Lead Opinion
ORDER DENYING REQUEST FOR STAY OF EXECUTION AND SETTING EXECUTION DATE
{1 James Patrick Malicoat was tried by jury and convicted of First Degree Murder
T2 Malicoat filed an Objection to Setting of an Execution Date on June 5, 2006.
13 The State urges this Court to either disregard Malicoat's pleading as improper or apply the doctrine of waiver. This Court has not yet had an opportunity to rule on this issue.
T 4 In support of his claim, Malicoat offers this Court affidavits from the Warden of the Oklahoma State Penitentiary, and an Assistant Professor of Clinical Anesthesiology in the Department of Anesthesiolgy at Columbia University, New York. He also provides the Court with the Oklahoma Department of Corrections Procedures for Execution, a portion of a 2000 Report on the American Veterinary Medical Association Panel on Euthana
T5 Oklahoma's execution protocol, requiring lethal injection, is established by statute: "The punishment of death must be inflicted by continuous, intravenous administration of a lethal quantity of an ultrashort-acting barbiturate in combination with a chemical paralytic agent until death is pronounced by a licensed physician according to accepted standards of medical practice."
16 Malicoat fails to show that this protocol is facially unconstitutional. The Eighth Amendment prohibits cruel and unusual punishment.
T7 Malicoat argues that the protocol is unconstitutional because mistakes may be made in its application, and if mistakes are made during his execution, he will suffer a cruel and unusual death contrary to the Eighth Amendment. Dr. Heath's Affidavit lists fourteen potential areas in which mistakes may be made in the preparation or administration of the drugs.
All of these are potential problems during the lethal injection protocol, just as they are potential problems during any surgical procedure. As a society, however, we do not ban surgery because of these potential problems. We take appropriate precautions and rely upon adequate training, skill, and care in doing the job.27
T8 Malicoat claims that Oklahoma compounds the possibility of mistakes by allowing insufficiently licensed or trained persons to carry out executions. He argues that these mistakes could be avoided if Oklahoma required executions to be carried out by persons with special medical training. Dr. Heath suggests that appropriately trained persons include nurses, emergency medical technicians, physicians, dentists, veterinarians, and physician's assistants.
T9 Malicoat provides anectodal evidence, in the form of a newspaper article and Dr. Heath's Affidavit, that defendants may not have been unconscious in previous recent executions. Dr. Heath describes several eyewitness accounts of executions in which the defendant's body continued to move or convulse after sodium thiopental was injected. In his opinion, these accounts are "inconsistent with the successful administration of a large dose of pentothal."
T10 This Court does not intend to denigrate Malicoat's anecdotal examples of potential problems with executions in Oklahoma. We have previously noted that some eyewitness accounts of irregularities in past executions may create cause for concern.
{11 Although this is an issue of first impression in Oklahoma, other jurisdictions have considered and rejected similar claims.
T 12 IT IS SO ORDERED.
113 WITNESS OUR HANDS AND THE SEAL OF THIS COURT this 19th day of June, 2006.
Notes
. Malicoat v. State,
. Malicoat v. State, No. PC-1999-1289 (Okl.Cr. Feb. 1, 2000). Malicoat did not file a petition for writ of certiorari challenging this opinion in the United States Supreme Court.
. Malicoat v. Mullin,
. The State filed a Response on June 9, 2006. Malicoat filed a Reply to the State's Response on June 9, 2005.
. We have found that lethal injection is not cruel and unusual punishment, but have not specifically discussed Oklahoma's particular method of execution. Jones v. State,
. 22 0.$.2001, § 1089(8). By statute, this Court has original jurisdiction over capital appellate filings after the direct appeal has ended.
. 20 0.$.2001, § 3001.1; Valdez v. State,
. 22 0.8.2001, § 1014; Oklahoma Department of Corrections Procedures for the Execution of Inmates Sentenced to Death VII(B), OP-040301, Effective Date 4/8/05 (Exhibit C).
. Affidavit of Warden Mike Mullin, 15 (Exhibit A).
. Affidavit of Warden Mike Mullin, 18 (Exhibit A).
. Affidavit of Warden Mike Mullin, % 19 (Exhibit A).
. Affidavit of Warden Mike Mullin, 111 (Exhibit A). Malicoat claims that under the Oklahoma process nobody assures that the defendant is unconscious before the vecuronium bromide and potassium chloride are administered. [Appellant's Response at 2] This assertion is unsupported by any materials before this Court, and appears to be contradicted by the presence of the monitoring physician.
. Affidavit of Warden Mike Mullin, 11 6, 12 (Exhibit A).
. Affidavit of Warden Mike Mullin, §13, 15 (Exhibit A).
. Affidavit of Warden Mike Mullin, 113, 15 (Exhibit A). A total of 2400 milligrams, or 2.4 grams, of sodium thiopental is administered throughout the procedure. Malicoat mistakenly claims in his reply brief that only 1200 milligrams are used.
. Affidavit of Warden Mike Mullin, 1 20 (Exhibit A).
. Affidavit of Warden Mike Mullin, 1 17 (Exhibit A).
. U.S. Const. amend. VHI
. Roper v. Simmons,
. Roper,
. Gregg,
. Affidavit of Dr. Mark Heath, §5 (Exhibit D).
. Affidavit of Dr. Mark Heath, 16 (Exhibit D). He also states, "The successful administration of a large dose of pentothal causes the rapid onset of deep unconsciousness." Affidavit, 112. Dr. Heath does not state the amount of sodium thio-pental he considers sufficient to cause rapid unconsciousness in the affidavit before the Court. Dr. Heath testified before a Tennessee court that two grams would cause unconsciousness, and five grams would almost certainly be fatal. Abdur'Rahman v. Bredesen,
. The Tennessee and Connecticut Supreme Courts have noted that lethal injection is thought to be the most humane form of execution. Abdur'Rahman,
. Jones,
. Affidavit of Dr. Mark Heath, 1 8, (a-n) (Exhibit D).,
. Ex Parte Aguilar,
. State v. Webb,
. Affidavit of Dr. Mark Heath, 19 (Exhibit D).
. Affidavit of Dr. Mark Heath, 19 10, 11 (Exhibit D).
. Affidavit of Dr. Mark Heath, 1% 12 (Exhibit D). Dr. Heath also suggests that post-execution autopsy reports of sodium pentothal blood concentration levels in North Carolina defendants, some of which were low, may be helpful in determining whether sodium thiopental is appropriately administered. Dr. Heath's brief description of these report results, and their complete inapplicability to Oklahoma procedure, make them less than helpful to this Court.
. Murphy,
. Ex Parte Aguilar,
. Abdur'Rahman,
. The United States Supreme Court recently held that state capital prisoners may bring civil federal suits, claiming that lethal injection procedures are cruel and unusual for reasons similar to Malicoat's, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Hill v. McDonough, - U.S. --,
Concurrence Opinion
concur in Part/Dissent in part:
T1 I concur in the decision to deny the request for a stay of execution and, in a proper proceeding, the finding that Oklahoma's execution protocol is constitutional. However, I disagree with the way in which this result was reached and question as to whether it is properly before the Court. Initially, I would not treat Appellant's claim as a subsequent post-conviction application. Under 22 0.98.2001, $ 1089(D)(8) Appellant's claim is waived as he cannot show the claim could not have been presented to this Court previously. Failure to adhere to statutory requirements, as well as this Court's own Rules, creates inconsistency and brings into question the validity of the Court's opinions.
T2 Further, I find taking the attached affidavits as evidence troublesome. Affidavits are ex parte supplementations of the record. This Court reviews affidavits only to determine whether the threshold showing of clear and convicting evidence as been met to warrant an evidentiary hearing. See Bland v. State,
13 Additionally, I find Appellant's request to be spared the imposition of his legally imposed punishment because it might cause him to suffer or experience pain unpersuasive (and rather fronic) as his murderous acts
