Texarkana Gazette

Latest use of sedative keeps death penalty debate alive

- By Andrew Welsh-Huggins

COLUMBUS, Ohio—Is unorthodox the same as cruel and unusual punishment?

It’s the central question of the current U.S. death penalty debate, highlighte­d by the latest execution involving a disputed sedative that appeared to involve discomfort to the inmate.

States struggling to find lethal drugs believe they’ve got the answer in midazolam, a sedative that’s taking the place of barbiturat­es and anesthetic­s no longer available because drug manufactur­ers don’t want them used in executions.

States that have the drug won’t say where they’ve obtained it, but in recent months have secured enough supplies to carry out or plan executions.

But once again, the effectiven­ess of midazolam has been questioned following executions in Ohio, Arizona and, just this week, Arkansas. That’s where condemned inmate Kenneth Williams lurched and convulsed 20 times during a lethal injection execution Thursday that began with midazolam.

“There is so much evidence that this drug leads to problemati­c and likely torturous executions, and the two courts that have heard the most evidence—Ohio and Arkansas—ruled against the drug,” said Jen Moreno,

a staff attorney with the Berkeley Law Death Penalty Clinic.

In June, the full 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals plans to hear a challenge by Ohio death row inmates of the state’s new three-drug method, which inmates say could lead to a substantia­l risk of harm. The method begins with midazolam.

Attorneys leading that challenge didn’t immediatel­y respond to requests by The Associated Press for any plans to use what happened in Arkansas in their case. But it’s almost guaranteed to be among their leading arguments before the court, judging by past filings.

Ohio plans to use a massive dose of 500 milligrams of midazolam, which attorneys for the state say is more than enough to render inmates unconsciou­s. The state also notes the Supreme Court has drawn a distinctio­n between pain that amounts to cruel and unusual punishment, and pain that is a consequenc­e of death.

Attorneys fighting Ohio’s procedure have presented evidence from expert witnesses who say that midazolam is subject to a “ceiling effect” that limits its effectiven­ess, regardless of how much is administer­ed.

At the state’s request, the full appeals court agreed to review the case after a three-judge panel rejected the method as unconstitu­tional. Such full-court hearings, instead of by a smaller panel, are relatively rare.

The appeals court is the middle step between initial rulings by federal judges and reviews by the U.S. Supreme Court.

Attorneys for Williams and the American Civil Liberties Union called for a full investigat­ion after he became the fourth convicted killer executed in Arkansas in eight days. The state sought to carry out as many lethal injections as possible before one of its drugs expired Sunday, meaning its effectiven­ess date passes without new supplies to replace it.

The Arkansas governor says he sees no reason for anything beyond a routine review of procedures.

Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson also noted that the use of midazolam, which was a component of Williams’ injection, has been upheld by higher-level courts. He said he does not think Arkansas needs to change its execution protocol.

Questions about midazolam come as use of the death penalty slowly declines in the U.S. following its reintroduc­tion in 1976, four years after the Supreme Court declared it unconstitu­tional.

Only 30 people were sentenced to death in the United States last year, the lowest number since the early 1970s. Just 20 people were executed in 2016, the fewest since 1991, and a far cry from 1999, when there were 98 executions.

Beginning in 2011, drugmakers, many based in Europe, came under new pressure from antideath penalty activists and began to put drugs previously used in executions off limits.

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