The News-Times

Federal executions halted; Garland orders review

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Garland said the department would review the protocols put in place by former Attorney General William Barr. A federal lawsuit has been filed over the protocols — including the risk of pain and suffering associated with the use of pentobarbi­tal, the drug used for lethal injection.

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department is halting federal executions after a historic use of capital punishment by the Trump administra­tion, which carried out 13 executions in six months.

Attorney General Merrick Garland made the announceme­nt Thursday night, saying he was imposing a moratorium on federal executions while the Justice Department conducts a review of its policies and procedures. He gave no timetable.

“The Department of Justice must ensure that everyone in the federal criminal justice system is not only afforded the rights guaranteed by the Constituti­on and laws of the United States, but is also treated fairly and humanely,” Garland said. “That obligation has special force in capital cases.”

Garland said the department would review the protocols put in place by former Attorney General William Barr. A federal lawsuit has been filed over the protocols — including the risk of pain and suffering associated with the use of pentobarbi­tal, the drug used for lethal injection.

The decision puts executions on hold for now, but it doesn’t end their use and keeps the door open for another administra­tion to simply restart them. It also doesn’t stop federal prosecutor­s from seeking the death penalty; the Biden administra­tion recently asked the U.S. Supreme Court to reinstate the Boston Marathon bomber’s original death sentence.

President Joe Biden has said he opposes the death penalty and his team vowed that he would take action to stop its use while in office. But the issue is uncomforta­ble one for Biden. As a then-proponent of the death penalty, Biden helped craft 1994 laws that added 60 federal crimes for which someone could be put to death, including several that did not cause death. He later conceded the laws disproport­ionately impacted Black people. Black people are also overrepres­ented on death rows across the United States.

Anti-death penalty advocates had hoped for a more definitive answer from the Biden administra­tion. Sup?port for the death penalty among Americans is at near-historic lows after peaking in the mid-1990s and steadily declining since, with most recent polls indicating support now hovers around 55%, according to the nonpartisa­n Death Penalty Informatio­n Center in Washington, D.C.

Ruth Friedman, Director of the Federal Capital Habeas Project, which represente­d some of the prisoners on death row, said Garland’s action was a step in the right direction, but it’s not enough. She called on Biden to commute the sentences.

“We know the federal death penalty system is marred by racial bias, arbitrarin­ess, over-reaching, and grievous mistakes by defense lawyers and prosecutor­s that make it broken beyond repair,” she said. There are 46 people still on federal death row.

The review is strikingly similar to one to one imposed during the Obama administra­tion. In 2014, following a botched state execution in Oklahoma, President Barack Obama directed the Justice Department to conduct a broad review of capital punishment and issues surroundin­g lethal injection drugs.

Barr announced the restarting of executions in 2019, saying the Obama-era review had been completed and clearing the way for executions to resume. He approved the new procedure for lethal injections that replaced the threedrug combinatio­n previously used in federal executions with one drug, pentobarbi­tal. This is similar to the procedure used in several states, including Georgia, Missouri and Texas, but not all.

Donald Trump’s Justice Department resumed federal executions in July, following a 17-year hiatus. No president in more than 120 years had overseen as many federal executions. The last inmate to be executed, Dustin Higgs, was put to death at the federal prison complex in Terre Haute, Indiana, less than a week before Trump left office.

They were carried out during a worsening coronaviru­s pandemic. Toward the end of the string of executions, 70% of death row inmates were sick with COVID-19, guards were ill and traveling prisons staff on the execution team had the virus. It’s impossible to know precisely who introduced the infections and how they started to spread, in part because prisons officials didn’t consistent­ly do contact tracing and haven’t been fully transparen­t about the number of cases. But an Associated Press analysis found the executions were likely a supersprea­der event.

There were major discrepanc­ies in the way executione­rs who put the 13 inmates to death described the process of dying by lethal injection. They likened the process in official court papers to falling asleep and called gurneys “beds” and final breaths “snores.”

But those tranquil accounts are at odds with reports by The Associated Press and other media witnesses of how prisoners’ stomachs rolled, shook and shuddered as the pentobarbi­tal took effect inside the U.S. penitentia­ry death chamber in Terre Haute. The AP witnessed every execution.

Secrecy surrounded all aspects of the executions. Courts relied on those carrying them out to volunteer informatio­n about glitches. None of the executione­rs mentioned any.

Lawyers argued that one of the men put to death last year, Wesley Purkey, suffered “extreme pain” as he received a dose of pentobarbi­tal. The court papers were filed by another inmate, Keith Nelson, in an effort to halt or delay his execution. But it went forward.

The federal Bureau of Prisons has declined to explain how it obtained pentobarbi­tal for the lethal injections under Trump. But states have resorted to other means as the drugs used in lethal injections have become increasing­ly hard to procure. Pharmaceut­ical companies in the 2000s began banning the use of their products for executions, saying they were meant to save lives, not take them.

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