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Judge rules Oklahoma’s lethal injection method is constitutional following a legal challenge from dozens of death row prisoners

By Elizabeth Wolfe, Amanda Musa and Raja Razek, CNN

Oklahoma’s use of a three-drug lethal injection method is constitutional, a federal judge ruled Monday following a lawsuit from nearly 30 people on death row challenging the protocol.

The suit, brought on behalf of 28 death row prisoners, named officials with multiple Oklahoma corrections agencies and claimed the state’s lethal injection method violates the Eighth Amendment because it causes “constitutionally impermissible pain and suffering,” according to the ruling.

In a judgment filed Monday, Judge Stephen Friot of the US District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma ruled against the prisoners and upheld the constitutionality of the method.

Ultimately, Friot ruled the prisoners’ attorneys fell “well short of clearing the bar set by the Supreme Court” for lethal injection challenges.

The state’s lethal injection protocol uses a combination of the drugs midazolam as a sedative, vecuronium bromide as a paralytic, and potassium chloride to stop the heart.

Friot described a “battle of the experts” during the week-long trial earlier this year, in which testifying experts frequently and strongly contradicted one another.

“Rarely, in any field of litigation, does a court see and hear well-qualified expert witnesses giving expert testimony as squarely–and emphatically– contradictory, on the issues at the heart of the matter, as this case,” Friot wrote in a statement of facts filed Monday.

During the trial, the court considered four recent state executions, including the October 2021 execution of John Grant. A media witness to Grant’s execution said at the time that he convulsed and vomited immediately after receiving a dose of midazolam.

While examining why Grant may have vomited, Friot cited the speed of administering such a large dose as a possible reason, noting manufacturer advice to administer midazolam slowly and the drug’s possible side effects of vomiting or retching.

Friot also rejected “speculation that Grant was conscious during this episode, whether it was vomiting or passive regurgitation,” citing a doctor’s conclusion during the execution that he was unconscious.

Grant was the first person to be executed in Oklahoma since the state put a moratorium on lethal injections in 2015 following a botched execution in 2014. At the time, state officials said executions would resume after the state revised its protocol and obtained the drugs necessary for the procedure.

Oklahoma Attorney General John O’Connor applauded Friot’s decision Monday, saying, “The State has proven that the drugs and method of execution satisfy the United States and Oklahoma constitutions.”

“Midazolam, as the State has repeatedly shown, ‘can be relied upon … to render the inmate insensate to pain,'” O’Connor said, adding that he intends to seek execution dates from the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals for inmates awaiting execution.

Jennifer Moreno, attorney for the plaintiffs told CNN, “The district court’s decision ignores the overwhelming evidence presented at trial that Oklahoma’s execution protocol, both as written and as implemented, creates an unacceptable risk that prisoners will experience severe pain and suffering. We are assessing our options for an appeal.”

Prisoners proposed alternative execution methods

In their suit, the death row prisoners proposed two alternative methods of execution: injection of a combination of fentanyl with an anesthetic and death by firing squad.

Execution by firing squad, while uncommon, is offered as an alternative method in four states. Lethal injection is the widely preferred execution method in the United States.

A state department of corrections official testified during the trial that the agency is unable to procure fentanyl or either of the proposed anesthetics. The corrections official’s comment echos a common argument that corrections agencies across the nation have been making for years as they struggle to obtain the drugs necessary to carry out lethal injections due to manufacturers not wanting their products used in executions.

In his rebuttal of the firing squad method as a viable alternative, Friot concluded that “execution by firing squad, done right, is highly likely to cause a quick death,” however “it is difficult to conceive that a method of execution which requires the sternum to be shattered … can be called painless.”

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CNN’s Jason Hanna contributed to this report.

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