Texarkana Gazette

Arkansas races against the clock to get execution approval

- By Andrew DeMillo and Sean Murphy

VARNER, Ark.—Arkansas raced against the clock to get U.S. Supreme Court approval to execute a convicted killer Monday but backed off putting another inmate to death as part of what had been a plan to carry out double executions on four nights before the state’s supply of a lethal injection drug expires.

In a chaotic day of legal wrangling, state and federal courts finally lifted the two primary obstacles Arkansas faced to carrying out its first executions since 2005 but another hurdle remained before the Supreme Court. The decisions from the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and the state Supreme Court were over the series of planned lethal injections that, if carried out, would mark the most inmates put to death by a state in such a short period since the U.S. Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976.

The state was rushing to get approval to execute convicted

killer Don Davis before his death warrant was expected to expire at midnight. Davis and Bruce Ward were set to be executed Monday night and had been granted stays by the state Supreme Court. The state decided not to challenge the stay for Ward but the U.S. Supreme Court had not yet decided whether to allow Davis to be put to death.

The state scheduled the executions to occur before its supply of midazolam expires at the end of the month, and Arkansas has not found a new supplier of the lethal injection drug.

“Allowing (Davis’) stay to stand will effectivel­y prevent Arkansas from seeing justice done,” Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge said in a petition to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Separately, a federal appeals court overturned U.S. District Judge Kristine Baker’s decision to halt the executions over the use of midazolam, which has been used in flawed executions in other states, but the Arkansas Supreme Court’s stays remain in place.

A little over an hour later, the state Supreme Court lifted a judge’s ruling that had effectivel­y blocked the executions by prohibitin­g the state from using its supply of vecuronium bromide, one of the other lethal injection drugs. A medical supply company said it was misled by the state and that the drug was sold for medical purposes, not executions. The state Supreme Court voted 4-3 to grant stays for Davis and Ward. The inmates wanted stays of execution while the U.S. Supreme Court takes up a separate case concerning access to independen­t mental health experts by defendants. The U.S. high court is set to hold oral arguments on that request April 24. Three Arkansas justices dissented, with Associate Justice Shawn Womack writing that Ward and Davis “had their day in court, the jury spoke, and decades of appeals have occurred. The families are entitled to closure and finality of the law.” The inmates’ attorneys argued that their clients were denied access to independen­t mental health experts, saying Ward has a lifelong history of severe mental illness and that Davis has an IQ in the range of intellectu­al disability.

Attorney General Leslie Rutledge’s office said she was only appealing Davis’ stay to the U.S. Supreme Court, noting that Ward has two stays from the state high court. Five U.S. Supreme Court justices must vote to vacate an execution stay, and Monday marked the first day the U.S. Supreme Court was in session with new Justice Neil Gorsuch on the bench. “This decision was not unanimous and the dissenting opinions reflect the harm the delays cause the families of the victims and it also expresses my frustratio­n in the continued delayed justice,” Gov. Asa Hutchinson, who set the execution dates, said in a statement. The death warrants for Davis and Ward expire at midnight, and it was not clear whether Hutchinson would immediatel­y set new dates for the men.

The Arkansas high court already had issued one stay for Ward after a Jefferson County judge said she didn’t have the authority to halt Ward’s execution. Ward’s attorneys have argued he is a diagnosed schizophre­nic with no rational understand­ing of his impending execution. The back-and-forth with the courts came as the state seeks to execute eight prisoners before its supply of the sedative midazolam expires at the end of the month. If court proceeding­s are pushed into May, Arkansas won’t be able to carry out the executions with the drugs it has on hand.

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