Boyd had challenged Alabama’s new lethal injection protocol, alleging it violates his Eighth Amendment right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment.
Instead, he noted, legislatures in Utah and Oklahoma have approved the firing squad, which has a good track record of “speed and certainty for the condemned.” In the alternative, hanging is an option that has been approved by lawmakers in Delaware, New Hampshire and Washington. And Alabama is “fully capable” of approving those execution methods as well, the appeal said.
The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, in a ruling written by Judge Stanley Marcus, said Alabama gives condemned prisoners the choice between two methods of execution: lethal injection and electrocution.
Also, Marcus wrote, the law is clear. Inmates challenging a method of execution must prove there is an alternative method of execution “that is feasible, readily implemented and in fact significantly reduces the risk of pain posed by the state’s planned method of execution,” he said.
“The Alabama legislature is free to choose any method of execution that it deems appropriate, subject only to the constraints of the United States Constitution,” Marcus wrote.
“But Boyd has not alleged that either lethal injection in all forms or death by electrocution poses and unconstitutional risk of pain,” he noted. “Having authorized two unchallenged methods of execution, Alabama is under no constitutional obligation to experiment with execution by hanging or firing squad.”
Marcus added, “Notably, Boyd did not propose an alternative drug cocktail that the state could use in his execution.”
Judge Wilson concurred in the result only but wrote separately to explain his disagreement with binding law.
In other news, tomorrow is the District's Bench and Bar conference. All of the judges will be forced to mingle with the hoi polloi. Good times, good times...
Look forward to hearing the judges talk about how busy they are.
ReplyDeleteYOLO!!!
ReplyDeleteLet's face it, the ghouls (judges) like to inflict cruel and unusual punishment. Memo to Marcus, death by firing squad is not an "experiment", it has a proven track record of success.
ReplyDeletere 11.22 "Look forward to hearing the judges talk about how busy they are." LOL!
also, will the judges talk about how they could be making millions in private practice, but choose to serve?