Robert Charles Towery v Janice K Brewer

672 F.3d 650, 2012 WL 627787, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 4012
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 28, 2012
Docket12-15381
StatusPublished
Cited by86 cases

This text of 672 F.3d 650 (Robert Charles Towery v Janice K Brewer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert Charles Towery v Janice K Brewer, 672 F.3d 650, 2012 WL 627787, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 4012 (9th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

This appeal under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 challenges Arizona’s execution protocol, adopted as Order 710 of the Arizona Department of Corrections (“ADC”) on January 25, 2012. Robert Charles Towery, Robert Henry Moormann, Pete Rovogich, Thomas Arnold Kemp, Milo McCormick Stanley, and Samuel Villegas Lopez are death row inmates in Arizona who claim that ADC’s execution protocol violates the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments. Towery and Moormann, two of the named plaintiffs with impending execution dates, moved the district court for a preliminary injunction against ADC’s use of its current lethal injection protocol. The district court denied the preliminary injunction, and Towery and Moormann appealed. Because the new protocol was adopted on the eve of the two planned executions, this appeal comes to us at the eleventh hour. We held oral argument less than 48 hours before the first scheduled execution.

Even after the appeal was filed and hours before the argument, Arizona yet again changed course as to its plans for the executions. 1 It advised the court on February 27, 2012, that it was not proceeding under the three-drug protocol but instead under the one-drug protocol because it discovered at the last minute that the originally-planned drugs had expired in *653 January 2012. How such a discovery escaped the State for the past six weeks is beyond us, and gives us pause as to the regularity and reliability of Arizona’s protocols. To be sure, the State caught the mistake, but almost too late.

“The penalty of death differs from all other forms of criminal punishment, not in degree but in kind. It is unique in its total irrevocability. It is unique in its rejection of rehabilitation of the convict as a basic purpose of criminal justice. And it is unique, finally, in its absolute renunciation of all that is embodied in our concept of humanity.” Furman v. Georgia, 408 U.S. 238, 306, 92 S.Ct. 2726, 33 L.Ed.2d 346 (1972) (Stewart, J., concurring). Because the death penalty is undeniably the most serious penalty available to a State, the procedures for such penalty must be implemented in a reasoned, deliberate, and constitutional manner. Over time, the State of Arizona, however, has insisted on amending its execution protocol on an ad hoc basis — through add-on practices, trial court representations and acknowledgments, and last minute written amendments — leaving the courts with a rolling protocol that forces us to engage with serious constitutional questions and complicated factual issues in the waning hours before executions. This approach cannot continue.

Although we uphold the denial of the preliminary injunction based on the 2012 Protocol, as amended by the State during oral argument with respect to Towery and Moormann’s executions, the State’s frequent changes to its protocol during litigation are not sustainable. We find ourselves, once again, deciding not the merits of Arizona’s written protocol, but the validity of litigation-related, often case-specific, amendments to the protocol designed to ensure constitutionality. We are mindful of the admonition requiring us to refrain from micro-managing each individual execution, but the admonition has a breaking point. The State appears to have invited the present litigation through its recent amendment of the protocol after the issuance of Towery and Moormann’s death warrants. Unless permanent changes are made in the manner in which Arizona amends its protocols, Arizona’s ongoing conduct may require us “to monitor every execution on an ad hoc basis, because the State cannot be trusted to fulfill its otherwise lawful duty to execute inmates sentenced to death.” In re Ohio Execution Protocol Litigation, 671 F.3d 601, 602 (6th Cir.2012). We trust this will not be the case.

On the basis of the protocol approved in Dickens v. Brewer, 631 F.3d 1139 (9th Cir.2011), as well as the State’s undertakings as to the upcoming executions, we affirm the denial of the preliminary injunction, albeit on different grounds than underlay the district court’s denial.

Background

I. The Baze Standard

In Baze v. Rees, the Supreme Court held that Kentucky’s three-drug lethal injection protocol does not violate the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment. 553 U.S. 35, 128 S.Ct. 1520, 170 L.Ed.2d 420 (2008). The plurality held that the Kentucky protocol is constitutional because it contains sufficient safeguards to prevent improper anesthetization, and thus does not give rise to a “substantial risk of serious harm.” Id. at 49-50, 128 S.Ct. 1520.

Faced with the Justices’ divergent views, our circuit adopted the plurality’s substantial risk of serious harm standard as the governing one because it is the narrowest necessary to secure a majority in any given challenge to a method of *654 execution. Dickens, 631 F.3d at 1144-45. We explained that “[e]very circuit court that has considered a challenge to a lethal injection protocol following Baze has analyzed the protocol under the plurality’s substantial risk standard.” Id. at 1145.

II. Arizona’s Lethal Injection Protocol During Dickens

Since the end of a six-year hiatus in implementation of the death penalty from 2000 to 2006, Arizona has conducted executions by lethal injection. Prior to the 2012 changes in its lethal injection protocol, Arizona used a three-drug lethal injection cocktail that consisted of three chemicals— sodium thiopental, pancuronium bromide, and potassium chloride — administered sequentially. Sodium thiopental is a fast-acting barbiturate that anesthetizes the inmate and permits the other chemicals to be administered without causing pain. Pancuronium bromide is a paralytic neuromuscular blocking agent that causes complete paralyzation and suffocation. Potassium chloride induces cardiac arrest. In Dickens, we constrained our holding to the constitutionality of Arizona’s November 1, 2007, protocol, as amended by the Joint Report (the “2007 Protocol”), and did “not conside[r] — and expressed] no opinion on — any amendments to the [2007] Protocol.” 631 F.3d at 1142.

III. Arizona’s Current (2012) Lethal Injection Protocol

Since Dickens, ADC has made various amendments to its lethal injection protocol. Some of those were informal amendments through practice, and others were incorporated into a formal departmental order. At issue here is ADC’s January 25, 2012, amendment to Department Order 710 (the “2012 Protocol”). The revised 35-page protocol permits execution through either a three-drug or one-drug protocol and requires ADC to choose between these two protocols at least seven days prior to a scheduled execution. 2

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
672 F.3d 650, 2012 WL 627787, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 4012, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-charles-towery-v-janice-k-brewer-ca9-2012.