Las Vegas Review-Journal

The makers of ketamine demanded that Nevada prison officials return a supply before a planned execution.

Ketamine part of execution cocktail

- By David Ferrara

The makers of ketamine, a drug planned for the execution of convicted killer Zane Floyd, have demanded that Nevada prison officials return the supply before the lethal injection scheduled for next month.

A lawyer for Hikma Pharmaceut­icals wrote in a ceaseand-desist letter to Attorney General Aaron Ford on Thursday that the Nevada Department of Correction­s obtained 50 vials of ketamine illegally.

“NDOC’S purchase and intended use of Hikma’s products for capital punishment is in violation of state and federal law, in knowing violation of Hikma’s property and proprietar­y interests in its products, and these actions will cause significan­t damage to Hikma’s business reputation and the interests of its investors,” Hikma’s lawyer, Josh Reid, wrote in the nine-page letter obtained by the Review-journal.

The prison system’s lethal injection cocktail calls for an injection of painkiller­s fentanyl or alfentanil, “depending on availabili­ty;” ketamine, an anesthetic; cisatracur­ium, a paralytic; and heart-stopping potassium chloride or

potassium acetate, “depending on availabili­ty.”

A prison spokeswoma­n said this week that the department holds all the drugs listed in the execution protocol.

In a statement filed in federal court late Thursday, prison director Charles Daniels wrote that he had asked the department’s pharmacy director, Linda Fox, to purchase ketamine, fentanyl, alfentanil, cisatracur­ium, potassium chloride and potassium acetate “through ordinary transactio­n efforts,” which meant ordering the drugs online.

Floyd’s federal public defenders have argued that ketamine could cause “excessive secretions from the mouth” and vomiting and lead to a burning sensation in Floyd’s veins and lungs.

According to the letter and drug purchase invoices, the prison system purchased Hikma’s ketamine through wholesaler Cardinal Health last month.

The letter asks for a written confirmati­on from Ford that the drug will not be used for capital punishment.

Earlier court case

Less than three years ago, Hikma’s lawyers sued the state to ensure that another of its drugs, fentanyl, was not used in the planned execution of Scott Dozier, who had waived his appellate rights.

“This is not Hikma’s first rodeo with NDOC on this issue, and the OAG and NDOC are well aware of Hikma’s long history of opposing the purchase and misuse of its life-saving products for capital punishment,” Reid wrote. “It is nothing less than shocking, and embarrassi­ng for the State of Nevada.”

Through a spokesman, Ford declined to comment on the demand.

Prison officials could not immediatel­y be reached.

Floyd shot and killed four employees and gravely wounded another inside an Albertsons on West Sahara Avenue in June 1999. He also was convicted of repeatedly raping a woman before the shooting. Now 45, he would be the first person executed in Nevada since 2006.

Last week, Floyd’s lawyers argued that the untested combinatio­n of drugs planned for his lethal injection would lead to “unconstitu­tional pain and suffering.”

Chief Deputy Attorney General Randall Gilmer filed an opposition on Thursday, arguing in part that Floyd’s lawyers did not cite any medical or scientific evidence that showed the proposed drugs would result in a painful execution.

In his opposition, Gilmer included statements from Daniels, Fox, doctors outside the prison system, including one who stated that the execution protocol was “likely to cause a death without significan­t pain or suffering.”

“Floyd relies solely on conclusory statements regarding what he or his counsel believe may occur if the NDOC Protocol is used,” Gilmer wrote. “On the other hand, NDOC provides this Court with undisputed medical and pharmaceut­ical evidence establishi­ng that the NDOC Protocol will not result in unconstitu­tional pain or suffering—indeed, it is likely to result in very minimal to no pain.”

Gilmer also argued against a stay of execution, writing that prison officials provided the execution protocol as soon as it was finalized and that they have “acted ethically, above board, and, to the extent possible without waiving crucially important, and well-establishe­d privileges, in an open and public manner.”

In another brief filed this week, lawyers for the state’s chief medical officer, Ihsan Azzam, one of those tasked with obtaining the fatal prescripti­on, joined the opposition to a stay of execution, while stating that Azzam had no authority in execution decisions.

Drug purchases

The drug purchase invoices show that the prison system’s efforts to stockpile lethal injection drugs date back as far as 2017, while Dozier’s case was still being litigated. He killed himself in January 2019, but two months later another death row inmate, Kevin Lisle, indicated that he wanted to give up his appeals.

By July of that year, the prison system had acquired ketamine from Par Pharmaceut­ical Inc. and potassium chloride through an undisclose­d company, suggesting that the protocol for Floyd’s execution may have been in the works for nearly two years.

Gilmer has argued to keep the names of the drug companies secret, pointing to potential public harm, backlash, “copycats and cancel culture.”

But many pharmaceut­ical companies have written letters to governors and prison officials to request that their drugs not be used in executions, according to Robert Dunham, executive director of the Death Penalty Informatio­n Center.

Secretly obtaining execution drugs, he said, “delegitimi­zes the process. It shows that they care less about open government, public accountabi­lity, and the rule of law than they care about killing prisoners as fast as they can.”

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Zane Floyd

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