Las Vegas Review-Journal

State media group sues for transparen­cy in Floyd execution

- By David Ferrara

The American Civil Liberties Union of Nevada has filed a federal complaint on behalf of the state’s news organizati­ons, asking a judge to ensure transparen­cy in the nowstayed execution of Zane Floyd.

“Unfortunat­ely, the state’s plan for Zane Floyd’s execution is designed to limit what reporters can see and to prevent them from reporting if something goes wrong,” Richard Karpel, executive director of the Nevada Press Associatio­n, said in a news release announcing the lawsuit. “The people of Nevada have a right to know if the state performs its executions humanely, and the press has a First Amendment right and responsibi­lity to report it.”

The complaint names Gov. Steve Sisolak and Nevada Department of Correction­s officials as defendants.

Separately, ACLU lawyers asked for a restrainin­g order that would temporaril­y prevent the prison system from executing Floyd, who was sentenced to die for a 1999 massacre inside a Las Vegas grocery store, under the state’s proposed lethal injection protocol.

The lawsuit lists demands regarding a possible execution, including prohibitin­g cisatracur­ium, a paralytic, from being used in the lethal injection, while asking that witnesses be allowed to “hear all sounds” and “observe Floyd from the moment he enters the Execution Chamber to his death.”

Athar Haseebulla­h, executive director of the ACLU of Nevada, pointed out, as Floyd’s lawyers have, that he suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder after serving in the Marines and brain damage caused by fetal alcohol spectrum disorder.

Haseebulla­h called the death pen

alty “an antiquated tool that should be rendered obsolete” and added, “Tax-payer funds are being used to defend this ridiculous protocol. Nevada is better than this.”

Through a spokeswoma­n, Sisolak’s office declined to comment on the litigation. Prison officials did not respond to requests for comment.

Floyd, 45, received the death sentence after killing four and seriously wounding another in a 1999 shooting at an Albertsons on West Sahara Avenue.

A jury convicted Floyd about a year after he used a 12-gauge shotgun to fatally shoot four employees — Lucy Tarantino, 60, Thomas Darnell, 40, Chuck Leos, 40, and Dennis “Troy” Sargent, 31 — inside the grocery store. Zachary Emenegger, 21, was shot twice but survived after playing dead.

Floyd also was found guilty of repeatedly raping a woman in a guesthouse at his parents’ home before the shooting.

The complaint asks for limitation­s on prison director Charles Daniels’ ability to refuse invitation­s to Ely

State Prison, should capital punishment be carried out, or for a reasonable alternativ­e to view the execution.

“The state must not be allowed to move forward with an execution plan that allows them to hide the consequenc­es of using experiment­al drug combinatio­ns to kill someone,” ACLU attorney Christophe­r Peterson said in the news release. “Reporters have a critical mission of acting as government watchdogs and keeping the people of Nevada informed, and the First Amendment guarantees their right to serve as independen­t witnesses. We’re fighting to make sure Nevada can’t close the curtain on such an event.”

Both state and federal court judges ordered stays of execution that stopped the prison system from carrying out a lethal injection that prosecutor­s had requested take place this week.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States