The drug company quickly moved to appeal the judge’s order, leaving uncertain whether the execution will still take place as planned.
State officials are
planning to execute Moore — who has lived more than half his life under sentence of death — on Tuesday in Lincoln, the state capital. Relatives of the victims in his case — Reuel Van Ness and Maynard Helgeland, both killed in 1979 — have said they are
ready to be done with decades of waiting. Moore has said he does not want to stop his execution or have anyone else stop it for him, though he also
belittled state officials who have been unable to execute him for decades as “either lazy or incompetent to do their jobs or both.”
Whether Moore will be executed as planned was thrown into question this week when the drug company Fresenius Kabi filed a federal lawsuit accusing Nebraska of improperly — and possibly illegally — obtaining its products to use in the execution. In its lawsuit, the company said it restricts the use of certain drugs to try to keep them from being used in lethal injections, a practice that
other firms also have in place.
“While Fresenius Kabi takes no position on capital punishment, Fresenius Kabi opposes the use of its products for this purpose and therefore does not sell certain drugs to correctional facilities,” the company said in the lawsuit, which was filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Nebraska.
The company said it sells these restricted drugs to wholesalers and distributors under conditions that are meant to keep the products from being sold to prisons, penitentiaries or jails. According to the lawsuit, though, Fresenius Kabi thinks that it manufactured two of the four drugs Nebraska intends to use next week.
One of the drugs, potassium chloride, is intended to stop Moore’s heart. Another drug, cisatracurium besylate, would paralyze his muscles. The other two drugs Nebraska intends to use are diazepam, a sedative better known as Valium; and fentanyl, the synthetic painkiller that has helped fuel the country’s opioid epidemic and would be used to render Moore unconscious.
The company says its drugs could only have been attained “through improper or illegal means” because of the restrictions they put into place regarding their products, and it asked for the courts to bar Nebraska from using its drugs and to order the state to return them.
The office of Nebraska Attorney General Doug Peterson responded to the lawsuit with a one-sentence statement: “Nebraska’s lethal injection drugs were purchased lawfully and pursuant to the State of Nebraska’s duty to carry out lawful capital sentences.”
In court filings, Peterson’s office pushed back against the company’s arguments, saying it obtained the drugs from a licensed pharmacy and not through “any fraud, deceit or misrepresentation.” Nebraska officials also disputed the firm’s contention that it would “suffer great reputational injury” if its drugs are used, saying that only the company’s own lawsuit drew attention to its potential involvement.
Peterson’s office also said they were facing a ticking clock to carry out Moore’s execution, saying that the ongoing shortage of available drugs leaves them unable to know when or if they could get more.
“Lethal substances used in a lethal injection execution are difficult, if nearly impossible, to obtain,” Scott R. Frakes, director of Nebraska’s Department of Correctional Services, said in an affidavit filed in federal court. “This problem is not limited solely to Nebraska, but exists in other death penalty states.”
Supporters of capital punishment argue that opponents have forced states to pursue inferior options because of what Supreme Court Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr.
once called “a guerrilla war against the death penalty.”
Frakes said he contacted at least 40 potential suppliers and half a dozen other states while searching for lethal injection drugs, but only one supplier — which he did not identify beyond calling it “a licensed pharmacy” — was willing to provide them. That same supplier will not provide more substances, Frakes said, adding that he does not have any backup options for purchasing any additional drugs.
With one drug in question — potassium chloride — expiring at the end of August, Frakes said, any court order blocking Nebraska from using any of the drugs would keep them from being able to execute Moore and essentially change his “final death sentence into a de facto sentence of life in prison.”
With one drug in question — potassium chloride — expiring at the end of August, Frakes said, any court order blocking Nebraska from using any of the drugs would keep them from being able to execute Moore and essentially change his “final death sentence into a de facto sentence of life in prison.”
On Friday, Richard G. Kopf, senior U.S. district judge, rebuffed the drug company’s request to block Nebraska officials from using the drugs in question. Kopf said in an order that there was no evidence that the cisatracurium Nebraska will use was manufactured or distributed by the company, nor did he think the company would face any blame or that its reputation would be harmed if it was associated with the execution.
Kopf, who called it “a very strange suit,” noted that lawmakers in Nebraska “decided to kill the death penalty, and after that, and very recently, the people decided to resurrect it.” As such, he explained, the public interest sided with the state officials seeking to carry out Moore’s death sentence.
The drug company is “disappointed” in the judge’s order, emphasizing that its “main purpose is to provide lifesaving medicines to people who care for patients,” Matthew Kuhn, a spokesman, said Friday.
Spokesmen for Nebraska’s governor and attorney general did not respond to requests for comment on the ruling and the company’s move to appeal. An attorney for Moore declined to comment.
Danielle Conrad, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Nebraska, said in a statement after Kopf’s order that the group “commends Fresenius Kabi for taking action to ensure their products were not obtained illegally or used for illicit purposes.”
These legal fights have drawn the attention of attorneys general in more than a dozen other states, including active death-penalty states Florida, Texas, Georgia and Alabama. In a brief filed by Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge and signed by 13 other attorneys general, they argued that the lawsuit in Nebraska is part of “the latest nationwide campaign being waged by anti-death-penalty activists to deny states access to drugs necessary to carry out lawful executions.” Most of these officials made a similar argument in the Nevada case, which is still pending.
In a statement, Rutledge accused the pharmaceutical firms of “trying to circumvent the rule of law by using 11th-hour litigation tactics to stall these lawful executions” and pledged to “continue to fight for justice.”
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"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed,
but by the punishments that the good have inflicted." -- Oscar Wilde