Las Vegas Review-Journal

Lawyer: Inmate is ‘very disappoint­ed’

- By David Ferrara Las Vegas Review-journal

Scott Dozier was “very disappoint­ed” that he did not die on Wednesday, his lawyer said.

The condemned man’s lawyer, Tom Ericsson, spent about an hour with him at Ely State Prison after the execution was halted for the second time.

This time, a drug company’s lawyers had successful­ly argued that the Nevada Department of Correction­s should be blocked from using the sedative planned for the 8 p.m. execution.

Dozier knew of the complaint from Alvogen Inc., which makes midazolam, one of three drugs in the state’s untested lethal injection cocktail.

“He’s very disappoint­ed that the execution is not going forward,” Ericsson said Wednesday. “By the time I saw him this afternoon, he was somewhat prepared for the possibilit­y.”

LAWYER

Dozier’s family also had traveled to Ely to visit with him. But about nine hours from the time the first needle was set to be injected, District Judge Elizabeth Gonzalez barred prison officials from using midazolam in the execution.

“They had come out for their final goodbyes,” Ericsson said. “They had attempted as best they could to make peace with this. Now there’s another reprieve.”

A different drug had been barred from use at Dozier’s execution when it was set for November. But by the time the Nevada Supreme Court

reversed that decision, the prison system’s supply had expired.

As was the case in November, Dozier was immediatel­y placed on suicide watch, but “not necessaril­y because of anything he has said or done,” Correction­s Department spokeswoma­n Brooke Santina said. “It’s a precaution we have to take.”

He would be moved to a special location in the prison where he could not harm himself, she said, and would be evaluated by a mental health profession­al before returning to his regular cell.

Dozier, 47, told the Las Vegas Review-journal this weekend that he started discussing his death wish with family as early as 2011.

Ericsson referred to Dozier’s relatives

as “a strong family,” adding that the state’s first execution in more than 12 years was “clearly an incredibly emotional, stressful situation for everyone involved.”

Dozier, who had a prior murder conviction in Arizona, was sentenced to die for the murder of Jeremiah Miller.

Miller’s torso was found on April

25, 2002, in a suitcase that had been dumped in a trash bin at the Copper Sands apartment complex in the 8100 block of West Flamingo Road.

At 2:16 p.m. Wednesday, District Judge Jennifer Togliatti, who oversaw Dozier’s 2007 trial in which a jury sentenced him to death, signed a stay of execution.

Ericsson said that even though

Dozier has repeatedly stated publicly since late 2016 that he wanted his sentence carried out, he still has the right to appeal his case.

“He needs to decide if he’s going to direct an attorney to work on post-conviction relief,” the defense lawyer said. “Everything has happened so quickly.”

Execution protocol called for Dozier’s last meal to be served at 3 p.m. on Wednesday. Santina would not say what he had requested.

“It’s not relevant at this point,” the spokeswoma­n said. “So it’s not a last meal.”

Contact David Ferrara at dferrara@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-380-1039. Follow @randompoke­r on Twitter.

 ?? Bizuayehu Tesfaye ?? Las Vegas Review-journal @bizutesfay­e Attorneys James Pisanelli, left, Todd Bice, Kenneth Schuler, and Michael Faris, right, represent Alvogen.
Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-journal @bizutesfay­e Attorneys James Pisanelli, left, Todd Bice, Kenneth Schuler, and Michael Faris, right, represent Alvogen.

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