Lead Opinion
ORDER
Pursuant to the rules applicable to capital cases in which an execution date has been scheduled, a deadline was established
A majority of the non-recused active judges did not vote in favor of rehearing en banc. Therefore, the panel’s order is the final order of this Court. A copy of the panel order, along with a copy of the district court order to which it refers is attached. Also attached is a dissent from the order denying rehearing en banc and a concurrence in the order.
No further petitions for rehearing or rehearing en banc will be entertained as to the order. The previously issued temporary stay of execution is VACATED. Before: O’SCANNLAIN, GRABER, and McKEOWN, Circuit Judges.
ORDER
Donald Beaty is scheduled to be executed by the State of Arizona today, Wednesday, May 25, 2011. Earlier today, the district court denied Beaty’s Motion for Temporary Restraining Order or Preliminary Injunction. Beaty subsequently filed, in this court, an Emergency Motion Under Circuit Rule 27-3 for an Injunction.
To obtain preliminary injunctive relief, a plaintiff must demonstrate (1) that he is likely to succeed on the merits of such a claim, (2) that he is likely to suffer irreparable harm in the absence of preliminary relief, (3) that the balance of equities tips in his favor, and (4) that an injunction is in the public interest. See Winter v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc.,
Accordingly, Beaty’s motion is DENIED.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting from the denial of rehearing en banc,
Rushing to execute Donald Beaty under the circumstances before us is unconscionable. At 4:00 p.m. yesterday, a mere eighteen hours before the State was scheduled to execute him, Arizona announced that, due to concerns about the legality of its importation of the drug constitutionally approved for use in its three-drug protocol, it would switch to a new drug that it had never tested and that its executioners had not been trained to use.
The issue before us is not the substantive one of whether substituting drug A for drug B is “very likely” to cause needless suffering. It is the question of procedural due process: whether an individual may be executed pursuant to a protocol substituted for the established means of execution, eighteen hours before the scheduled time of execution and without sufficient opportunity even to present his constitutional objections.
The last-minute action in this case, unlike those previously condemned by the Supreme Court, was taken by the State not the individual about to be executed. Normally, we count against a condemned man seeking a stay “the extent to which the inmate has delayed unnecessarily in bringing the claim.” Nelson v. Campbell,
Due Process demands more. “The fundamental requisite of due process of law is the opportunity to be heard. This right to be heard has little reality or worth unless one is informed that the matter is pending .... ” Mullane v. Cent. Hanover Bank & Trust Co.,
Beaty has a right to reasonable notice of changes or variations to the mode and manner in which the State plans to carry out his execution in order to review it and ensure that it comports with constitutional requirements. He has a protected interest in knowing and being given an opportunity to be heard about the State’s use of pentobarbital in his execution, in contrast to its protocol in past executions. Were it otherwise, the capital defendant’s due process right to review such protocols would be meaningless.
The panel denied relief because Beaty failed to demonstrate certain factual matters regarding the new protocol. Yet, we cannot fault him for failing to do so in less than a single day. To require such a showing in the eighteen hours before execution is to deny Beaty due process. The Winter v. Natural Resources Defense Council
We err not only by concluding that Beaty will not suffer irreparable injury, a rather odd proposition to say the least, but by failing to recognize that the judicial system itself will as well. This is not the first time there has been a rush to judgment in a capital case, nor the first time there has been an unwillingness to provide due process to a capital defendant. Our conduct in this case, as in others, will certainly weaken even further the diminishing public confidence in the administration of the death penalty.
Notes
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Concurrence Opinion
with whom
Judge Reinhardt and those who join him fault this Court for failing to further delay the inevitable. They fault us for not giving Donald Beaty yet another opportunity to delay the just punishment he has been resisting for more than twenty-six years. Admittedly, we, like the district court, are
Judge Reinhardt argues that the “issue is not the substantive one of whether substituting drug A or drug B is ‘very likely’ to cause needless suffering.” Not so. Though “the right to procedural due process is ‘absolute,’ ” it is not unmeasured. Carey v. Piphus,
Had Beaty raised a claim of significant merit, the “risk of error” would have risen and so, too, would the degree of process necessary to satisfy any constitutional concern. However, Beaty did not raise such a claim. To the contrary, Beaty not only failed to provide any factual support for his claim, cf. Brewer v. Landrigan, 562 U.S.-,
Indeed, the Tenth Circuit approved a virtually identical procedure after allowing the inmate to pursue discovery, introduce an expert report, and hold an evidentiary hearing. See Pavatt v. Jones,
Furthermore, the factual underpinnings of this claim were reviewed by the Arizona Supreme Court, the Arizona District Court, and the Ninth Circuit itself. This process was constitutionally sufficient and firmly resolved any lingering substantive question of the merit of Beaty’s claim. Both the district court, and our three-judge panel, applied the Winter factors to conclude that Beaty had not met his burden of entitlement to injunctive relief. Winter v. Natural Res. Def. Council,
Judge Reinhardt suggests that the timing constraints at issue in this situation should prohibit Winter’s application, but he cites nothing to support that novel proposition.
To the contrary, the Supreme Court has instructed that “a plaintiff seeking a preliminary injunction must establish that he is likely to succeed on the merits, that he is likely to suffer irreparable harm in the absence of preliminary relief, that the balance of equities tips in his favor, and that an injunction is in the public interest.” Id. at 374 (emphasis added); see also Hill v. McDonough,
The Supreme Court has instructed that an injunction is an “extraordinary and drastic remedy,” Munaf v. Geren,
Were we to countenance such untimely hypothetical arguments, we would simply encourage collateral litigation, embroiling us in scientific controversies beyond our expertise and intruding on legislative and executive prerogative in providing for humane methods of execution. See id. at 51,
ORDER
May 27, 2011.
The Amended Order dated May 25, 2011, is amended to include the attached concurrence by Chief Judge Kozinski and the additional dissent by Judge Reinhardt.
Concurrence Opinion
with whom
Because I decided not to delay further the order denying en banc rehearing, I did not file a concurral on the day of the execution. Nevertheless, I believe it’s important to lay out an argument that I found very persuasive when voting on the en banc call. By the time Beaty asked for a stay, his claim — that the state violated his constitutional rights by substituting pentobarbital for sodium thiopental as the first drug in its three-drug execution protocol — had already been rejected by two other courts of appeals. The Tenth Circuit approved a protocol virtually identical to Arizona’s after allowing the inmate to conduct discovery, submit an expert report and participate in an evidentiary hearing. See Pavatt v. Jones,
While these out-of-circuit cases aren’t controlling, I found it significant that the factual and legal issues in Beaty’s claim had been fully considered by these courts. Indeed, the inmate in the Eleventh Circuit had about a month’s notice of the planned drug substitution, yet the best evidence he could produce was the same expert report the Tenth Circuit had rejected. See Powell,
Dissenting Opinion
additional dissent from the denial of rehearing en banc:
Chief Judge Kozinski finds it “very persuasive” that two circuits have approved the use of the three-drug protocol that Arizona adopted less than twenty-four hours before the scheduled execution. Again, I find it necessary to express my disagreement.
Conflicts among circuits are common. Indeed, one of the principal reasons for the Supreme Court to hear cases is to resolve the numerous conflicts among circuits. See Sup.Ct. R. 10. That other circuits have taken a position on a constitutional question does not relieve us of the responsibility to make a full and independent judgment ourselves. This is the Ninth Circuit, not the Tenth or Eleventh, and our views sometimes differ from those of other circuits. See, e.g., United States v. Gaudin,
This is a death penalty, not a slip-and-fall case. We have no greater duty than to decide such cases fairly and properly. Constitutional challenges often turn on their facts. We will never know whether with more time Beaty could have successfully pleaded sufficient facts to satisfy the district court or the three judges of this court to whom the case was assigned that a stay was warranted.
When the State has created a constitutional issue by changing the method of execution only eighteen hours before that ultimate and irreversible act is to take place, we must permit the person to be executed adequate time to prepare his challenge. That did not happen here. As a result, Beaty was deprived of due process, and we as a court were compelled to fall back on inadequate arguments such as those advanced by Chief Judge Kozinski,
