Chattanooga Times Free Press

Tennessee execution pause through 2022 could last longer

- BY JONATHAN MATTISE

NASHVILLE — After Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee halted a lethal injection in April because he learned the drugs hadn’t been tested as required, he ordered an independen­t investigat­ion and paused all executions through the end of the year.

Now, it’s clear that Tennessee’s problems in following its own lethal injection protocol are more extensive and complicate­d than state officials have acknowledg­ed — and sorting through them may take longer, possibly years, before an execution that passes constituti­onal muster can take place.

Many of the problems surfaced as part of challenges of Tennessee’s execution process by two death row inmates in federal court. Filings show that since resuming executions in 2018, Tennessee has struggled to follow its own lethal injection rules at nearly every step — from the compoundin­g of the drugs to testing, storing and administer­ing them.

Those cases are on hold until the investigat­ion ordered by Lee concludes — but in the meantime, the state attorney general’s office acknowledg­ed in a May 6 court filing that there may be “factual inaccuraci­es or misstateme­nts” in its previous filings and that correction­s will be made “once the truth has been ascertaine­d.”

Robert Dunham, executive director of the Washington-based nonprofit Death Penalty Informatio­n Center, said the records show problems have existed at “virtually every step of the protocol,” and he attributed the issues to “a combinatio­n of hubris and incompeten­ce.”

“The large number of problems and depths of problems Tennessee had with complying with its protocol raise significan­t questions about the state’s competency to carry out the death penalty,” Dunham said.

The governor and attorney general’s office have not predicted when executions could resume. Dunham said he believes it’s very likely to extend past 2022, and could be a yearslong hiatus.

Pausing those legal challenges came with a guarantee from the state that officials wouldn’t seek to execute the two inmates who sued until the investigat­ion is finished, any needed changes are made to the state’s protocol, the lawsuits are updated to reflect the changes, and the cases are given time to be decided by a federal district judge and then a circuit appeals panel.

Other inmates’ cases may be impacted because the state expects to overhaul its lethal injection protocol, according to Kelley Henry of the federal public defender’s office.

Deposition­s and other filings show multiple parties contribute­d to the state’s problems, from the out-of-state pharmacy supplying the drugs to the state’s execution team. Their issues include missed or fumbled steps to test, store and prepare the chemicals and a dearth of proper training on executions.

Two inmates have died by lethal injection since 2018. Attorneys for death row inmates have argued in vain that the deadly drugs prolong pain and suffering, saying the sedative, midazolam, doesn’t render someone unable to feel pain and the paralyzing drug, vecuronium bromide, then masks their agony, violating constituti­onal protection­s against cruel and unusual punishment. Because of that contention, the other five inmates put death since 2018 have decided to die in the electric chair rather than take the injections.

Lawyers for the two current death row inmates say in federal court filings that the three drugs used in Donnie Johnson’s lethal injection on May 16, 2019 were expired — midazolam, expired by two weeks, the other two, prepared almost two hours in advance, when protocol requires using them within one hour.

Those two drugs were also prepared about two hours in advance in the August 2018 execution of Billy Ray Irick, making them expired then as well. The filings also say that the pharmacy didn’t test every drug for endotoxins — testing that could be an indication of problems with the manufactur­e of the drugs.

Text messages provided in response to an Associated Press public records request show two people involved in preparing for the scheduled April execution of Oscar Smith knew the night before that there was no endotoxin test this time around, either. A halt to the execution wasn’t announced until about an hour beforehand.

Other problems raised in court filings by the inmates’ attorneys include the pharmacist not personally compoundin­g the drugs; and the executione­r wiping down sterile needles with alcohol, using incorrect syringe sizes and failing to visually inspect the prepared syringes to ensure the chemicals are fully dissolved and safe to use.

Other shortcomin­gs include storing the chemicals at incorrect temperatur­es, holding on to expired doses, and providing inadequate training that entailed being read the protocol and practicing the procedure at sessions the execution team blithely called “band practice.”

“The logs documentin­g these practice sessions list fictitious prisoner names including ‘Wild Bill,’ ‘Con Demned,’ ‘Annie Oakley,’ ‘Doc Holliday,’ ‘Tom Thumb,’ ‘John Henry,’ and ‘Billy the Kid,’” a court filing states.

 ?? AP PHOTO/MARK HUMPHREY ?? Officers on horseback guard the entrance to designated demonstrat­or areas near the Riverbend Maximum Security Institutio­n as people wait to enter before the scheduled execution of inmate Oscar Smith on April 21 in Nashville
AP PHOTO/MARK HUMPHREY Officers on horseback guard the entrance to designated demonstrat­or areas near the Riverbend Maximum Security Institutio­n as people wait to enter before the scheduled execution of inmate Oscar Smith on April 21 in Nashville

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