High Court Allows Lethal Shot Challenges

By GINA HOLLAND
The Associated Press
Monday, June 12, 2006; 4:31 PM

WASHINGTON -- The Supreme Court opened the door Monday to new constitutional challenges to lethal injection, the method used by most states and the federal government to execute death row inmates.

In an unanimous decision, the court allowed those condemned to die to make last-minute claims that the chemicals used are too painful _ and therefore amount to cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Constitution's Eighth Amendment.


An undated photograph supplied by the Florida Department of Corrections shows Clarence Hill. The Supreme Court ruled unanimously Monday, June 12, 2006, that the nation's death row inmates can file last-minute challenges to lethal injection after they've exhausted their regular appeals. The court's ruling in the case of Hill leaves unanswered, however, broader questions about the chemicals used in lethal injections and whether they cause excruciating pain.  (AP Photo/HO,Florida Department of Corrections)
An undated photograph supplied by the Florida Department of Corrections shows Clarence Hill. The Supreme Court ruled unanimously Monday, June 12, 2006, that the nation's death row inmates can file last-minute challenges to lethal injection after they've exhausted their regular appeals. The court's ruling in the case of Hill leaves unanswered, however, broader questions about the chemicals used in lethal injections and whether they cause excruciating pain. (AP Photo/HO,Florida Department of Corrections) (AP)

Justices, in a separate 5-3 ruling, also made it easier for death row inmates to challenge their convictions with new evidence. The court said Tennessee death-row inmate Paul Gregory House can use DNA evidence to try to get his conviction overturned in the 1985 murder of a neighbor.

"This is not a case of conclusive exoneration," Justice Anthony M. Kennedy wrote in the decision, which permits House to proceed in federal court claiming innocence for the murder of Carolyn Muncey in Union County, Tenn., in July 1985.

The lethal injection ruling sets the stage for a nationwide legal battle over that subject, with the country's 3,300 death row inmates armed with a new tool to contest how they are put to death. Justices have never ruled on the constitutionality of a specific type of execution.

The winner in the case was Florida death row inmate Clarence Hill, who was strapped to a gurney with lines running into his arms to deliver the drugs when the Supreme Court in January intervened and blocked the execution.

Kennedy, writing for the court, said that while Hill and other inmates can file special appeals, they will not always be entitled to delays in their executions.

"Both the state and the victims of crime have an important interest in the timely enforcement of a sentence," he wrote.

Hill, convicted of killing a police officer, had run out of regular appeals so he went to court using a civil rights law claiming that his constitutional rights would be violated by Florida's lethal injection drug protocol. The court's decision renews his bid to have Florida change its chemical combination.

The decision is setback for Florida and other states that will have to defend more last-minute filings from inmates. More than two dozen states had filed arguments at the court seeking the opposite outcome. They said dragged-out appeals jeopardize justice for victims' families.

Lethal injection is the main method used by every state that has capital punishment except Nebraska. Nebraska still has the electric chair, although that, too, is being contested.

Kennedy said that Hill is not claiming that he cannot be executed, only that he should not be forced into a painful execution.


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