WILLIAM P. BARR, ATTORNEY GENERAL, ET AL. v. DANIEL LEWIS LEE, ET AL.
No. 20A8
Supreme Court of the United States
July 14, 2020
591 U. S. ____ (2020)
ON APPLICATION FOR STAY OR VACATUR
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
PER CURIAM.
Thе application for stay or vacatur presented to THE CHIEF JUSTICE and by him referred to the Court is granted. The District Court‘s July 13, 2020 order granting a preliminary injunction is vacated.
The plaintiffs in this case are all federal prisoners who have been sentenced to death for murdering children. The plaintiffs committed their crimes decades ago and have long exhausted all avenues for direct and collateral review. The first of their executions was scheduled to take place this afternoon, with others to follow
Hours before the first execution was set to take place, the District Court preliminarily enjoined all four executions on the ground that the use of pentobarbital likely constitutes cruel and unusual punishment prohibited by the
- Has been adopted by five of the small number of States that currently implement the death penalty.
- Has been used to carry out over 100 executions, without incident.
- Has been repeatedly invoked by prisoners as a less painful and risky alternative to thе lethal injection protocols of other jurisdictions.
- Was upheld by this Court last year, as applied to a prisoner with a unique medical condition that could only have increased any baseline risk of pain associated with pentobarbital as а general matter. See Bucklew, 587 U. S. ____.
- Has been upheld by numerous Courts of Appeals against
Eighth Amendment challenges similar to the one presented here. See, e.g., Whitaker v. Collier, 862 F. 3d 490 (CA5 2017); Zink v. Lombardi, 783 F. 3d 1089 (CA8 2015); Gissendaner v. Commissioner, 779 F. 3d 1275 (CA11 2015).
Against this backdrop, the plaintiffs cite new expert declarations suggesting that pentobarbital causes prisoners to experience “flash pulmonary edema,” a form of respiratory distress that temporarily produces the sensation of drowning or asphyxiation. But the Government has produced competing expert testimony of its own, indicating that any pulmonary edema occurs only after the prisoner has died or been rendered fully insensate. The plaintiffs in this case have not made the showing required to justify last-minute intervention by a Federal Court. “Last-minute stays” like that issued this morning “should be the extreme exception, not the norm.” Bucklew, 587 U. S., at ____ (slip op., at 30). It is our responsibility “to ensure that method-of-execution challenges to lawfully issued sentеnces are resolved fairly and expeditiously,” so that “the question of capital punishment” can remain with “the people and their representatives, not the courts, to resolve.” Id., at ____ (slip op., at 29-30). In keeping with that responsibility, we vacate the
It is so ordered.
JUSTICE BREYER, with whom JUSTICE GINSBURG joins, dissenting.
Today, for the first time in 17 years, the Federal Government will execute an inmate, Daniel Lewis Lee. I have previously described how various features оf the death penalty as currently administered show that it may well violate the Constitution. See Glossip v. Gross, 576 U. S. 863, 908-946 (2015) (dissenting opinion). The Federal Government‘s decision to resume executions renders the question of the death penalty‘s constitutionality yet more pressing.
Given the finаlity and seriousness of a death sentence, it is particularly important to ensure that the individuals sentenced to death are guilty, that they received full and fair procedures, and that they do not spend excessively long periods of time on death row. Courts must also ensure that executions take place through means that are not inhumane.
This case illustrates at least some of the problems the death penalty raises in light of the Constitution‘s prohibition against “cruel and unusual punishmen[t].”
Moreover, there are significant questions regarding the constitutionality of the method the Federal Government will use to execute him. The Government announced on July 25, 2019, that it plаnned to resume federal executions, after nearly two decades, pursuant to a new single-drug protocol using pentobarbital. See Press Release, Dept. of Justice, Federal Government to Resume Capital Punishment After Nearly Two Decade Lapse, https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/federal-government-resume-capital-punishment-after-nearly-two-decade-lapse.
In an opinion preliminarily enjoining the execution of Mr. Lee and three other plaintiffs, the U. S. District Court for the District of Cоlumbia explained that the “scientific evidence before [it] overwhelmingly indicates that the [Government‘s] 2019 Protocol is very likely to cause Plaintiffs extreme pain and needless suffering during their executions.” Memorandum Opinion in No. 19-mc-145, In the Matter of the Federal Bureau of Prison‘s Execution Protocol Cases, Doc. 135, pp. 9, 11 (July 13, 2020). That court also explained that Mr. Lee and the other plaintiffs had “identified two available and readily implementable alternative methods of execution that would significantly reduce the risk of serious pain.” Id., at 18.
In short, the rеsumption of federal executions promises to provide examples that illustrate the difficulties of administering the death penalty consistent with the Constitution. As I have previously written, the solution may be for this Court to directly examine the question whether the deаth
JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR, with whom JUSTICE GINSBURG and JUSTICE KAGAN join, dissenting.
The Court hastily disposes of respondents’
I
Respondents’ original complaint in this case dates back to 2005. Since then, the Government has modified its execution protocol in significant part, most recently in July 2019 when it replaced the three-drug protocol with a single drug: pentobarbital sodium. App. to Application for Stay or Vacatur 5a. In light of this change, respondents alleged that the Government‘s planned use of pentobarbital could result in needless pain and suffering in violation of the
On June 15, 2020, the Govеrnment announced respondents’ new execution dates. Four days later, respondents filed a joint motion for a preliminary injunction on their remaining claims and filed a motion for expedited discovery the following day. The parties submitted hundreds of pages of briefing and exhibits over two weeks. The District Court decided this record-heavy motion within two weeks, and during a time when two sister courts independently stayed two of the executions. The District Court evaluated respondents’
II
That outcome is hard to square with this Court‘s denial of a similar request by the
These statements now ring hollow. By overriding the lower court‘s stay, this Court forecloses any review of respondents’
III
Once again, the Court has chosen to grant an emergency application from the Government for extraordinary relief. Wolf v. Cook County, 589 U. S. ____ (2020) (SOTOMAYOR, J., dissenting from grant of stay) (slip op., at 5). The dangers of that practice are particularly severe here, where the grant of the Government‘s emergency application inflicts the most irreparable of harms without the deliberation such an action warrants. See id., at ____ (slip op., at 6) (entertaining last-minute stay аpplications from the Government “upend[s] the normal appellate process” and “force[s] the Court to consider important statutory and constitutional questions that have not been ventilated fully in the lower courts, on abbreviated timetables and without oral argument“).
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Today‘s decision illustrates just how grave the consequences of such accelerated decisionmaking can be. The Court forever deprives respondents of their ability to press a constitutional challenge to their lethal injections, and prevents lower courts from reviewing that challenge. All of that is at sharp odds with this Court‘s own ruling mere months earlier. In its hurry to resolve the Government‘s emergency motions, I fear the Court has overlooked not only its prior ruling, but also its role in safeguarding robust federal judicial review. I respectfully dissent.
