore, according to plaintiffs, if only one attorney
is permitted to witness the execution, without the capability of communicating with a court, it
would be impossible to satisfy counsel’s duties under § 3599 (Dkt. Nos. 2-2, ¶¶ 179–181; 117, ¶¶
54–58).
Plaintiffs initially cited the case of Joseph Wood in Arizona as an example of the potential
necessity of immediate judicial review during the execution process. During Mr. Wood’s nearly
two-hour execution, his attorneys were forced to leave the witness room to seek a stay of execution
during a telephonic hearing with a federal judge, which eventually was convened. Mr. Wood died
during the course of the 30-minute hearing. (Dkt. No. 2-2, ¶¶ 15(c), 170). Also, the Court notes
that, in this case, counsel contacted the Court during Mr. Lee’s execution and prior to Mr. Marcel
Williams’ execution, with the Court conducting hearings and issuing rulings on the respective
motions made–one after the execution and one prior to it. The Court further notes that, as to a
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third execution, even Director Kelley testified that, had the events with Mr. Kenneth Williams
gone on any longer, she would have thought that something needed to stop with the execution.
However, before that thought could formulate, the events with Mr. Kenneth Williams were over,
according to Director Kelley (Director Kelley). The Court has this history in mind when
examining the nature of the claimed right.
Plaintiffs allege that, in the past, Director Kelley’s predecessors have permitted multiple
attorneys to witness executions (Dkt. No. 2-2, ¶ 25). Plaintiffs also allege that certain of Director
Kelley’s initially proposed policies in this case would permit only one attorney per inmate to
witness an execution (Dkt. Nos. 2-2, ¶ 27, Ex. 9; 117, ¶ 22). Plaintiffs also allege that, due to the
terms of certain of Director Kelley’s proposed policies, the lone witnessing attorney would have
no access to a telephone during the execution (Dkt. Nos. 2-2, ¶ 28, Ex. 10; 117, ¶ 22). Plaintiffs
further allege that Director Kelley’s predecessor provided procedures in the past that placed no
restrictions on attorney viewing or phone access during the execution and that there is no indication
as to when these policies changed (Dkt. No. 2-2, ¶ 29).
The Court entered a Preliminary Injunction Order finding that plaintiffs were likely to
succeed on the merits of this specific claim regarding the number of lawyers with access to the
court viewing the execution (Dkt. No. 54, at 92–100). In that Order, the Court made factual
findings specific to this issue and incorporates those findings here (Id., ¶¶ 152–182). In this Order,
the Court also makes specific factual findings regarding this claim (See supra, ¶¶ 280–294). While
the appeal of the Preliminary Injunction Order to the Eighth Circuit was pending, the parties jointly
proposed an execution viewing policy (Dkt. Nos. 62, 63). Plaintiffs moved later to clarify the
policy, which defendants opposed and the Court denied (Dkt. Nos. 73, 75–76).
85
The Joint Execution Viewing Policy was followed during the April 2017 executions. At
the bench trial in this matter following the executions, Director Kelley testified that she allowed
two attorney witnesses to be present for each execution in April 2017, and the Deputy Director of
the ADC held a cell phone that did not have a camera provided by the attorney witnesses and that
was given to the attorney witnesses to use, if requested. Director Kelley was not aware of any
issues with that practice during the April 2017 executions. Further, Director Kelley testified under
oath that, while she serves as Director of the ADC, if another execution is scheduled, she does not
plan to go back on the agreement that was reached in this case.
Director Kelley further testified that, while she is not opposed to the practice implemented
by the parties’ Joint Execution Viewing Policy being made a part of the ADC policy, she would
prefer that the practice not be court-mandated due to concerns about a bill being considered by the
Arkansas legislature that would jam cell phones in prison housing areas due to contraband and
security issues. Director Kelley is concerned that, if the bill becomes law, then cell phones in the
area where executions are conducted might also be jammed and unusable.
Defendants take the position that, based on this, plaintiffs’ claim regarding the number of
attorney witnesses with access to the court viewing the execution is moot. Plaintiffs request that
the Court require the ADC to incorporate the Joint Execution Viewing Policy into formal ADC
policy, not merely a practice subject to change as demonstrated by the facts of this case. The Court
credits Director Kelley’s under oath testimony and credits that, while she serves as Director of the
ADC, if another execution is scheduled, she does not plan to go back on the agreement that was
reached in this case with respect to the Joint Execution Viewing Policy. To the extent that a
question of mootness is raised by these developments, Director Kelley’s testimony does not
convince this Court that the current plaintiffs’ claim regarding the number of attorney witnesses
86
with access to the court viewing the execution is moot and that the merits need not be addressed
by the Court.
“Federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction and can only hear actual ‘cases or
controversies’ as defined under Article III of the Constitution.” Hickman v. Missouri, 144 F.3d
1141, 1142 (8th Cir. 1998) (quoting Neighborhood Transp. Network, Inc. v. Pena, 42 F.3d 1169,
1172 (8th Cir. 1994)). “[A]n actual controversy must be extant at all stages of review, not merely
at the time the complaint is filed.” Ringo v. Lombardi, 677 F.3d 793, 796 (8th Cir. 2012) (alteration
in original) (quoting Preiser, 422 U.S. at 401). However, it is well-established that “a defendant’s
voluntary cessation of a challenged practice does not deprive a federal court of its power to
determine the legality of the practice.” City of Mesquite v. Aladdin’s Castle, Inc., 455 U.S. 283,
289 (1982). The Supreme Court has explained that, if mere voluntary cessation of allegedly
unconstitutional conduct could moot a case, “the courts would be compelled to leave the defendant
free to return to his old ways”; therefore, a case becomes moot only “if subsequent events made it
absolutely clear that the allegedly wrongful behavior could not reasonably be expected to recur.”
United States v. Concentrated Phosphate Exp. Ass’n, 393 U.S. 199, 203 (1968) (alterations,
citations, and internal quotation marks omitted); see also Lowry ex rel. Crow v. Watson Chapel
Sch. Dist., 540 F.3d 752, 761 n.8 (8th Cir. 2008) (holding that defendants’ voluntary change of
potentially unconstitutional student apparel policy did not moot students’ claim that defendants
violated their rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments by discipling them for wearing
black armbands to signify their disagreement with student apparel policy).
In its Preliminary Injunction Order, the Court determined that plaintiffs were likely to
succeed on the merits of their access-to-the-courts and access-to-counsel claims, at least as they
related to the number of attorneys for plaintiffs permitted to view each execution and those
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attorneys’ access to a telephone during each execution, and directed the parties to confer and jointly
present to the Court an execution viewing policy that adequately protects these rights (Dkt. No.
54, at 92–101). The Joint Execution Viewing Policy was filed in response to this directive (Dkt.
No. 62). Thus, because the Joint Execution Viewing Policy was proposed at the Court’s direction
after it had already found that the original execution viewing policy was substantially likely to be
proven unlawful and awarded preliminary injunctive relief against defendants, it is not clear that
the voluntary-cessation doctrine is implicated here. However, even if the voluntary-cessation
doctrine does apply, the Court has only Director Kelley’s statement that, so long as she remains
Director of the ADC, she intends to abide by the Joint Execution Viewing Policy. The Court takes
judicial notice that Dexter Payne is now the Director of the ADC. See Ark. Dep’t of Corr., Staff
Directory, https://adc.arkansas.gov/contact-us (last visited May 31, 2020). Thus, while the Court
has no reason to doubt the sincerity of Director’s Kelley’s statement, it does not make it “absolutely
clear that the allegedly wrongful behavior could not reasonably be expected to recur.” Friends of
the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Envtl. Servs. (TOC), Inc., 528 U.S. 167, 170 (2000) (citing Concentrated
Phosphate, 393 U.S. at 203).10 Also of concern is that because defendants have taken corrective
action only with respect to the named plaintiffs, holding the access-to-the-courts and access-tocounsel claims moot under these circumstances may allow defendants to insulate the contested
policy from judicial review. In short, defendants have not demonstrated mootness in this instance.
The Court also rejects any argument that the claim regarding the number of attorney
witnesses with access to the court viewing the execution is time barred or barred by res judicata
10
At the same time, defendants’ abandonment, at least for the time being, of the execution
viewing policies in place at the time this action commenced is an important factor bearing on the
question whether the Court should exercise its power to enjoin defendants from renewing the
policies, “but that is a matter relating to the exercise rather than the existence of judicial power.”
Aladdin’s Castle, 455 U.S. at 289.
88
or collateral estoppel, given the evidence that defendants intended to change the practice under
this policy for the April 2017 executions prior to plaintiffs initiating suit. Instead, for the reasons
explained, the Court determines that plaintiffs prevail on their claim regarding the number of
attorney witnesses with access to the court viewing the execution. The Court specifically relies on
Director Kelley’s representation that, while she serves as Director of the ADC, if another execution
is scheduled, she does not plan to go back on the agreement that was reached in this case with
respect to the Joint Execution Viewing Policy when fashioning a remedy for this claim.
a.
The Contours Of This Right
Prisoners have a constitutional right to access the courts. See Bounds v. Smith, 430 U.S.
817, 821 (1977). “[T]he fundamental constitutional right of access to the courts requires prison
authorities to assist inmates in the preparation and filing of meaningful legal papers by providing
prisoners with adequate law libraries or adequate assistance from persons trained in the law.”
Lewis v. Casey, 518 U.S. 343, 346 (1996) (quoting Bounds, 430 U.S. at 828).11 The Supreme
Court has required prison administrators to adopt “remedial measures to insure that inmate access
to the courts is adequate, effective, and meaningful.” Bounds, 430 U.S. at 822.
In Lewis, the Supreme Court explained that “[t]he right that Bounds acknowledged was the
(already well-established) right of access to the courts.” 518 U.S. at 350. The majority traced the
“roots” of this right, explaining that: “[W]e had protected that right by prohibiting state prison
officials from actively interfering with inmates’ attempts to prepare legal documents, or file them,
and by requiring state courts to waive filing fees, or transcript fees, for indigent inmates.” Id.
(citations and internal quotation marks omitted). Having recited this jurisprudential arc, Justice
11
The Supreme Court defined its main concern as “protecting the ability of an inmate to prepare
a petition or complaint.” Bounds, 430 U.S. at 828 n.17 (quoting Wolff v. McDonnell, 418 U.S 539,
576 (1974)).
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Scalia, writing for the majority, summarized the right of access to the courts as follows: prisoners
must be afforded “a reasonably adequate opportunity to present claimed violations of fundamental
constitutional rights to the courts.” Id. at 351 (quoting Bounds, 430 U.S., at 825).
Therefore, the question before this Court is whether the ADC’s execution policies afford
plaintiffs a reasonably adequate opportunity to present claimed constitutional violations during
their executions. Other district courts have addressed analogous challenges to similar execution
policies, finding that “there is unquestionably a right to access the courts involved in the context
of executions that inherently injects the issue of access to counsel into this discussion.” Cooey v.
Strickland, No. 2:04-CV-1156, 2011 WL 320166, at *7 (S.D. Ohio Jan. 28, 2011) (footnote
omitted). “[C]ourts have recognized that the traditional access to the courts analysis requiring
actual injury is unworkable in the prisoner execution context.” Hoffman v. Jindal, No. CIV.A. 12796-JTB, 2014 WL 130981, at *6 (M.D. La. Jan. 10, 2014) (citing Strickland, 2011 WL 320166
at *11). In this situation, the traditional actual injury analysis “makes no sense when many of the
claims could not even be recognized until during the execution process.” Strickland, 2011 WL
320166, at *11. Instead, in this “unusual context,” the circumstances of an execution “present an
inherent risk of actual injury to the timely and meaningful presentation of non-frivolous claims to
a court.” Id. at *11.
This Court has considered, but declines to adopt, the contrary reasoning of the Eleventh
Circuit in Grayson v. Warden, 672 F. App’x 956 (11th Cir. 2016). In that case the Eleventh Circuit
held that, to state a valid right-of-access claim, the death-row inmate had to establish an actual
injury, and that his “request for access to a cell phone or landline [during his execution[ [was]
based on the possibility that something could go wrong, which does not qualify as an actual injury.”
Id. at 967 (citing Lewis, 518 U.S. at 351). This Court concludes that Grayson misconstrued the
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alleged constitutional deprivation at issue. Unlike in Grayson, this Court does not find that
plaintiffs have failed to allege an “actual injury” for standing purposes. Here, plaintiffs do not
allege that the imminent injury is the mere prospect of an Eighth Amendment violation occasioned
during the executions. Rather, plaintiffs allege that the imminent injury is the lack of meaningful
access to a court from which they might seek redress from a prospective Eighth Amendment
violation occasioned during the executions.
In a case cited, but not followed, in Grayson, the Middle District of Tennessee held that a
death-row inmate had a right to have counsel view his execution with access to a telephone. See
Coe v. Bell, 89 F. Supp. 2d 962, 967 (M.D. Tenn. 2000), vacated as moot, 230 F.3d 1357 (6th Cir.
2000). While the district court’s decision was vacated as moot following the inmate’s execution,
its admonition regarding the right of access to the courts is worth repeating:
Plaintiff has an Eighth Amendment right not to be subjected to cruel and unusual
punishment, and substantial caselaw supports the contention that this right attaches
until his successful execution. Plaintiff’s right to meaningful access to the courts
to assert that right requires that counsel have some access to the prisoner during the
last hour before the execution and be permitted to witness his execution and have
access to a telephone until execution has been successfully carried out.
Id. at 966 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
Consequently, the district court held that “the plaintiff has the right under the First, Eighth,
and Fourteenth Amendments to have some access to his counsel during the last hour before the
execution and to have his counsel witness the execution,” and that “his counsel must have access
to a telephone with an unimpeded outside line at the time that he or she witnesses the execution.”
Id. at 967.
The Court has also considered the case of Towery v. Brewer, No. CV-12-245-DHX-NVW,
2012 WL 592749 (D. Ariz. Feb. 23, 2012), aff’d on other grounds, 672 F.3d 650 (9th Cir. 2012),
but does not consider its reasoning applicable in this case. Towery concerned the right to counsel
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in the context of communications between prisoners and their counsel. See id. at *18. In that case,
the prisoners alleged that the presence of prison authorities near their holding cell would hamper
their ability for “privileged communication” with their counsel. Id. Here, plaintiffs’ concern does
not arise from alleged deficiencies in the communications between plaintiffs and their counsel;
rather, plaintiffs’ concern is that their counsel witnessing the executions will be unable to access
the courts to seek redress. Therefore, the Court finds the reasoning contained in Strickland and
Cole to be more instructive here.
“It is for the courts to remedy past or imminent official interference with individual
inmates’ presentation of claims to the courts.” Lewis, 518 U.S. at 349. “Meaningful access to the
courts is the touchstone.” Id. at 351 (quoting Bounds, 430 U.S. at 823). Plaintiffs have alleged
that the ADC policies initially proposed in this case prohibited multiple counsel from witnessing
the execution and failed to guarantee counsel’s reasonable telephonic access to the courts. Without
both, plaintiffs allege that the ADC interferes with their right to petition this Court for relief, should
it appear that the execution is being carried out in a way that violates the Eighth Amendment.
b.
Whether Proposed Restrictions Are Reasonable
Although the Court determines that plaintiffs’ right of access to the courts extends through
the duration of their executions (Dkt. No. 53), plaintiffs’ right of access to the courts is not
absolute. In the light of the substantial deference owed to the policies implemented by prison
authorities, the issue before the Court is whether Director Kelley’s viewing policies as announced
prior to the parties proposing the Joint Execution Viewing Policy are reasonably related to
legitimate penological interests.
“[C]ourts are ill equipped to deal with the increasingly urgent problems of prison
administration and reform.” Safley, 482 U.S. at 84 (quoting Procunier v. Martinez, 416 U.S. 396,
92
405 (1974)). Therefore, “courts owe ‘substantial deference to the professional judgment of prison
administrators.’” Beard v. Banks, 548 U.S. 521, 528 (2006) (quoting Overton v. Bazzetta, 539
U.S. 126, 132 (2003)). “[R]estrictive prison regulations are permissible if they are ‘reasonably
related’ to legitimate penological interests” and are not an “‘exaggerated response’ to such
objectives.” Id. at 529 (quoting Turner, 482 U.S. at 87) (citations omitted). “Bounds and Turner
must be read in pari materia.” Lewis, 518 U.S. at 361. “Turner applies to prison restrictions
relating to rights not typically subject to strict scrutiny,” including access to the courts. Roe v.
Crawford, 514 F.3d 789, 794 (8th Cir. 2008) (citing Johnson v. California, 543 U.S. 499, 510
(2005)). Therefore, the Court will examine the four factors of the Turner test to determine whether
the prison regulations at issue impermissibly deprive plaintiffs of their constitutional right of
access to the courts and statutory right to counsel.
Turner sets forth four factors that are relevant in determining the reasonableness of the
regulation at issue: “First, there must be a ‘valid, rational connection’ between the prison
regulation and the legitimate government interest put forward to justify it.” Turner, 482 U.S. at
89 (quoting Block v. Rutherford, 468 U.S. 576, 586 (1984)). Second, courts must consider
“whether there are alternative means of exercising the right that remain open to prison inmates.”
Id. at 90. “A third consideration is the impact accommodation of the asserted constitutional right
will have on guards and other inmates, and on the allocation of prison resources generally.” Id.
“Finally, the absence of ready alternatives is evidence of the reasonableness of a prison regulation.”
Id.
With respect to the first Turner factor, defendants assert two justifications for their viewing
policies. First, defendants claim that Arkansas Code Annotated § 16-90-502 mandates that only
one attorney be permitted to witness each execution from the viewing room and also mandates that
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attorneys may not bring devices capable of recording audio or video to the prison (Dkt. No. 29, at
92–93). Second, defendants assert that their viewing policies are “validly and rationally connected
to maintaining security in the prison setting.” (Id., at 93). The Court will address each justification
in turn.
As to the first justification, the parties dispute whether the operative statute requires that
only one attorney be permitted to witness an execution from the viewing room. Arkansas Code
Annotated § 16-90-502(e)(1)(E) provides, in relevant part, that among those present for an
execution shall be “counsel for the person being executed if he or she chooses to be present.”
Defendants contend that this provision confines the number of “counsel” to one attorney, while
plaintiffs contend that “counsel” refers to one or more attorneys. The Court notes that the plain
language of the statute does not resolve this ambiguity.
However, during the preliminary injunction evidentiary hearing, Director Kelley testified
that multiple attorneys for a condemned prisoner have been permitted to witness executions in the
past (Tr. Hr’g Mot. Prelim. Inj., Vol. 4, at 1279 (“I don’t know about under Mr. [Art L.] Lockhart,
but I know under Mr. [Larry] Norris, only one attorney was present, and even, to my knowledge,
and we can ask Jeff [Rosenzweig], when Jeff was there under Mr. Lockhart and there were two
attorneys, one didn’t leave”)). Also at the hearing, Director Kelley’s immediate predecessor,
Director Norris, testified that he could not recall whether multiple attorneys were permitted to
witness executions during his tenure (Tr. Hr’g Mot. Prelim. Inj., Vol. 3, at 752). In sum, this Court
does not find that the statute requires that only one attorney be permitted to witness the execution
in the viewing area. Therefore, the Court is unwilling to find that Arkansas law mandates the
prison regulation at issue.
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For their second justification under the first prong of the Turner inquiry, defendants assert
that their viewing policies are “validly and rationally connected to maintaining security in the
prison setting.” (Dkt. No. 29, at 93). The Eighth Circuit “accord[s] great deference to the judgment
and expertise of prison officials, ‘particularly with respect to decisions that implicate institutional
security.’” Murphy v. Mo. Dep’t of Corr., 372 F.3d 979, 983 (8th Cir. 2004) (quoting Goff v.
Graves, 362 F.3d 543, 549 (8th Cir. 2004). The Eighth Circuit has consistently held that the
maintenance of prison security may satisfy the first Turner inquiry. See, e.g., Murchison v. Rogers,
779 F.3d 882, 891 (8th Cir. 2015) (holding that state prison officials’ censorship of one issue of
state prisoner’s weekly news magazine was rationally connected to officials’ legitimate
penological interest in prohibiting materials that promoted violence, disorder, or the violation of
the law); Rouse v. Benson, 193 F.3d 936, 943 (8th Cir. 1999) (holding that restrictions on state
prisoner’s practice of his Native American religion did not violate his equal-protection rights
because he failed to present “any evidence showing that other inmates following other religions
have not been similarly limited”).
In the light of the proper deference owed to prison
administrators, the Court concludes that there is a valid, rational connection between the viewing
policies and legitimate security interests. Consequently, the Court must turn to the remaining
prongs of the Turner test to determine whether the viewing policies are reasonable, or instead
constitute “an exaggerated response” to the defendants’ security concerns. Turner, 482 U.S. at 91.
With respect to the second Turner factor, it is unclear that certain of Director Kelley’s
proposed viewing policies afford plaintiffs an alternative means to effectuate their rights to counsel
and access to the courts. During her testimony at the evidentiary hearing, Director Kelley
suggested that counsel for plaintiffs could be transported by car from the viewing room to the
Deputy Warden’s office, located in a separate building on the prison grounds, where counsel could
95
use an outbound phone line to convene a hearing with a court (Tr. Hr’g Mot. Prelim. Inj., Vol. 4,
at 1270–71).
This alternative is inadequate for two reasons. First, this policy would not allow for the
lone attorney permitted in the viewing room to continue witnessing the execution should that
attorney need to petition a court during the execution. Access to a telephone would require the
attorney viewing the execution to leave the viewing room. As a result, the inmate would be left
without counsel present during a period of the execution. This would violate plaintiffs’ statutory
right to have counsel witness their executions. See Ark. Code Ann. § 16-90-502(e)(1)(E).
Second, access to an outbound telephone line that is located in a different building on the
prison grounds substantially delays the ability for counsel to communicate with a court. According
to Director Kelley’s testimony, a witnessing attorney who sought to petition a court must first
leave the witness room, enter a vehicle outside the execution building, be transported to a separate
building on the prison grounds, and then travel to the Deputy Warden’s office where an outbound
telephone line would be provided. Minutes matter during an execution. Any delay diminishes the
likelihood that a court could provide a meaningful remedy in the event of an ongoing constitutional
deprivation. The Court determines that Director Kelley’s policies, as they existed prior to the April
2017 executions and the proposal of the Joint Executive Viewing Policy, do not provide to
plaintiffs a sufficient alternative means to exercise their right to access to the courts. In effect,
Director Kelley’s viewing policies render mutually exclusive the plaintiffs’ right to have counsel
witness the execution and plaintiffs’ right to access the courts.
As to the third inquiry mandated by Turner, this Court must consider the impact that
accommodation of the plaintiffs’ right to access to the courts will have on guards, other inmates,
and on the allocation of prison resources generally. See 482 U.S. at 90. If there is minimal impact
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imposed by accommodation of the right, then this factor “weighs against the reasonableness of the
policy.” Roe, 514 F.3d at 798.
Defendants do not contend that permitting attorneys to bring a telephone, or providing an
outbound line in the execution building, would impose substantial burdens on prison guards, other
inmates, or the allocation of prison resources. Rather, defendants assert that bringing two or more
lawyers would “strain the ADC’s limited space in the witness room.” (Dkt. No. 29, at 94). Further,
defendants assert that permitting plaintiffs’ counsel to have access to recording devices would
violate Arkansas statute and harm defendants’ legitimate interests in preserving the solemnity of
executions and the dignity of the condemned prisoners and their families (Id.). With respect to
defendants’ concerns regarding recording devices, the Court reaffirms that defendants may
properly prohibit recording devices in the viewing room.
See Ark. Code Ann. § 16-90-
502(e)(5)(C). The Court turns to consider the impact of permitting more than one attorney on
guards, other inmates, or the allocation of prison resources.
Arkansas law requires certain persons to be present at an execution:
(A) The director or an assistant designated by the director;
(B) The Department of Correction official in charge of medical services or his or her
designee;
(C) No more than six (6) of the following persons related to a victim of a crime for which
the person is being executed if he or she chooses to be present:
(i)
A spouse;
(ii)
Any parent or stepparent;
(iii) Any adult sibling or stepsibling; and
(iv)
Any adult child or stepchild;
(D) A number of citizens determined by the director, not fewer than six (6) nor more than
twelve (12), whose presence is necessary to verify that the execution was conducted in
the manner required by law;
(E) Counsel for the person being executed if he or she chooses to be present; and
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(F) The spiritual adviser to the person being executed if he or she chooses to be present.
Ark. Code Ann. § 16-90-502(e)(1).
The parties dispute whether “counsel” is singular or plural for purposes of this provision.
Regardless, assuming, without deciding, that “counsel for the person being executed” refers to a
single attorney, the Court determines that the maximum total of persons required by statute is 22.
During her testimony at the evidentiary hearing, Director Kelley testified that there is room to seat
at least 24 individuals in the viewing room (Tr. Hr’g Mot. Prelim. Inj. Vol. 4, at 1275). Director
Kelley also testified that the viewing room could accommodate one additional person, or 25 people
in total, by placing an additional seat in the room (Id.). Director Kelley testified that there will be
a corrections officer present in the viewing room as well, though it is unclear to the Court whether
the officer would occupy one of the 24 seats (Id., at 1218). Therefore, there appears to be sufficient
room for at least one additional person to be seated in the viewing room during an execution, even
if all 12 citizen witnesses view the execution. The Court determines that requiring additional
counsel to be present would not impose an undue burden on space constraints in the viewing room
based on the current evidence before the Court.
Based on the evidence in the record, the Court does not find that accommodations of
plaintiffs’ rights to counsel and access to the courts would cause “a significant ‘ripple effect’ on
fellow inmates or on prison staff.” Turner, 482 U.S. at 90 (quoting Jones v. N.C. Prisoners’ Labor
Union, Inc., 433 U.S. 119, 132–33 (1977)). Such accommodations would be made only in the
limited circumstance of the duration of an execution. According to an exhibit attached to Director
Kelley’s affidavit, the State of Arkansas executed 27 inmates since 1990 prior to the April 2017
executions, amounting approximately to one execution per year (Dkt. No. 28-1, Ex. A). Because
the accommodations sought by plaintiffs are confined solely to the execution context, the Court
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determines that the accommodation of this right would have little impact on the allocation of prison
resources generally, and few, if any, ripple effects on fellow inmates or on prison staff. For this
reason, the Court determines that the third factor weighs against the reasonableness of certain of
Director Kelley’s proposed viewing policies. See Roe, 514 F.3d at 798.
Finally, regarding the fourth prong of the Turner test, “[i]f an inmate claimant can point to
an alternative that fully accommodates the prisoner’s rights at de minimis cost to valid penological
interests, a court may consider that as evidence that the regulation does not satisfy the reasonable
relationship standard.” Id. (quoting Turner, 482 U.S. at 91). In their response to the motion to
dismiss filed by defendants at the outset of this litigation, plaintiffs offered three accommodations
that they asserted would provide adequate safeguards for plaintiffs’ right to counsel and access to
the courts (Dkt. No. 31, at 30–31). First, plaintiffs proposed that Director Kelley “permit two
attorneys in the viewing area, so that if the need to communicate with the court or co-counsel in
the warden’s office manifests itself, one can communicate with a court and co-counsel while the
other remains in the viewing area to continue to watch the execution.” (Id., at 30). Second,
plaintiffs proposed that Director Kelley “permit a witnessing attorney to bring a cell phone into
the prison, with the device held by prison authorities, but brought into the viewing area to be given
to the attorney only if there is a need to contact a court or co-counsel; or, alternatively, permit
witnessing attorneys access to ADC-provided phone lines during the execution.” (Id.). Finally,
plaintiffs proposed that Director Kelley “permit the witnessing attorney . . . to witness the
execution from the time Plaintiffs enter the death chamber to pronunciation of death, and permit
audio from the death chamber to the viewing area throughout the execution.” (Id. at 30–31). All
but the last of these proposals were agreed upon by the parties in their Joint Execution Viewing
Policy and implemented without incident during the April 2017 executions.
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The Court determines that the evidence in the record demonstrates readily available
alternatives to Director Kelley’s viewing policies that would accommodate plaintiffs’ rights to
counsel and access to the courts. The viewing room has space to seat at least one additional
member of plaintiffs’ legal counsel, and there is evidence in the record that Director Kelley’s
predecessors have permitted multiple attorneys to witness executions. Moreover, defendants have
conceded their ability “to allow the Prisoners’ attorneys to access a landline in the execution
building.” (Dkt. No. 29, at 97). During the April 2017 executions, witness attorneys were
permitted to bring a cell phone with no recording device into the prison with the device held by
prison authorities and with access to the cell phone by attorneys when necessary during the
execution. Consequently, the Court determines that, though considerable deference is due to the
judgment of prison administrators regarding matters of prison security, the ready availability of
alternatives weighs against the reasonableness of Director Kelley’s viewing policies as proposed
prior to the April 2017 executions.
c.
Remedy
“It is the role of courts to provide relief to claimants, in individual or class actions, who
have suffered, or will imminently suffer, actual harm; it is not the role of courts, but that of the
political branches, to shape the institutions of government in such fashion as to comply with the
laws and the Constitution.” Lewis, 518 U.S. at 349. “It is for the courts to remedy past or imminent
official interference with individual inmates’ presentation of claims to the courts.” Id.
As Lewis makes clear, a district court must “scrupulously respect the limits on its role, by
not thrusting itself into prison administration and instead permitting prison administrators to
exercise wide discretion within the bounds of constitutional requirements.” Id. at 363 (alterations,
citations, and internal quotation marks omitted). Further, Bounds, recognized that “determining
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the appropriate relief to be ordered presents a difficult problem.” 430 U.S. at 818 (alterations,
footnote, and internal quotation marks omitted). Rather than crafting its own remedy, the district
court in Bounds properly “charge[d] the Department of Correction with the task of devising a
Constitutionally sound program to assure inmates access to the courts.” Id. at 818–19 (internal
quotation marks omitted). The state responded with a proposal, which the district court ultimately
approved with minor changes, after considering objections raised by the inmates. See id. at 819–
20.
For these reasons, the Court memorializes the Joint Execution Viewing Policy entered into
by the parties prior to the April 2017 executions and followed during the April 2017 executions
(Dkt. No. 62). Per the parties’ on-the-record representations, and consistent with Bounds, the
Court directs the parties, absent good cause, to abide by the Joint Execution Viewing Policy.
2.
Viewing Initial Preparation And Viewing Or Knowing Of Drug
Administration
Plaintiffs next contend that, by preventing their attorneys from seeing and hearing the full
execution, defendants are violating their rights of access to the courts. Plaintiffs assert that the
prohibition on seeing any part of the execution until the condemned individual is strapped to the
gurney and intravenous access is established fails to provide attorney access to the entire execution
and violates their right of access to the courts (Dkt. No. 117, ¶¶ 50, 57). Plaintiffs also assert that
the prohibition on determining when each drug is injected under the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol
prevents their attorneys from verifying that the executioners have not materially deviated from the
Arkansas Midazolam Protocol and thereby violates plaintiffs’ rights of access to the courts (Id., ¶¶
51, 57). Defendants oppose these claims. The Court views these claims differently than the claim
regarding the number of lawyers with access to the court viewing the execution.
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As an initial matter, there is no evidence before the Court that defendants altered from prior
executions this policy or practice regarding whether counsel are permitted to view and hear the
entirety of what goes on in the execution chamber, including the insertion of intravenous lines and
information about when each drug in the Arkansas Midazolam Protocol is pushed.
More
importantly, however, the Court is not convinced that rights under the First Amendment or 18
U.S.C. § 3599 have been extended to give rise to these particular types of claims.
To prevail on an “access-to-the-courts” claim, the plaintiffs must establish “an actual
injury, that is, the hindrance of a nonfrivolous and arguably meritorious underlying legal claim.”
White v. Kautzky, 494 F.3d 677, 680 (8th Cir. 2007) (citing Christopher v. Harbury, 536 U.S. 403,
413, 415 (2002), and Casey, 518 U.S. at 351). Without an actual injury, this Court does not have
jurisdiction over the claim. See id. (stating that the actual-injury requirement concerns standing to
bring a claim); Lewis, 518 U.S. at 349 (“The requirement that an inmate alleging a violation of
Bounds must show actual injury derives ultimately from the doctrine of standing.” (citing Allen v.
Wright, 468 U.S. 737, 750–52 (1984), and Valley Forge Christian Coll. v. Ams. United for
Separation of Church and State, Inc., 454 U.S. 464, 471–76 (1982))). Lewis specifically disclaims
that the right to access embraces a right to “discover grievances, and to litigate effectively once in
court.” 518 U.S. at 353 (citing Bounds, 430 U.S. at 825–26).
The Ninth Circuit confronted a similar access claim in First Amendment Coalition of
Arizona, Inc. v. Ryan, 938 F.3d 1069, 1080 (9th Cir. 2019). In Ryan, prisoners sought an
“injunction that would allow witnesses to hear the sounds of the entire execution proceeding, from
the time that the prisoner is brought into the execution room to the time of death.” Id. at 1073.
The district court denied the injunction, and the Ninth Circuit affirmed.
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The Ninth Circuit cited the two types of right to access claims generally recognized as
available under the First Amendment: “[(1)] the denial of adequate law libraries and other legal
assistance to prisoners, which prevents them from challenging their sentences and the conditions
of their confinement[, and (2)] claims involv[ing] active interference with a prisoner’s right to
litigate, such as seizing and withholding the prisoner’s legal files.” Id. at 1080 (citations omitted).
The Ninth Circuit highlighted the Supreme Court’s admonishment from Lewis that “the First
Amendment right of access to the courts does not include the right of prisoners to ‘discover
grievances[ ] and to litigate effectively once in court.’” Id. (alteration in original) (quoting Lewis,
518 U.S. at 354). The court noted that the prisoners’ only purpose for the information they sought
was to facilitate the discovery of colorable constitutional violations. See id. The court concluded
that the inmates were not entitled to such information, and thus, the claim failed as a matter of law.
See id.; but see id. at 1082 (Berzon, C.J., dissenting in part) (stating that the inmates plausibly
alleged “that Arizona, through its deliberate concealment of information about its execution
process, has violated their First Amendment right of access to the courts”).
Absent evidence that defendants’ policy or practice on these points changed from prior
executions to the April 2017 executions, and given the uncertain state of the law with respect to
this type of claimed right, the Court determines that defendants are entitled to judgment in their
favor on plaintiffs’ claims seeking to permit their attorneys to see and hear the full execution,
including the insertion of intravenous lines and information about when each drug in the Arkansas
Midazolam Protocol is pushed.
V.
Conclusion
For these reasons, the Court determines that defendants are entitled to judgment in their
favor on plaintiffs’ claim one under the Eighth Amendment and on plaintiffs’ claim two under the
103
Eighth Amendment and the Equal Protection Clause. The Court determines that plaintiffs are
entitled to judgment in their favor, in part, and that defendants are entitled to judgment in their
favor, in part, on plaintiffs’ claims three and four under the First Amendment and the right to
counsel under 18 U.S.C. § 3599. The Court orders relief consistent with the terms of this Order.
Specifically, the Court memorializes the Joint Execution Viewing Policy entered into by the parties
prior to the April 2017 executions and followed during the April 2017 executions (Dkt. No. 62),
and, per the parties’ on-the-record representations, the Court directs the parties, absent good cause,
to abide by the Joint Execution Viewing Policy.
It is so ordered this 31st day of May, 2020.
_________________________________
Kristine G. Baker
United States District Judge
104
4/11/17 Admitted
4/11/17 Admitted
4/12/17 Admitted
Not Admitted
4/11/17 Admitted
4/12/17 Admitted
4/12/17 Admitted
4/13/17 Admitted
4/13/17 Admitted
4/13/17 Admitted
4/13/17 Admitted
4/13/17 Admitted
4/13/17 Admitted
4/13/17 Admitted
Not Admitted
Not Admitted
4/13/17 Admitted
4/13/17 Admitted
4/13/17 Admitted
4/12/17 Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 6
Defendants’ Exhibit 12**
Defendants’ Exhibit 16
Defendants’ Exhibit 25
Defendants’ Exhibit 26**
Defendants’ Exhibit 35
Defendants’ Exhibit 36**
Defendants’ Exhibit 37
Defendants’ Exhibit 38
Defendants’ Exhibit 39
Defendants’ Exhibit 40**
Defendants’ Exhibit 41
Defendants’ Exhibit 42
Defendants’ Exhibit 44
Defendants’ Exhibit 45
Defendants’ Exhibit 46
Defendants’ Exhibit 47
Defendants’ Exhibit 48
Defendants’ Exhibit 49**
Defendants’ Exhibit 50**
Court’s Exhibit A
Defendants’ Request To Admit Exhibits
Page 1
Ruling From
Exhibit
Preliminary Injunction
Defendants’ Exhibit 5
4/11/17 Admitted
981
981
981
625
981
625
625
981
981
981
981
981
981
341-42
777
339
229, 325
Yes, Admitted 4/29/19
Yes, Admitted 4/23/19
Yes, Admitted 4/23/19
Bench Trial
Record Cite*
Listed Exhibit
229, 362
Yes, Admitted 5/2/19
Admit
Not Admitted
Not Admitted
Admit
Admit
Admit
Admit
Admit
Admit
Admit
Admit
Admit
Admit
Admit
Admit
Admit
Not Admitted
Admit
Admit
Admit
Court’s Bench
Trial Ruling
Admit
625
987-88
616-17
1013
987-88
987-88
987-88
987-88
987-88
987-88
987-88
987-88
980, 987-88
987-88
987-88
Record Cite*
983-84
983-84
Yes, Admitted 4/29/19
Yes, But Not Admitted
Bench Trial
Listed Exhibit
*Record Cite references the point in the preliminary injunction record where the Exhibit was moved into admission.
**Plaintiffs withdrew their objections to these Exhibits post-trial (Dkt. No. 198, at 27–28 n.2).
Court’s Exhibit A
Defendants’ Request To Admit Exhibits
Page 2
Ruling From
Exhibit
Preliminary Injunction
Defendants’ Exhibit 51**
4/13/17 Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 52
4/13/17 Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 53
Not Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 54
Not Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 55
4/13/17 Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 56
4/13/17 Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 57
Not Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 58
4/13/17 Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 59
4/13/17 Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 60
4/13/17 Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 61
4/13/17 Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 62**
4/13/17 Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 63
Not Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 64
4/13/17 Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 65
4/13/17 Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 66
Not Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 67
4/13/17 Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 68**
4/13/17 Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 69
Not Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 70**
4/12/17 Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 71
4/13/17 Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 72
4/12/17 Admitted
Defendants’ Exhibit 73**
4/13/17 Admitted
Court’s Bench
Trial Ruling
Admit
Admit
Not Admitted
Not Admitted
Admit
Admit
Not Admitted
Admit
Admit
Admit
Admit
Admit
Not Admitted
Admit
Admit
Not Admitted
Admit
Admit
Not Admitted
Admit
Admit
Admit
Admit
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