Death Row Inmates Say Expired Drug Makes Execution Painful, Cruel

Robert Fratta set to die Tuesday night

Texas prison officials have already scheduled nine executions for 2023, more than in all of last year.

The first three prisoners facing death – Robert Fratta (tomorrow night, Jan. 10), Wesley Ruiz, and John Balentine – are asking that the state investigate whether the drugs Texas uses in its lethal injections are expired and could cause pain and suffering in the execution process. So far, no court has granted the request.

Such appeals over using an expired drug to kill prisoners have been made several times before – for example, in the case of Willie Trottie in 2014. Trottie’s attorneys argued that the use of expired pentobarbital, the drug the state has used since 2012 to kill death row inmates, causes a burning sensation before death, constituting cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth Amendment. The courts rejected Trottie’s appeal and he was executed.

This is not the same argument, however, that Shawn Nolan, the attorney for Ruiz and Balentine, is making. Instead, Nolan charges that prison officials are violating the Texas Pharmacy Act, the Texas Controlled Substances Act, the Texas Food, Drug, and Cosmetics Act, and the Texas Penal Code in using an expired drug. He has asked District Judge Jan Soifer – whose 345th District Court here in Travis County handles civil, not criminal, matters – to order TDCJ to refrain from using expired pentobarbital in the execution of his clients. On Jan. 5, at the request of Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals ordered the district court not to intervene in the matter.

The Texas Department of Criminal Justice claims that its supply of pentobarbital is safe. Dr. Michaela Almgren, a pharmacology professor at the University of South Carolina, disagrees. “Based on the records I reviewed … all of the pentobarbital in TDCJ’s possession is expired,” Almgren wrote in the petition submitted by Nolan in December. Almgren added that the method TDCJ uses to assess the drugs’ potency, apparently to justify its use after expiration, is “completely unscientific and incorrect, and therefore the result is invalid.”

Nolan says in his petition that TDCJ purchases pentobarbital in 50 and 100 milliliter vials. “The 50ml vials of pentobarbital in TDCJ’s possession expired over 20 months ago and the 100ml vials of pentobarbital expired over 43 months ago,” Nolan writes. “Given the age of the drugs … the pentobarbital [they] intend to use to execute Mr. Ruiz and Mr. Balentine will act unpredictably, obstruct IV lines during the execution, and cause unnecessary pain.”

Time is running out for another court to act before tomorrow night's scheduled execution of Robert Fratta, a former policeman convicted of hiring two men to kill his wife in 1994. Fratta’s attorney, John Freiman, submitted a 197-page petition in late December with a number of new claims, including that prosecutors used hypnosis to alter the memory of the only eyewitness to the murder but never disclosed it to Fratta’s defense attorneys. The CCA rejected Freiman’s petition on January 4 without bothering to review its contents.

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KEYWORDS FOR THIS POST

Death Watch, Robert Fratta, Shawn Nolan, pentobarbital, Eighth Amendment, cruel and unusual punishment, Court of Criminal Appeals, Texas Dept. of Criminal Justice

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