Jan 7, 2008 5:30 pm US/Central
High Court Considers Lethal Injection Case
Justices To Decide If Execution Method Is Cruel And Unusual Per Constitution
WASHINGTON (CBS News) ―
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Three dozen states use lethal injections
AP
The Supreme Court appeared divided Monday over whether the drugs
commonly injected to execute prisoners risk causing excruciating pain
in violation of the Constitution.
Several justices indicated a willingness to preserve the three-drug
cocktail that is authorized by three dozen states that allow
executions. Such a decision would allow lethal injections, on hold
since late September, to resume quickly.
Justice Antonin Scalia said states have been careful to adopt
procedures that do not seek to inflict pain and should not be barred
from carrying out executions even if prison officials sometimes make
mistakes in administering drugs. "There is no painless requirement" in
the Constitution, Scalia said. Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice
Samuel Alito also indicated their support for the states' procedures.
Other members of the court, who have raised questions about lethal
injection in the past, said they are bothered by the procedures used in
Kentucky and elsewhere in which three drugs are administered in
succession to knock out, paralyze and kill prisoners.
Two years ago in Ohio, for example, when convicted murderer Joseph
Clark got his mix of lethal drugs, he cried out in pain for an hour
before he died, CBS News correspondent Wyatt Andrews reports.
Even the victim's brother, who wanted Clark to die, says no one should die like that.
"I believe in the Constitution which says no cruel and unusual
punishment - and that's what I think was cruel and unusual punishment,"
Michael Manning said.
CBS News legal analyst Andrew Cohen says that the debate
over lethal injection comes before a Court which has become
increasingly willing - even as it becomes evermore conservative - to
limit the application of the death penalty in America.
The argument against the three-drug protocol is that if the initial
anesthetic does not take hold, a third drug that stops the heart can
cause excruciating pain. The second drug, meanwhile, paralyzes the
prisoner, rendering him unable to express his discomfort.
"I'm terribly troubled by the fact that the second drug is what
seems to cause all the risk of excruciating pain, and seems to be
almost totally unnecessary," said Justice John Paul Stevens.
Justice Anthony Kennedy, who often plays a decisive role on the closely divided court, gave little indication of his views.
The case before the court comes from Kentucky, in which two
death row inmates are not asking to be spared execution or death by
injection. Instead, they want the court to order a switch to a single
drug, a barbiturate, that causes no pain and can be given in a large
enough dose to cause death.
At the very least, they are asking for tighter controls on the
three-drug process to ensure that the anesthetic is given properly. A
decision should come by late June.
Justice Stephen Breyer seemed to capture the discomfort of the
court, which has upheld the constitutionality of capital punishment.
"There is a risk of human error generally where you're talking
about the death penalty, and this may be one extra problem," Breyer
said. "But the question here is can we say that there is a more serious
problem here than with other execution methods?"
Donald Verrilli, a Washington lawyer who is a veteran of capital
cases, offered the court examples of executions in California and North
Carolina in which inmates appeared to suffer pain as they were being
put to death.
He said the best way to avoid repetition was to switch to a single
drug, as veterinarians commonly use in putting animals to sleep.
"The risk here is real," Verrilli said. "That is why in the state
of Kentucky it is unlawful to euthanize animals the way" the state
executes inmates, he said.
Roy Englert, who typically argues business cases before the Supreme
Court, said on behalf of Kentucky that the one-drug method has never
been used in executions. The Bush administration also took Kentucky's
side.
Englert also defended the state's practices as humane. Kentucky
regularly trains its execution team and employs an experienced worker
to insert the intravenous lines through which the drugs are
administered, he said.
The state's lone execution by lethal injection did not present any obvious problems, both sides agreed.
The court may decide the Kentucky case is not the right one to
settle the constitutionality of the three-drug procedure and leave that
issue for another death penalty case.
Justice David Souter, however, urged his colleagues to take the
time necessary to issue a definitive decision about the three-drug
method in this case, even if it means sending the case back to Kentucky
for more study by courts there.
Scalia, however, said such a move would mean "a national cessation
of executions" that could last for years. "You wouldn't want that to
happen," he said.
Recent executions in Florida and Ohio took much longer than usual,
with strong indications that the prisoners suffered severe pain in the
process. Workers had trouble inserting the IV lines that are used to
deliver the drugs.
Lined up in front of the court waiting to attend the arguments,
college students Jeremy Sperling and Gira Joshi said they oppose the
death penalty, but regard making executions less painful and more
humane as a worthy goal.
"You have the right to die with dignity," said Joshi, a political
science and religion major at New Jersey's Rutgers University.
Sperling, a psychology and religion major at New York University, said
serving a life prison term is the appropriate alternative to the death
penalty.
After Monday's court session, the brother of a victim of one
Kentucky prisoner said the case already has dragged on too long. Powell
County Sheriff Steve Bennett was shot to death by Ralph Baze in 1992.
Cohen says that Kentucky will be arguing that the 8th
Amendment, in its prohibition against "cruel and unusual punishment,"
does not preclude from punishment (capital or otherwise) the infliction
of
any and
all pain.
"Petitioners have been sentenced to death, Kentucky seeks to
execute them in a relatively humane manner, and has worked hard to
adopt such a procedure," the Commonwealth writes in its legal argument.
So it depends, Cohen says, upon what your definition of "relatively" is.
"Ralph Baze was tried. The death penalty was what he got and he
chose lethal injection," said Orville Bennett of Beattyville, Ky. "And
we need to just get this over with."
The case is Baze v. Rees, 07-5439.
(© 2009 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)