10th Circuit Stay
10th Circuit Stay
10th Circuit Stay
Plaintiffs - Appellants,
and
Plaintiffs,
v. No. 21-6139
(D.C. No. 5:14-CV-00665-F)
SCOTT CROW, et al. (W.D. Okla.)
Defendants - Appellees.
_________________________________
ORDER
_________________________________
execution dates. Along with 30 other Oklahoma death-row inmates, they filed a Third
remaining claim asserted in the TAC, and the 27 plaintiffs remaining in the suit who are
not part of this appeal are scheduled to participate in that trial. But the district court
dismissed all of Appellants’ claims in the TAC and denied their motion for a preliminary
injunction. They have appealed the district court’s denial of their motion for a
Case 5:14-cv-00665-F Document 542 Filed 10/27/21 Page 2 of 11
Appellate Case: 21-6139 Document: 010110596676 Date Filed: 10/27/2021 Page: 2
preliminary injunction and have moved this court for a stay of execution pending our
resolution of this appeal. We have jurisdiction, see 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1), and we grant
Supreme Court has identified as a “critical” factor in our inquiry. Nken v. Holder, 566
U.S. 418, 435 (2009). Although Appellants have asserted a likelihood of success on the
merits of several of their claims, we need only consider the core claim in the TAC, for
which a trial has been scheduled: Count II, which raises a direct Eighth Amendment
2
Case 5:14-cv-00665-F Document 542 Filed 10/27/21 Page 3 of 11
Appellate Case: 21-6139 Document: 010110596676 Date Filed: 10/27/2021 Page: 3
This claim requires a prisoner to meet two prongs. First, he must show that the
State’s chosen method of execution presents “a substantial risk of severe pain.” Bucklew
v. Precythe, 139 S. Ct. 1112, 1125 (2019). Second, he must show that the risk is
law that plaintiffs’ claim failed the first prong. It set that issue for trial. For example, the
district court stated that “[t]here is a fact issue as to whether midazolam performs as well,
for execution purposes, as defendants claim it does.” Glossip v. Chandler, No. 5:14-cv-
00665-F, CM doc. 449 at 10 (W.D. Okla. 2021). It also recognized “a fact issue as to
whether midazolam will reliably render the prisoner insensate to pain . . . for the length of
time necessary to avoid a constitutionally unacceptable risk that the prisoner will be
subjected to a constitutionally unacceptable level of pain.” Id. at 11. The district court
further stated that “the prisoners squarely attack the warden’s unfettered discretion to
deviate from the protocol, as well as—among other things—the adequacy of the
consciousness check specified in the protocol,” which it said was “unmistakably a central
Notwithstanding this ruling, in denying the motion for preliminary injunction, the
district court found that Appellants had failed to demonstrate a likelihood of success on
the merits concerning the first prong. Because the district court had already ruled that the
first prong must be resolved at trial, Appellants are likely to succeed on their position that
3
Case 5:14-cv-00665-F Document 542 Filed 10/27/21 Page 4 of 11
Appellate Case: 21-6139 Document: 010110596676 Date Filed: 10/27/2021 Page: 4
As for the second prong, Appellants have made a strong showing that they
complied with it. The TAC identified four alternative methods that all plaintiffs,
including Appellants, alleged, as required by the pertinent test, were “feasible, available,
readily implemented and would significantly reduce a substantial risk of severe pain.”
Id., CM doc. 325 at 47. None of the plaintiffs, including Appellants, have ever
withdrawn that allegation or withdrawn these methods from consideration. But the
identify which of these alternative methods he proffered for use in executing him.
Although the plaintiffs objected to this interrogatory, the district court overruled the
objection and required them to answer it. The plaintiffs who answered the interrogatory
did so by filing a supplemental response that included a listing of the four alternative
methods identified in the TAC, with a blank line next to each method where a plaintiff
could put his initials. Appellants refused to specify an alternative in response to the
interrogatory. The district court therefore granted summary judgment against them on
Count II, but permitted the other plaintiffs, who had “checked a box” in supplemental
responses to interrogatories that designated one or more alternative methods for their own
methods in the TAC, and in their response to the defendants’ motion for summary
judgment, all the plaintiffs reserved the right to challenge the alternative methods they
had specified at some future date. The district court cited this as an additional reason for
4
Case 5:14-cv-00665-F Document 542 Filed 10/27/21 Page 5 of 11
Appellate Case: 21-6139 Document: 010110596676 Date Filed: 10/27/2021 Page: 5
But all the plaintiffs, including those whom the district court permitted to go to
trial on Claim II, made the same reservation of a future challenge, and the district court
held that reservation against only Appellants. As for the other plaintiffs, the court said in
its summary-judgment order that it would ignore the very same reservations, stating that
if it appeared at trial that any of the plaintiffs actually do reserve the right to challenge
their proposed alternative execution methods, that would be fatal to their claim. See id.,
CM doc. 449 at 18. In contrast, the district court cited the same reservations as fatal to
Appellants, who made no more serious reservation of a future challenge than the other
The only real difference between those plaintiffs who survived summary judgment
to go to trial and these Appellants, who lost on summary judgment and now face
imminent execution, was that the other plaintiffs complied with the district court’s
method or methods to be used to carry out their death sentences; the supplemental
responses listed the same four alternative methods as choices that were identified by all
plaintiffs in the TAC. Appellants, citing religious scruples about assisting in what they
viewed as “suicide,” refused to answer the interrogatory by choosing one or more of the
four alternative methods to be used in their particular case. The problem with granting
summary judgment on this basis is that we find nothing in the relevant case law that
by “checking a box” when the prisoner has already identified in his complaint the very
5
Case 5:14-cv-00665-F Document 542 Filed 10/27/21 Page 6 of 11
Appellate Case: 21-6139 Document: 010110596676 Date Filed: 10/27/2021 Page: 6
same alternative methods given as choices on the form. 1 Nor did Appellants’ refusal to
make such a designation by specifying each method they proffered for their execution in
methods they identified in the TAC. Thus, Appellants have shown a likelihood of
success concerning the second prong of their claim as well. The district court abused its
Appellants have also satisfied the other stay factors. They risk being unable to
present what may be a viable Eighth Amendment claim to the federal courts before they
are executed using the method they have challenged. Although Appellees cite the State’s
and the crime victims’ interest in prompt execution, the delay in developing the new
protocol, coupled with the relatively short time frame that will ensue until the district
court has finished its trial, which is set to commence on February 28, 2022, weigh against
Appellees’ assertions of harm. And the public interest favors a stay, so that all the
plaintiffs with identical claims in this matter are treated equitably by the courts.
1
The leading cases in this area are Bucklew v. Precythe, 139 S. Ct. 1112 (2019);
Glossip v. Gross, 576 U.S. 863, 877 (2015); and Baze v. Rees, 553 U.S. 35 (2008).
6
Case 5:14-cv-00665-F Document 542 Filed 10/27/21 Page 7 of 11
Appellate Case: 21-6139 Document: 010110596676 Date Filed: 10/27/2021 Page: 7
appeal. To accomplish that purpose and in aid of our jurisdiction, we partially grant the
motion and stay the executions of John Grant, currently scheduled for October 28, 2021,
7
Case 5:14-cv-00665-F Document 542 Filed 10/27/21 Page 8 of 11
Appellate Case: 21-6139 Document: 010110596676 Date Filed: 10/27/2021 Page: 8
Correction Center, on November 13, 1998. Donald Grant murdered Brenda McElyea and
Suzette Smith on July 18, 2001, during a robbery. Julius Jones murdered Paul Howell on
July 28, 1999, in front of Mr. Howell’s sister and daughters during a carjacking. Gilbert
Postelle chased down and murdered James Alderson and Amy Wright on May 30, 2005,
after they witnessed his accomplice murder two other victims. And Wade Lay murdered
Kenneth Anderson during a bank robbery on May 24, 2004. They have all had their
sentences reviewed on appeal and exhausted their rights to habeas review. Oklahoma has
spent the past six years developing a method of lethal injection that it hopes will satisfy
the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment. Having done
so, Oklahoma has set execution dates for the five prisoners in this case.
not be routinely granted. See Warner v. Gross, 776 F.3d 721, 729 (10th Cir. 2015). The
same is true of a stay of execution, which requires the movant to show, among other
things, that he is likely to succeed on the merits of his claim. See id. Unlike the majority,
I would deny the emergency motion because Plaintiffs fail to demonstrate a likelihood of
success on Count II, the Eighth Amendment challenge to Oklahoma’s lethal injection
protocol. I also conclude that none of the other claims in the motion for stay has merit.
Case 5:14-cv-00665-F Document 542 Filed 10/27/21 Page 9 of 11
Appellate Case: 21-6139 Document: 010110596676 Date Filed: 10/27/2021 Page: 9
To mount a successful challenge under the Eighth Amendment, the prisoners must
establish (1) the State’s method presents “a substantial risk of severe pain” and (2) the
Precythe, 139 S. Ct. 1112, 1125–26 (2019). Plaintiffs fail to demonstrate either.
The district court heard testimony from witnesses on the issue of whether Oklahoma’s
three-drug protocol using midazolam presented a substantial risk of severe pain and
ultimately ruled that the prisoners failed to carry their burden. The court did not commit
The district court also ruled that the prisoners failed to show a likelihood of
success in demonstrating the risk of severe pain under Oklahoma’s proposed method of
court cited Plaintiffs’ failure to identify an alternative method of execution that could be
used in their case. Although the prisoners in this appeal identified four alternative
methods of execution in the TAC, they added the caveat that they reserved the right to
object to these methods. 1 Glossip v. Chandler, No. 5:14-cv-00665-F, CM doc. 325 at 47.
execution; rather, they argue they must merely identify alternative methods for a
1
Admittedly, Appellants’ counsel gradually abandoned the reservation stated in their written
pleadings during the preliminary injunction hearing. But permitting Appellants to obtain a stay
here, on their shifting form of compliance with the Supreme Court’s requirements, risks
rewarding Appellants for playing delay games with the court rather than serving the true function
of their Glossip claim: to avoid unnecessary and superadded pain associated with an
unconstitutional method of execution. See Bucklew, 139 S. Ct. at 1129; Glossip v. Gross, 576
U.S. 863, 879-80 (2015).
2
Case 5:14-cv-00665-F Document 542 Filed 10/27/21 Page 10 of 11
Appellate Case: 21-6139 Document: 010110596676 Date Filed: 10/27/2021 Page: 10
not theoretical measuring sticks, but rather practical alternatives the State may be
required to implement. See id. at 1126 (“To decide whether the State has cruelly
‘superadded’ pain to the punishment of death isn’t something that can be accomplished
by examining the State’s proposed method in a vacuum, but only by ‘compar[ing]’ that
method with a viable alternative.”) (emphasis added). The Supreme Court made clear in
Baze v. Rees, 553 U.S. 35 (2008), that prisoners cannot successfully challenge a “method
And it warned against “transform[ing] courts into boards of inquiry charged with
determining ‘best practices’ for executions, with each ruling supplanted by another round
Rather than attack the current method of execution with a hypothetical alternative,
prisoners must proffer alternatives that are feasible, readily implemented, and that in fact
significantly reduce a substantial risk of pain. Id. at 52. If plaintiffs meet these
requirements and the State does not implement an alternative method without sufficient
justification, the refusal to change methods can be viewed as cruel and unusual. Id. This
purpose.
Nothing in the Supreme Court cases expounding this area of law suggests that a
prisoner may satisfy the second Glossip requirement by making such a conditional,
3
Case 5:14-cv-00665-F Document 542 Filed 10/27/21 Page 11 of 11
Appellate Case: 21-6139 Document: 010110596676 Date Filed: 10/27/2021 Page: 11
constitutionally acceptable (but possibly imperfect) method. See id. at 51. To that end,
the prisoner is required to designate an alternative method that can be used in his case.
See, e.g., Bucklew, 139 S. Ct. at 1115 ((“[T]he inmate’s proposal must be sufficiently
detailed to permit a finding that the State court carry it out relatively easily and
reasonably quickly.”); id. at 1130 (the Eighth Amendment “does not compel a State to
adopt untried and untested . . . methods of execution” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
If plaintiffs are unwilling to accept the methods of execution they proffer, alternative-
method-of-execution litigation will devolve courts into the boards of inquiry the Supreme
Court warned against, and the alternatives will fail to serve the practical purpose the
In sum, the prisoners seek to avoid the practical inquiry required by the Supreme
Court in these cases, and in essence ask the courts to accept pleading games rather than
examine carefully whether the State has satisfied the Constitution. The district court
correctly applied Supreme Court precedent and did not abuse its discretion in denying a
stay of execution.
the two Glossip requirements. I would similarly reject the other grounds upon which
Plaintiffs seek relief because they did not demonstrate a likelihood of success.
Consequently, I would reject the motion for stay of execution. I respectfully dissent.