A federal appeals court paved the way on Wednesday for Ohio to resume executions by lifting a lower court's decision to halt the state's lethal injection process.
It was a contentious decision that split the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals judges in an 8-6 vote.
In the case brought by death row inmates, the judges focused on the effects of the sedative midazolam, one of the three lethal injection drugs used by Ohio.
As The Two-Way has reported, the drug has been "used during multiple botched executions in Arizona, Ohio, Oklahoma and Alabama."
Authorities used it in Ohio during the Jan. 16, 2014, execution of Dennis McGuire, who took 24 minutes to die. As we've reported, a witness said he appeared to be gasping and choking. Since then, executions in the state have been on hold.
Death row inmates Ronald Phillips, Gary Otte and Raymond Tibbetts say that executing them using midazolam would violate the Eighth Amendment, which protects against cruel and unusual punishment.
A federal judge ruled in January that midazolam is not sufficiently humane and blocked the upcoming executions. In that decision, U.S. District Court Magistrate Judge Michael Merz stated that the "use of midazolam as the first drug in Ohio's present three-drug protocol will create a 'substantial risk of serious harm' or an 'objectively intolerable risk of harm.' "
The state appealed Merz's decision, which the 6th Circuit's majority opinion described as "seriously flawed."
The judges say the district court applied the wrong standard. The proper legal question, they say, is not whether the use of midazolam in the protocol presents a "substantial risk of serious harm," but whether it is "sure or very likely to cause serious pain."
The court concluded that the plaintiffs "have fallen well short" of proving this, even though they "have shown some risk that Ohio's execution protocol may cause some degree of pain, at least in some people." Ultimately, the court states, the Constitution "does not guarantee 'a pain-free execution.' "
McGuire's dose of midazolam was 10 milligrams, the judges say, far smaller than the 500-milligram dose in the state's current lethal injection protocol.
Six of the judges disagreed with the majority, writing that the plaintiffs "should not be executed before a trial on the constitutionality of Ohio's execution method."
Allen Bohnert, a public defender representing death row inmates, told The Associated Press that Wednesday's judgment does not constitute "a decisive ruling on the constitutionality of the three-drug method." According to the wire service, Bohnert says he plans to appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.
There are currently 139 people sentenced to die in Ohio.
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