EARLENE BRANCH PETERSON, KIMMA GUREL, and MONICA VEILLETTE, Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. WILLIAM P. BARR, Attorney General of the United States, MICHAEL CARVAJAL, and T. J. WATSON, Warden, Defendants-Appellants.
No. 20-2252
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
SUBMITTED JULY 11, 2020 — DECIDED JULY 12, 2020
Before SYKES, Chief Judge, and EASTERBROOK and BARRETT, Circuit Judges.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, Terre Haute Division. No. 2:20-cv-00350-JMS-DLP — Jane Magnus-Stinson, Chief Judge.
In 1999 a federal jury in the Eastern District of Arkansas convicted Lee of three counts of capital murder in aid of racketeering,
On July 7, 2020, three family members of the victims filed a complaint in the Southern District of Indiana seeking to enjoin the BOP from carrying out Lee’s execution. The plaintiffs—Earlene Peterson, agе 81 (Nancy’s mother); Kimma Gurel, age 61 (Nancy’s sister); and Monica Veillette, age 43 (Nancy’s niece)—want to attend the execution even though they oppose it. The Warden has authorized them to be witnesses, but they object to the BOP’s decision to carry оut the execution during the COVID-19 pandemic. They raise health concerns due to age, underlying medical conditions, the need to travel interstate to reach the Terre Haute prison, and the current degree of COVID-19 spread throughout the country. They seek to delay the execution until the pandemic is suppressed by widespread vaccination or effective treatment. The suit names the Attorney General, the BOP Director, and the Warden as defendants; we refer to them collectively as “the government.” The plaintiffs allege that the agency’s decision to schedule Lee’s execution for July 13 failed to adequately account for the effect of the pandemic on their right to attend and thus is arbitrary, capricious, and contrary tо law in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”),
Late in the day on Friday, July 10, a district judge in the Southern District of Indiana issued a preliminarily injunction enjoining the defendants “from carrying out the execution of
The government immediately appealed and sought a stay from the district court. That request was promptly denied. On Saturday morning, July 11, the government filed an emergency motion asking us to summarily stay or vacate the preliminary injunction. We ordered a response from the plaintiffs by 6 p.m. CDT. They complied. The government filed a reply late last night.
We vacate the preliminary injunction. The plaintiffs’ APA claim lаcks any arguable legal basis and is therefore frivolous.
First, the challenged agency action—setting a date for execution—may not be judicially reviewable at all. The APA does not permit judicial review of an action “committed to agency discretion by law.”
As relevant here, the Federal Death Penalty Act directs that “[a] person who has been sentenced to death” must be “committed to the custody of the Attorney General until exhaustion of the procedures for appeal of the judgment of conviction and for review of the sentence.”
The applicable regulations delegate broad discretion to the BOP Director to set execution dates:
(a) Except to the extent a court orders otherwise, a sentencе of death shall be executed:
(1) On a date and at a time designated by the Director of the Federal Bureau of Prisons, which date shall be no sooner that 60 days from the entry of the judgment of death. If the date designated for execution passes by reason of a stay of execution, then a new date shall be designated promptly by the Director … when the stay is lifted.
Another regulation provides:
Except to the extent a court orders otherwise:
(a) The Warden of the designated institution shall notify the prisoner under sentence of death of the date designated for execution at least 20 days in advance, except when the date follows a postponement of fewer than 20 days of a previously scheduled and noticed date of execution, in which case the Warden shall notify the prisoner as soon as possible.
Pеrhaps the minimal constraints imposed by these regulatory requirements—the 60-day postjudgment waiting period and the 20-day notice to the prisoner—are enough to preclude a conclusion that the BOP Director’s scheduling decisions are entirely unreviewable under
The plaintiffs’ claim is frivolous for another reason: they have no statutory or regulatory right to attend the execution. Judicial review under the APA is limited to persons who are “adversely affected or aggriеved by agency action within the meaning of a relevant statute.”
The plaintiffs cannot satisfy this basic requirement. No federal statute or regulation gives them a right to attend Lee’s execution. Needless to say, executions are not public proceedings. The Federal Death Penalty Act makes no mention of witnesses, whether members of the victims’ family or others. In their complaint and motion for a preliminary injunction, the plaintiffs relied on the following regulation:
(c) In addition to the Marshal and Warden, the following persons shall be present at the execution:
(1) Necessary personnel selected by the Marshal and Warden;
(2) Those attorneys of the Department of Justice whom the Deputy Attorney General determines are necessary;
(3) Not more than the following numbers of person[s] selected by the prisoner:
(i) One spiritual adviser;
(ii) Two defense attorneys; and
(iii) Three adult friends or relatives; and
(4) Not more than the following numbers of persons selected by the Warden:
(i) Eight citizens; and
(ii) Ten representatives of the press.
(d) No other person shall be present at the execution, unless leave for such person’s presence is granted by the Director of the Federal Bureau of Prisons. No person younger than 18 years of age shall witness the execution.
The plaintiffs argued below that subsection (c)(4)(i) of
Indeed, the district judge did not credit this argument. Instead, she developed her own theory of the case. Setting aside the impropriety of this maneuver, see United States v. Sineneng-Smith, 140 S. Ct. 1575, 1582 (2020), the judge’s theory is no more viable than the one raised by the plaintiffs.
Recall that the Federal Death Penalty Act provides that an execution shall be implemented “in the manner prescribed by the law of the [s]tate in which the sentence is imposed,”
By its terms,
Nothing in any of the separate opinions in Execution Protocol Cases supports the judge’s conclusion that
In short, section 16-90-502(e)(1) of the Arkansas Code, the provision governing execution witnesses, is irrelevant here. The judge was wrong to insert it into this case.
INJUNCTION VACATED
