We have before us a motion filed by the State of Florida, through the Secretary of its Department of Corrections, asking that we vacate a stay of execution the district court entered early yesterday afternoon on behalf of Mark Dean Schwab. That court entered the stay in response to Schwab’s emergency motion for one in connection with his last-minute filing of a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 lawsuit challenging the manner in which the state’s lethal injection procedures are designed and carried out.
1
The district court made it clear that the Supreme Court’s grant of certiorari in
Baze v. Rees,
- U.S.-,
The district court’s action in granting the stay is contrary to the unequivocal law of this circuit that, because grants of certiorari do not themselves change the law, they must not be used by courts of this circuit as a basis for granting a stay of execution that would otherwise be denied.
Rutherford v. Crosby,
The district court’s belief that “the fact that the Supreme Court has elected to grant review in [the Baze] case suggests that [Schwab] faces the prospect of a significant possibility of success on the merits of his claims,” Schwab, No. 6:07ev1798, at 6, is simply wrong. The grant of certiorari on an issue does not suggest a view on the merits. We don’t know how the Supreme Court is going to decide the issues on which it has granted review in the Baze case, and the Supreme Court itself probably does not know given the fact that briefing has not even been completed in that case.
Even if we were permitted to sweep aside binding circuit law based on our speculation about what the Supreme Court may decide in another case and our conjecture about how that decision might affect the case in front of us, we have no reason to believe that the
Baze
decision will enhance Schwab’s prospects for relief in this case. In his state court proceeding raising the same issues as he raises here, Schwab relied entirely on the evidence introduced in the related
Lightbourne v. McCollum,
The first issue the Supreme Court granted certiorari to decide in the
Baze
case is whether the proper standard for judging this type of Eighth Amendment claim was substantial risk of wanton infliction of pain, as the Kentucky Supreme Court held, or unnecessary risk of pain, which is the standard Baze is urging.
Baze,
The second issue the Supreme Court granted certiorari to decide in the
Baze
case is whether a means for carrying out an execution violates the Eighth Amendment if there are readily available alternatives that pose less risk of pain and suffering.
Baze,
There is another reason that the decision in Baze is unlikely to increase Schwab’s likelihood for success. Florida’s statute providing lethal injection as an alternative to electrocution was enacted more than seven and a half years ago. Schwab’s petition for a federal writ of ha-beas corpus was denied two years ago, and we affirmed that denial seventeen months ago. Four months ago the Governor signed a warrant setting Schwab’s execution date for November 15, 2007. Yet Schwab did not file his § 1983 petition challenging Florida’s lethal injection procedures until 4:58 p.m. on November 13, 2007, just two days before his scheduled execution.
As the district court noted: “Turning to the subject of Plaintiffs diligence, certainly an argument can be made that he delayed too long in bringing this suit. Ordinarily, that consideration alone might warrant denial of a stay.”
Schwab,
No. 6:07cv1798, at 6. That observation understates the law of this circuit concerning the extent to which laches-like considerations may bar relief in this type of case.
See Williams v. Allen,
The district court pointed out two cases involving lethal injection challenges in which the Supreme Court has granted stays of execution since its grant of certiorari in the
Baze
case.
Berry v. Epps,
No. 07-7348,
The Supreme Court instructed us in
Nelson
that even in a capital case a stay is an equitable remedy which must take into account the State’s strong interest in proceeding with its judgment, that consideration must be given not only to the likelihood of success on the merits but also to the extent to which the inmate has delayed unnecessarily in bringing his claim.
In this case, for the reasons the Florida Supreme Court explained in the Lightb-oume case, Schwab does not have a substantial likelihood of success on the merits of his claim. The interest of the State of Florida and the victim’s family in seeing that Schwab’s sentence is carried out without further delay is substantial, and he did delay unnecessarily in bringing his claim, which is why this order is being issued on the morning of the day of the scheduled execution.
*1302 The district court’s order staying the execution is VACATED.
Notes
. On July 18, 2007, the Governor of Florida signed an execution warrant setting November 15, 2007 as the execution date. Schwab did not file his § 1983 lawsuit until 4:58 p.m. on November 13, 2007.
. The recent decision in
Siebert v. Allen,
