Chattanooga Times Free Press

Tenn. expects changes to its lethal injection protocol, staffing

- BY JONATHAN MATTISE

NASHVILLE — Tennessee officials say they anticipate that an independen­t investigat­ion of the state’s lethal injection methods will result in changes to how those executions are carried out, including how the procedures are staffed.

State correction­s officials made the statement last week in a federal court filing and a judge on Tuesday agreed to pause litigation challengin­g the lethal injection protocol while the probe unfolds.

The developmen­t comes as Tennessee officials have remained tight-lipped surroundin­g Republican Gov. Bill Lee’s decision last month to abruptly halt the execution of inmate Oscar Smith. The governor’s administra­tion has refused to hand over to media outlets an unknown amount of documents through public records requests, though some documents are expected to be released by the Department of Correction later this week. Instead, Lee has ordered an investigat­ion into the issue and paused all executions through 2022.

The investigat­ion is being led by former U.S. Attorney Ed Stanton.

Lee initially said the execution was delayed due to an ” oversight in preparatio­n.” He later added last week that the drugs to be used in Smith’s execution were tested for potency and sterility, but not endotoxins, as required by the state’s execution protocols. The state has released little else in the way of specifics about the issue.

While asking a judge to put the litigation brought by death row inmates on hold for now, attorneys for the state noted the governor has halted executions through this year to allow time for the investigat­ion and for “corrective action to be put in place.”

“It is, thus, clearly contemplat­ed that the independen­t investigat­ion will result in changes to the ways in which TDOC conducts lethal injection procedures, the ways in which those procedures are staffed, and the personnel responsibl­e for implementi­ng those procedures,” the state’s filing says, referring to the Tennessee Department of Correction.

It’s unclear what the state specifical­ly expects to change.

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