James Patrick MALICOAT, Appellant v. STATE of Oklahoma, Appellee.
No. D-1998-151.
Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma.
June 19, 2006.
2006 OK CR 25 | 137 P.3d 1234
¶1 James Patrick Malicoat was tried by jury and convicted of First Degree Murder
¶2 Malicoat filed an Objection to Setting of an Execution Date on June 5, 2006.4 Malicoat claims that Oklahoma‘s lethal injection protocol violates the Eighth Amendment prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment. He argues that the state‘s execution procedure creates a substantial risk that he will consciously suffer or experience excruciating pain during the execution process. Malicoat claims that mistakes made during the execution process itself might lead to drug administration failure, causing pain and suffering. He claims that Oklahoma‘s failure to require specially trained medical personnel heightens the likelihood that such mistakes will be committed. Malicoat also claims that the drugs used in the execution protocol themselves cause pain and suffering and violate the Eighth Amendment. Malicoat notes that pending litigation in the federal courts challenges Oklahoma‘s execution protocol, and asks this Court to stay any execution date until that litigation has been resolved.
¶3 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.5 We treat Malicoat‘s substantive claim, that to set an execution date would subject him to cruel and unusual punishment, as a subsequently filed application for capital post-conviction relief.6 If Malicoat‘s claim is correct, then his legal sentence will be carried out in an illegal manner, substantially violating both the United States and Oklahoma constitutions. This Court has the authority to consider the merits of an issue which may so gravely offend a defendant‘s constitutional rights and constitute a miscarriage of justice.7 In the interests of justice, and considering the importance of the principle of finality of sentences, we reach the merits of Malicoat‘s claim and deny his request to stay his execution date.
¶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 Anesthesiology 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-
¶5 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.”8 The specific method of execution is determined by Department of Corrections. The Department of Corrections developed the method of execution currently in use after consultation with medical professionals in the Oklahoma Medical Examiner‘s Office and the Department of Corrections Pharmacy, and after reviewing procedures used in other states.9 The process is described in Exhibit A to Malicoat‘s Objection, an Affidavit by Warden Mullin. Since 2003, the Department of Corrections has administered sodium thiopental, vecuronium bromide, and potassium chloride in the execution process.10 All personnel involved in the execution process have had extensive training and experience in the execution procedures.11 Throughout the execution, a licensed physician is present in the execution chamber to monitor the defen-
¶6 Malicoat fails to show that this protocol is facially unconstitutional. The Eighth Amendment prohibits cruel and unusual punishment.18 Whether a punishment is considered cruel and unusual is viewed through “the evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a maturing society.”19 We look at whether the punishment at issue is proportionate to the offense, offends contemporary standards of decency, and has legitimate punishment objectives.20 Punishment is cruel and unusual when it
¶7 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.26 Many of these involve human error, including failure to properly mix the drugs, mislabeling, errors in insertion of equipment, and errors in administering the drugs. Some involve mechanical or equipment failure. Some potential mistakes on the list involve equipment which may or may not be used in Oklahoma executions. As Judge Cochran of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has said, regarding a similar affidavit Dr. Heath prepared in a case for that Court,
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
The State of Oklahoma has developed a particular execution protocol, requiring trained personnel including a licensed physician and licensed medical personnel. The Department of Corrections provides training in the execution process for all persons involved in carrying out the procedures. We agree with the Supreme Court of Connecticut that an execution process “cannot foreclose the possibility of human error, that always accompanies any human endeavor,” and that the “risk of accident cannot and need not be eliminated from the execution process in order to survive constitutional review.”28
¶9 Malicoat provides anecdotal 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.”31 There is no way for this Court to determine, years after those executions, whether eyewitness reports of movement were accurate or signified anything with regard to those defendants’ conscious or unconscious state. This Court similarly cannot determine whether mistakes may be made in future executions. Once again, this Court will not speculate on whether mistakes may have been made in past executions. The question before us is whether Oklahoma‘s execution protocol is constitutional, and we have found that it is.
¶10 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.32 We again express our confidence that the Department of Corrections will continue to monitor and revise the execution protocol as may be necessary to ensure a swift, painless and humane execution. However, these expressions of concern and confidence regarding the process do not undermine our legal
¶11 Although this is an issue of first impression in Oklahoma, other jurisdictions have considered and rejected similar claims.33 After a lengthy analysis the Tennessee Supreme Court concluded, “we cannot judge the lethal injection protocol based solely on speculation as to problems or mistakes that might occur. We must instead examine the lethal injection protocol as it exists today.”34 We agree. Doing so, we have found that Oklahoma‘s execution protocol is not cruel and unusual. We recognize that this issue is being litigated separately in the federal court system. However, Malicoat is not entitled to a stay of execution while that litigation is pending.35 Malicoat‘s execution date is set for Tuesday, August 22, 2006.
¶12 IT IS SO ORDERED.
¶13 WITNESS OUR HANDS AND THE SEAL OF THIS COURT this 19th day of June, 2006.
/s/ Charles S. Chapel
CHARLES S. CHAPEL, Presiding Judge
/s/ Gary L. Lumpkin, CIP/DIP
GARY L. LUMPKIN, Vice Presiding Judge
/s/ Charles A. Johnson
CHARLES A. JOHNSON, Judge
/s/ Arlene Johnson
ARLENE JOHNSON, Judge
/s/ David B. Lewis
DAVID B. LEWIS, Judge
LUMPKIN, Vice-Presiding Judge, concur in Part/Dissent in part:
¶1 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
¶2 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 convincing evidence has been met to warrant an evidentiary hearing. See Bland v. State, 2000 OK CR 11, ¶¶ 115 & 121, 4 P.3d 702, 731-32. The assertions in affidavits have not been tested in an adversary proceeding and they are not a part of the record of evidence before the Court.
¶3 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 ironic) as his murderous acts
