US Pharm. 2008;33(11):40-42.
As of September 1, 2008, there
are 37 states in the United States that permit the use of the death penalty
for individuals who have committed the most heinous of crimes. The other 13
states (Alaska, Hawaii, Iowa, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New
Jersey, North Dakota, Rhode Island, Vermont, West Virginia, Wisconsin), and
the District of Columbia do not permit the use of capital punishment.1
However, the Nebraska Supreme Court ruled in February 2008 that inducing the
death of a condemned prisoner by use of the electric chair violates that
state's own constitution.2 New York State's highest court
concluded that the procedures used to impose a death penalty on a convicted
criminal are also unconstitutional.3 Of the states that do permit
use of the death penalty, 35 of them employ the use of lethal injection.4
Questions have been raised by death row inmates as to whether the protocol
used to administer the lethal dose of drugs is constitutional.
On September 25, 2007, the
U.S. Supreme Court granted a motion to hear an appeal in the case of Ralph
Baze and Thomas C. Bowling, Petitioners, v. John D. Rees, Commissioner,
Kentucky Department of Corrections, et al.5 This case offers
the nation's highest court the opportunity to examine issues related to the
use of legally marketed pharmaceuticals for carrying out lawful, court-ordered
executions by lethal injection. The case centers on arguments related to the
constitutionality of this method of execution under the third provision in the
Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution--"Excessive bail shall not be
required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments
inflicted."6
The parties to the case have
pointed out that the Supreme Court frequently receives such requests for
review, with over half the death row inmates facing an imminent execution in
the last two years filing suits challenging the chemicals used. This case
presents a record containing undisputed evidence that any and all of the
current lethal injection chemicals (i.e., sodium thiopental, pancuronium
bromide, potassium chloride) could be replaced with other chemicals that would
pose less risk of pain while causing death than the chemical combination
currently in use. The Kentucky statute in question provides that "every death
sentence shall be executed by continuous intravenous injection of a substance
or combination of substances sufficient to cause death."7
The last case before the
Supreme Court presenting an opportunity to rule on an Eighth Amendment issue
involving a method of execution was on March 17, 1879, in Wilkerson v. Utah,
when it upheld the use of a firing squad.8 The most recent ruling
was on May 19, 1890, in the case of In re Kemmler, when the Court
upheld the use of the electric chair against a due process challenge.9 Lethal
injection was first adopted in Oklahoma in 1977, with the understanding that
it would be more humane than other execution methods (e.g., electric chair,
gas chamber, firing squad, hanging).10
In 1985, the Supreme Court
addressed a case involving use of legally marketed medications for lawful
executions.11 A group of inmates facing execution by lethal
injection petitioned the FDA to prevent the use of FDA-approved drug products
to carry out lethal injection executions. The FDA refused, and the inmates
filed suit in U.S. District Court seeking an order under the Administrative
Procedures Act that the agency be required to do so. The federal trial court
granted summary judgment for the FDA. The inmates appealed, and the U.S. Court
of Appeals ruled that the refusal by the FDA was both subject to review by the
courts and an abuse of discretion, one of the tried-and-true bases for
challenging an action or failure to act by an administrative agency. Having
lost at the appellate court level, the FDA requested that the Supreme Court
hear the case, which it did, ruling in favor of the agency. The Court
concluded that the FDA's failure to act on the petition was not subject to
review by the courts.
Facts of the Case
The 2007 appeal was
filed by two Kentuckians who were convicted of homicide and received death
sentences for committing double murders.12 Ralph Baze was convicted
of the shooting murders of a sheriff and a deputy sheriff in Powell County,
Kentucky, in 1992. Bowling was convicted of the shooting murders of a couple
and the wounding of their two-year-old son in 1990, as the victims sat inside
their car in a parking lot in Lexington, Kentucky.
Both Bowling and Baze have
completely exhausted all legitimate state and federal means for challenging
their convictions and the propriety of the death sentences. Both have also
refused to select a method of execution as provided by state statute. The
statutory option allows an inmate to choose electrocution or to submit to the
default approach of lethal injection as punishment.13
Procedural History
Baze and Bowling
filed challenges to the three-drug protocol in Kentucky state court in 2004,
seeking a declaratory judgment under Ky Rev Stat §418.040 that the lethal
injection protocol violated or threatened to violate their right to be free
from cruel and unusual punishment.14 On April 18, 2005, the trial
judge began a bench trial to determine the sole issue regarding the propriety
of the lethal injection protocol and issued his decision on July 8, 2005, but
the Circuit Court of Franklin County denied that request. The inmates appealed
to the Kentucky Supreme Court, which issued a ruling rejecting their challenge
on April 19, 2007.
The Medications Used
The protocol for
lethal injection execution begins with the availability of a therapeutic dose
of diazepam, if it is requested for the relief of anxiety and associated
nervousness and tension.15 Certified phlebotomists and emergency
medical technicians (EMTs) are allowed up to an hour to insert the appropriate
needles into the arm, hand, leg, or foot of the inmate. Three grams of sodium
thiopental, a fast-acting barbiturate and general anesthetic, are injected.
The line is then flushed with 25 cc of a saline solution to prevent adverse
chemical interaction between the medications. Fifty milligrams of pancuronium
bromide are administered next to induce paralysis. The purpose is to suspend
muscular movement, stopping respiration. The line is again flushed with 25 cc
of a saline solution to prevent any adverse chemical reaction between the
drugs. Finally, 240 mg of potassium chloride are injected. This disrupts the
heartbeat, resulting in cardiac arrest. An ECG verifies the cessation of heart
activity. A physician and a coroner then verify the fact and cause of death.
Legal Issues
Three legal issues
are presented for consideration by the Supreme Court: 1) Does the Eighth
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution prohibit means for carrying out a method of
execution that create an unnecessary risk of pain and suffering as opposed to
only a substantial risk of the wanton infliction of pain? 2) Do the means for
carrying out an execution cause an unnecessary risk of pain and suffering in
violation of the Eighth Amendment upon a showing that readily available
alternatives that pose less risk of pain and suffering could be used? and 3)
Does the continued use of the three medications, individually or together,
violate the cruel and unusual punishment clause of the Eighth Amendment
because lethal injections can be carried out by using other chemicals that
pose less risk of pain and suffering?
It should be borne in mind
that the appellants are not challenging their convictions, death sentences, or
the general proposition that lethal injection is a constitutionally valid
method of execution. The focus of this appeal is exclusively on the specific
medication protocol used in Kentucky and other states. "Even an execution
method such as lethal injection that is humane in theory," the brief contends,
"can be carried out by means of flawed or haphazard procedures that create a
foreseeable danger of inflicting severe pain in actual practice." Kentucky's
system, they add, is "highly vulnerable to multiple errors, any one of which
will result in the infliction of agonizing pain."16
The defense lawyers do not
suggest that there has to be a high level of predictability that pain would
result from those procedures. Instead, they advance a standard of "unnecessary
risk" involving a three-step approach: 1) assess the severity of the pain
risked; 2) weigh the likelihood that pain would occur; and 3) determine the
extent to which an alternative means would be feasible, either by changing a
present process or switching to an alternative. This is their legal
definition: "An execution procedure creates unnecessary risk where, taken as a
whole, it presents a significant risk of causing severe pain that could be
avoided through the use of a reasonably available alternative or
safeguard."17
The Commonwealth's brief
denounces the proposed standard, saying it focuses on "the mere risk of future
pain and suffering."18 The "unnecessary risk" approach, the
state asserts, "places the states under a continuing obligation to adopt the
‘lowest risk' alternative that is ‘reasonably available,' even if the risk
being avoided is insignificant." Kentucky adds, "any method of lethal
injection that does not minimize the risk of pain and suffering would
apparently be deemed unconstitutional." The only workable standard, it
contends, is one keyed to whether a method or manner of execution creates
"substantial risk" of pain and suffering. Historically, it says, the focus has
been on whether pain is actually inflicted by a given method of execution. It
thus implies that use of a "substantial risk" approach would be more humane.
Cruel and Unusual?
The inmates advance
a number of objections to the execution protocol that in their view make its
implementation cruel and unusual:
1. The effects of the
three-drug formula used in Kentucky were undisputed at trial.
2. "It is undisputed that the
administration of pancuronium bromide and potassium chloride, either
separately or in combination, would result in a terrifying, excruciating death
if injected into a conscious person…Consequently, inducing general anesthesia
is ‘critical'…to ensuring humane execution…If the intended dose of thiopental
is not injected successfully, or does not bring about general anesthesia, the
inmate will experience both the
terror and agony of conscious suffocation and the excruciating pain caused by
the potassium, but will appear peaceful and unconscious to observers."19
3. "Drug preparation involves
getting medication from six separate kits of 0.5 grams of powder, each of
which must be individually mixed with solution…The combination of several
thiopental kits and accompanying calculations are difficult tasks for those
who do not prepare drugs in their day-to-day, and can lead to an insufficient
dose." The thiopental packaging states "that the only people who should mix or
administer the sodium thiopental are those ‘trained and experienced in the
administration of intravenous anesthetics'…The EMTs and phlebotomists
responsible for mixing the thiopental in Kentucky have not been trained" in
this area.20
4. "IV problems" are an issue
because the Kentucky Department of Corrections' "execution protocol does not
specify the rate at which the chemicals are to be injected, or how to
determine that rate."21
5. IV infiltration may occur
if the catheter is not inserted completely into or goes through the vein. "If
undetected, infiltration can result in the delivery of insufficient thiopental
to induce general anesthesia, but sufficient pancuronium and potassium
chloride to paralyze and cause pain."22 Kentucky's protocol
requires the insertion of two catheters, with the warden, who likely has no
expertise in IV insertion, selecting which ones will actually be used.23
6. The facilities used to
carry out the protocol are inadequate.
7. Under Kentucky law (Ky Rev
Stat §311A:170), EMTs are permitted to function only under the direct
supervision of a doctor. Phlebotomists have no licensure requirements in
Kentucky.24
8. There is no provision for
the inmate to be monitored during the procedure.25
Pharmacy Issues and Analysis
Is this an
opportunity for pharmacists to apply their knowledge and insights about
medication alternatives to meet a stated objective? Is this akin to a
pharmacist's recommending a better medication for palliative care? The primary
objection to the method adopted and the combination of agents used appears to
be that the initial administration of the sodium thiopental does not eliminate
the negative sensations associated with the intended actions of the subsequent
two medications.
A number of provisions in the
American Pharmacists Association (APhA) Code of Ethics for Pharmacists have
potential application in situations similar to this.26 The code is
designed to provide guidance for practitioners rather than specifically
prescribe or proscribe their decisions and actions.27,28 Certainly,
there will be pharmacists who have strong objections to members of their
profession participating in this process, just as there are some physicians
who share that view. "Physicians and other health care providers should not be
involved in capital punishment, even in an advisory capacity. A profession
dedicated to healing the sick has no place in the process of execution."29
Perhaps an additional point for pharmacists
to consider is whether the mere act of providing the medications to be used
does not raise a similar level of objection, as would the more active
participation inherent in recommending the medications to be used. In at least
one state (North Carolina), the board of pharmacy has become embroiled in this
issue by initially ruling that physicians were prohibited from participating
in executions. This was challenged by the North Carolina Department of
Corrections, leading to a court ruling that state statutes prevailed over the
board's ruling.30
Does this approach to carrying out
executions represent a lawful application of legally available medications or
an unconstitutional invasion of an individual's rights? Will the Court want to
get into the quagmire of what medications should be used and how best to
administer them safely and effectively to achieve the intended outcome? We
will find out when the Supreme Court issues its decision later this year.
Adapted from a presentation at the American
Society for Pharmacy Law 33rd/APhA 155th Annual Meeting; March
15-17, 2008; San Diego, CA.
REFERENCES
1. The death
penalty in the U.S. (1976-2008). The Clark County Prosecuting Attorney.
www.clarkprosecutor.org/html/death/dpusa.htm. Accessed October 5, 2008.
2. Reed L. Nebraska
Supreme Court says electrocution unconstitutional. Omaha World-Herald.
February 8, 2008. www.omaha.com/index.php?u_page=2798&u_sid=10253709. Accessed
October 5, 2008.
3. New York's death
penalty law declared unconstitutional: People v. Stephen LaValle. Death
Penalty Information Center. July 8, 2004. www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/node/1199.
Accessed October 7, 2008.
4. Lethal injection.
www.capitalpunishmentuk.org/injection.html. Accessed October 7, 2008.
5. 217 SW3d 207 (Ky
2006), cert granted, 76 USLW 3154 (U.S. September 25, 2007)(No.
07-5439).
6. 99 U.S. 130 (1878).
7. Ky Rev Stat
§431.220(a)(1).
8. See note 6, supra.
9. 136 U.S. 436 (1890).
10. Methods of
execution. The Clark County Prosecuting Attorney.
www.clarkprosecutor.org/html/death/methods.htm. Accessed October 15, 2008.
11. Heckler v.
Chaney, et al., 470 U.S. 821 (1985).
12. See note 5, supra.
13. Ky Rev Stat
§431.220.
14. See note 5, supra.
15. Brief for the
Respondent, Baze and Bowling v. Rees, 217 SW3d 207 (Ky 2006), cert
granted, 76 USLW 3154 (U.S. September 25, 2007)(No. 07-5439).
16. See note 13, supra.
17. Brief for the
Petitioner, Baze and Bowling v. Rees, 217 SW3d 207 (Ky 2006), cert
granted, 76 USLW 3154 (U.S. September 25, 2007)(No. 07-5439).
18. See note 15, supra.
19. See note 17, p. 12.
20. See note 17, p.
12-13.
21. See note 17, p. 14.
22. Id.
23. See note 17, p. 15.
24. See note 17, p. 17.
25. See note 17, p. 19.
26. APhA. Code of
ethics for pharmacists.
www.pharmacist.com/AM/Template.cfm?Section=Search1&template=/CM/HTMLDisplay.cfm&ContentID=2903.
Accessed October 7, 2008.
27. Fink JL III.
Updating the code of ethics. Am Pharm. 1994;NS34:80.
28. Fink JL III. Ethics
and a code of ethics in pharmacy practice: special additional introduction.
In: White BD. Drugs, Ethics, and Quality of Life: Cases and Materials on
Ethical, Legal, and Public Policy Dilemmas in Medicine and Pharmacy Practice.
Binghamton, NY: The Haworth Press; 2007:7-12.
29. Curfman GD,
Morrissey S, Drazen JM. Physicians and execution. N Eng J Med. 2008;358:403-404.
30. Barksdale T. Doctors lose in
execution ruling. News & Observer. September 22, 2007.
www.newsobserver.com/politics/death_penalty/story/712556.html. Accessed
October 7, 2008.
To comment on this article, contact rdavidson@jobson.com.