Otago Daily Times

Attorney’s emotional wait in leadup to an execution

Death penalty defence attorneys are integral to counterbal­ancing society’s lust for revenge, writes Mary Sanchez.

- A Mary Sanchez is an opinionpag­e columnist for The Kansas City Star.

‘‘S OMETIMES I just feel like I’m leaking grief from my pores.’’

The comment, a poetic admittance of emotional exhaustion, came as Cheryl Pilate awaited a phone call from the US Supreme Court on March 20. The call would either spare the life of her client, a death row inmate, or it would not. She knew the wait well — this wasn’t her first execution.

The clock hit 5.35pm.

After 6pm the state of

Missouri would be empowered to execute 49yearold Russell Bucklew by lethal injection. Pilate had spent three years trying to save him.

There are less controvers­ial ways to make money as an attorney than defending people that much of society would just as soon see dead —people like Bucklew. He was convicted more than two decades ago of murdering his exgirlfrie­nd’s new boyfriend (in front of that man’s young son), handcuffin­g his ex, dragging her to a car and raping her.

Understand­ably, the details of crimes like Bucklew’s make people think that showing any measure of sympathy is an injustice to victims. But the attitude stems from vengeance, not justice. Pilate and other death penalty defence attorneys are integral to counterbal­ancing society’s lust for revenge with other values, such as mercy and humanity. The death penalty is legal in 31 states and supported by 55% of the public in cases of murder, although that is the lowest percentage in 45 years.

‘‘It’s already 7pm in Washington,’’ Pilate remarked a little later. It was getting late for a stay to be granted. One of her cocounsels had already entered the prison in Bonne Terre, Missouri, along with a medical expert.

Their job was to witness the death. They had to. This execution could go horribly wrong and be national headlines by daybreak.

Bucklew had a medical condition that’s caused tumours inside his head and throat. A visible grapesized tumour dangled from his upper lip. A few days before this night, Pilate was among a team of defence attorneys who warned Missouri Governor Eric Greitens (in a meeting with a legal staffer) that executing Bucklew might result in a gory mess, with blood bursting from the tumours.

Missouri goes to great legal lengths to keep the procedures and protocols of its executions under tight wraps. You cannot find out, for example, which compoundin­g pharmacy is providing the pentobarbi­tal for a given execution.

The secrecy limits the defence. How does a legal team know if the drugs meet the constituti­onal standards prohibitin­g cruel and unusual punishment if it can’t substantia­te basic questions about how the drugs will be used?

Missouri’s stand, not unique in the US, tramples the right of a fair defence.

Still, in recent months, Bucklew had received more help than many on death row. A new statewide Capital Habeas Unit allowed federal defenders a few months to explore his background, aspects not investigat­ed during the trial.

The legwork, with attorneys driving back roads in southern Missouri, had offered a bit of closure for Bucklew as the clock ticked. Over the weekend, he had been able to have conversati­ons with people he’d long been estranged from.

Pilate never attends the executions. Years ago, she was warned against doing so by another death penalty attorney. The experience changes people, rocks them in ways they don’t expect.

‘‘I have to be able to do this again if need be,’’ she says. ‘‘I don’t want to render myself unable if I had to again.’’

She most certainly will fight this fight again. Before Bucklew, she had lost two death penalty inmates to execution and gotten one acquitted.

She helped bury one of the executed. He had no family that could pay — or anyone else who cared enough to step in — to move the body from the execution chambers back to where he wished to buried in St Louis.

It’s another reality of this work.

People with means do not wind up on death row in America. Not unless they are violently sadistic in ways that end up generating madeforTV movies about their lives.

‘‘We can’t always explain why human beings do the things that they do,’’ Pilate said, still waiting for a phone call. ‘‘And some of the things they do have horrible consequenc­es.’’

On this night, the phone call came. At almost the last minute, the Supreme Court gave a stay in the case on a 54 vote, granting more time to examine appeals.

And for the first time that night, Pilate exhaled deeply.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Russell Bucklew remains on death row.
PHOTO: REUTERS Russell Bucklew remains on death row.

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