Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Judge halts plan for eight executions in 11 days

Inmates on Arkansas’ death row have right to fight drug protocol

- By Andrew DeMillo and Kelly P. Kissel The Associated Press

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — A federal judge dealt a serious blow Saturday to Arkansas’ unpreceden­ted plan to execute eight inmates in an 11-day period, saying the men have the right to challenge a drug protocol that could expose them to “severe pain.”

The state appealed U.S. District Judge Kristine Baker’s order hours later, hoping to follow through with its planned executions, with the first scheduled for Monday. Arkansas’ supply of one of its three lethal injection drugs, midazolam, expires April 30 and Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson has said he wants to use the drugs before they spoil.

Manufactur­ers object to states using their drugs in executions, and the Arkansas Department of Correction­s said in previous court filings that it doesn’t have a way of obtaining more of the sedative midazolam. A drug supplier, meanwhile, asked a state judge to lift a temporary restrainin­g order preventing Arkansas from using a paralyzing drug, vecuronium bromide, and sought to drop its lawsuit claiming Arkansas obtained the drug under false pretenses.

Another federal judge and the state Supreme Court had already granted stays to two of the eight inmates, reducing the number of planned executions to six within an 11-day period. If Arkansas had proceeded with its original plan to execute eight inmates, it would have been the most people put to death by a state in that timeframe since the U.S. Supreme Court reauthoriz­ed the death penalty in 1976. Only Texas has executed six inmates in less time.

Hutchinson said he would meet with the state’s lawyers and its prison officials on Monday to discuss Arkansas’ next moves as it attempts to conduct executions for the first time since 2005.

“I understand how difficult this is on the victims’ families, and my heart goes out to them as they once again deal with the continued court review; however, the last minute court reviews are all part of the difficult process of death penalty cases,” Hutchinson said in a statement.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Pulaski County Circuit Judge Wendell Griffen is strapped to a cot, representi­ng a prison gurney, while taking part in an anti-death penalty demonstrat­ion outside the Arkansas governor’s mansion on Friday in Little Rock.
The Associated Press Pulaski County Circuit Judge Wendell Griffen is strapped to a cot, representi­ng a prison gurney, while taking part in an anti-death penalty demonstrat­ion outside the Arkansas governor’s mansion on Friday in Little Rock.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States