Skip to main content

Indiana | Roy Ward drops final legal challenges, clearing way for Indiana’s 2nd execution this year

State officials have not yet disclosed how much was paid for the latest round of execution drugs, however. 

Condemned man Roy Lee Ward has withdrawn the final 2 federal lawsuits that sought to delay his execution, effectively guaranteeing that his death sentence will be carried out before sunrise Friday at the Indiana State Prison in Michigan City.

Ward’s decision ends months of last-minute litigation over how Indiana carries out executions and the lethal injection drugs the state uses. The dismissals close the window for courts to intervene, with the exception of last-minute relief from the U.S. Supreme Court. The nation’s high court justices denied such efforts ahead of the state’s previous 2 executions.

The 44-year-old Ward was convicted and sentenced to death for the 2001 rape and murder of 15-year-old Stacy Payne in Spencer County. 

Gov. Mike Braun, following a recommendation from the Indiana Parole Board, denied Ward clemency in late September. 

State officials have not said how much was paid for the most recent 3 sets of lethal injection drugs purchased by the Department of Correction in recent months, however. 

At least 1 of those sets of pentobarbital is expected to be used for Ward’s execution. Any unused drugs will expire at the end of the month, according to new court documents. 

The governor previously disclosed that state officials spent $1.175 million on lethal injection doses over the past year — $600,000 of which was spent by former Gov. Eric Holcomb’s administration on drugs that expired before use. The cost has been between $275,000 and $300,000 per dose

But neither the governor’s office nor the DOC has responded to multiple questions from the Indiana Capital Chronicle the last 10 days about the price paid for the latest rounds of pentobarbital.
 

Federal lawsuits dismissed


In an Oct. 2 filing, the Indiana Attorney General’s Office and Ward’s legal team jointly notified the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Indiana that they had resolved the death row inmate’s challenges. 

Public defender Joanna Green told the Capital Chronicle the agreement “ensures compliance” with the prison’s written execution protocol. 

Ward’s legal team had raised concerns about the state’s drug-handling procedures, including storage temperatures, the source and quality of pentobarbital, and whether the DOC followed its own internal directives after irregularities were reported during Benjamin Ritchie’s execution in May. 

“After discovery, the parties came to an agreement that ensures compliance with the protocol and ensures, to the extent possible, Mr. Ward’s execution is not problematic given what happened in Mr. Ritchie’s execution,” she said, referring to accounts from Ritchie’s execution in which witnesses reported seeing the inmate lurch violently against his restraints after the injection began. 

DOC officials denied those reports, however, and maintained that “the execution was completed according to protocol.” No members of the media were permitted to witness Ritchie’s execution. 

Court filings additionally outline, for the 1st time, how DOC acquired, transported, and stored the lethal drug used in the state’s two most recent executions. 

DOC confirmed that the pentobarbital to be used in Ward’s execution is manufactured, not compounded. The state said in interrogatory responses that the drug was produced by a pharmaceutical manufacturer and distributed “without any post-manufacturing customizations.” 

Attorneys for Ward and other death row prisoners have argued that compounded pentobarbital degrades quickly and can lose effectiveness or become contaminated because it is mixed in small batches by compounding pharmacies rather than manufactured under conditions regulated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. 

Manufactured pentobarbital is produced in sterile facilities under federal quality controls, with longer shelf lives and stricter oversight than compounded alternatives, according to court filings. 

DOC indicated that each entity that handled or transported the drug kept it between 20 and 25 degrees Celsius, or about 68 to 77 degrees Fahrenheit. The drugs were not shipped through the U.S. Mail or by commercial carriers such as UPS or FedEx; instead, DOC employees personally retrieved them from a pharmacy and transported them to the state prison. 

The pentobarbital arrived in a sealed cardboard box with a Styrofoam container inside. The vials were in a cardboard holder marked with the manufacturer’s label. 

Each vial was labeled by the original producer, and DOC officials said they possess certificates of analysis for every vial that will be used Friday. 

Documents also show the vials of pentobarbital are kept on prison grounds in a locked safe secured by three separate locks. Only three prison employees can open the safe. 

Temperatures are checked daily with a thermometer and logged, and the drugs are kept in an environment “suitable for storage,” the state said. 

Even so, defense attorneys pointed to potential temperature discrepancies in January and February, when DOC logs showed several consecutive days of storage conditions outside the recommended range — some days as low as 62 F. Green said those fluctuations “may have affected the drugs used” in Ritchie’s execution. 

An updated sworn declaration filed by Indiana State Prison Warden Ron Neal also clarified that all 3 sets of pentobarbital now held by the DOC expire at the end of October. 

Earlier, Neal testified that 1 batch might not expire until March 2026, but he said that was based on an incorrect manufacturing date. 

Grievances denied, too


Roy Ward
Ward had also filed internal offender grievances asking the DOC to modify the execution chamber — specifically objecting to the capacity of the witness room, the glass partition separating it from the chamber, and the placement of the inmate’s gurney. He also sought to have more witnesses present. 

Green said prison officials refused to change the witness chamber, meaning “the witnesses cannot hear Roy and Roy cannot see his witnesses” — as was the case for Ritchie, and for Joseph Corcoran, who was executed at the state prison in December. 

State law does not provide access for journalists to witness executions unless invited by the condemned person. A federal lawsuit challenging that restriction is still pending. The Indiana Capital Chronicle is a plaintiff in the case. 

The Capital Chronicle witnessed Corcoran’s execution in December but was not invited for Ritchie’s. It remains unclear whether Ward has finalized his witness list. 

Per Indiana statute, attendance at executions is limited to: the warden, a warden’s designated assistant, the prison physician, another physician, a spiritual advisor, a prison chaplain, five friends or relatives of the inmate and 8 members of the victim’s family. 

Final execution preparations


Ward’s execution will be Indiana’s 2nd this year and the 3rd since the state resumed executions after more than a decade’s hiatus. 

The state prison’s execution team trains monthly, practicing IV insertions on both volunteers and medical training arms, with practices increasing as an execution nears. 

According to discovery records, the execution team conducts regular walkthroughs of the chamber and equipment in the final days before an execution. The DOC confirmed that the condemned inmate undergoes a medical evaluation and weekly vein assessments, while the gurney, IV tubing, and other equipment are inspected and calibrated. The chamber is cleaned and checked daily during the final week. 

State filings further show that communication systems connecting the prison to the governor’s office and Indiana Supreme Court are tested, and that DOC staff conduct trial runs to confirm that the separate viewing areas for victims’ families, defense witnesses and state officials function properly. 

In the final weeks, prison officials also meet with the inmate to review the lethal injection process, witness lists and options for spiritual counsel or last words. 

3 members of the team are responsible for administering the drug through an approximately 5- to 6-foot IV line, according to the latest court filings. 

Those individuals are kept anonymous, and each is trained to administer the drug as part of a coordinated three-person team.

Source: Indiana Capital Chronicle, Staff, October 8, 2025




"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed,
but by the punishments that the good have inflicted."
— Oscar Wilde


Comments

Most viewed (Last 7 days)

Oklahoma board recommends clemency for inmate set to be executed next week

A voting board in Oklahoma decided Wednesday to recommend clemency for Tremane Wood, a death row inmate who is scheduled to receive a lethal injection next week at the state penitentiary in McAlester.  Wood, 46, faces execution for his conviction in the 2001 murder of Ronnie Wipf, a migrant farmworker, at an Oklahoma City hotel on New Year's Eve, court records show. The recommendation was decided in a 3-2 vote by the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board, consisting of five members appointed by either the governor or the state's top judicial official, according to CBS News affiliate KWTV. Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Sitt will consider the recommendation as he weighs whether to grant or deny Wood's clemency request, which would mean sparing him from execution and reducing his sentence to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

UK | Lindsay Sandiford back in London

Two British drug convicts, including a grandmother who had been on death row in Indonesia for more than a decade, arrived back in the UK on Friday. Indonesia has some of the world's toughest drug laws, but has moved to release more than half a dozen high-profile detainees in the last year. Lindsay Sandiford, 69, was sentenced to death on the tourist island of Bali in 2013 for smuggling $2.14 million worth of cocaine into Indonesia. She was released on humanitarian grounds along with Shahab Shahabadi, 36, who had been serving a life sentence for drug offences after his arrest in 2014.

Tennessee | Death row inmate refuses to choose between electric chair and lethal injection

Harold Nichols is scheduled to die in December for raping and murdering a student Harold Wayne Nichols, a death row inmate in Tennessee, has declined to select his preferred execution method for his scheduled December 11 death. That means that the state will proceed with lethal injection. Nichols received his death sentence in 1990 after being found guilty of the rape and murder of Karen Pulley, a 21-year-old student at Chattanooga State University, which occurred two years prior.

‘I’ll be executed on Tuesday’: families reveal panicked last calls from foreigners on Saudi’s death row

Relatives share with the Guardian final words of those killed amid ‘horrifying’ surge in capital punishment under Mohammed bin Salman’s rule In the city of Tabuk in the far north of Saudi Arabia, neon lights flicker on in an overcrowded ward of a prison marking the start of a new day. The prisoners are waiting. When the guards enter, they know someone is about to be taken away. An execution squad of about 20 guards will approach an inmate quietly, whisper something in their ear and escort them out. Some break down in tears, others simply ask for forgiveness.

Florida | Military vets are third of inmates executed in Florida this year, report finds

A new report finds that five of the 15 people executed in Florida this year were military veterans. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is defending his modern-era record for executions this year, saying he is bringing justice to the families of victims. But a new report reveals some troubling data: Five of the 15 convicted murderers executed this year in Florida were military veterans.

Alabama Execution Witnesses Report ​“Violent Thrashing” of Prisoner and More Than 225 ​“Agonized Breaths” in Nitrogen Gas Execution

On October 23, 2025, Alabama exe­cut­ed Anthony Boyd, despite his unwa­ver­ing claim of inno­cence and a fiery dis­sent authored by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, renew­ing the seri­ous con­cerns that have been con­sis­tent­ly raised about the state’s use of nitro­gen gas. Justice Sotomayor, joined by Justices Kagan and Jackson, dis­sent­ed from the Court’s October 23, 2025, denial of a stay of exe­cu­tion, writ­ing that Alabama’s use of nitro­gen gas ​“vio­lates the Constitution by inflict­ing unnec­es­sary suf­fer­ing[.]” Justice Sotomayor not­ed sev­en peo­ple have been exe­cut­ed by nitro­gen gas since the January 2024 exe­cu­tion of Kenneth Smith , and argued that the Court should have pre­vent­ed Mr. Boyd from becom­ing the eighth.

Syria | Man to be hanged for harrowing murder of eight-year-old girl, in first death sentence since Assad ouster

A court in northeast Syria has sentenced a man to death by hanging after finding him guilty of raping and murdering an eight-year-old girl. Youssef al-Dahham, 25, was convicted of raping and murdering the child in the village of Muhkan in Deir az-Zour governorate. Security forces announced on 13 August the arrest of Dahham, who reportedly confessed to the crime after interrogation. The crime dates back to August, when Dahham snatched the girl outside her home, raped and murdered her.

Meet the man who has witnessed every Florida execution since Ted Bundy’s

John Koch has covered 100 executions since 1989 John Koch’s colleagues know him by a different name: Dr. Death.  The radio news journalist has witnessed over 100 executions since the start of his career 50 years ago, according to his own count. He documented infamous killer Ted Bundy’s last moments alive and every other death row inmate’s in Florida’s execution chamber since. Now 76, he has no intentions of stopping.

Woman who watched nearly 300 executions explained moment she had to give it up

Michelle Lyons' job wasn't for the fainthearted A woman who watched nearly 300 death row executions take place over 12 years opened up about how her macabre career impacted her life. For more than a decade, it was part of Michelle Lyons' job description to observe the final moments of hundreds of prisoners in the US state of Texas. She says the process never 'become mundane or normal', although she did become acclimatized to it - as she went on to watch so many executions that she 'can't recall' a lot of them.

Japan’s death penalty in the spotlight after Hakamada's acquittal

Dubbed the “Twitter Killer”, Takahiro Shiraishi trawled social media for posts by suicidal young women and lured them to his apartment outside Tokyo. Before being caught in 2017, he had murdered nine people, including three teenage girls, who he also raped and mutilated. His Twitter handle loosely translated as “hangman”.