Monday's first case concerned Alabama inmate Christopher Lee Price, who challenged his planned lethal
injection execution last month. The court denied his stay of execution in an
opinion that triggered a nearly 3 a.m. dissent from Justice Stephen Breyer, joined by three
other liberal justices, who asserted the planned sentence would be carried out
in an "arbitrary way." Price's death warrant expired before the
justices acted.
Thomas, Alito, and Gorsuch criticized their fellow justices
for waiting beyond midnight to handle the effort to block the execution,
resulting in what will be a seven-week delay.
Thomas said he wanted to "set the record
straight," about how things were handled. He called Price's complaints
"procedurally unremarkable and constitutionally acceptable," and said
the issue is all about timing.
"Of course, the dissent got its way by default.
Petitioner's strategy is no secret, for it is the same strategy adopted by many
death-row inmates with an impending execution: bring last-minute claims that
will delay the execution, no matter how groundless," Thomas
wrote. "The proper response to this maneuvering is to deny meritless
requests expeditiously."
"Whatever the right answer is to how the Supreme Court
should handle 11th hour applications in capital cases, this isn't it,"
said Steve Vladeck, CNN Supreme Court analyst and professor at the University
of Texas School of Law.
"The justices are clearly at loggerheads over what the
rules should be when death-row inmates seek to challenge the method of their
execution, but the right thing to do is to take a case on the merits, have full
briefing and argument, and resolve the matter conclusively -- rather than
continuing to snark at each other in separate opinions across different
cases," he added.
According to the state, Price and an accomplice wielded a
sword and a knife in 1991 and stabbed Bill Lynn, a minister, to death.
Awaiting execution, Price had recently argued that Alabama's
lethal injection protocol would cause him severe pain and asked that the state
use lethal gas as an alternative. Two lower courts had agreed to put the
execution on hold, but after Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall petitioned
the Supreme Court, the majority agreed to lift the stay of execution.
Price is now scheduled to be executed on May 30, the Montgomery Advertiser reported.
Thomas went to great lengths to describe the murder that
Price was accused of committing involving a minister, Bill Lynn, who was
returning from church, and criticized Breyer for failing to include those
details.
Thomas wrote that while "Bill died a slow lingering and
painful death," 20 years after the conviction Lee was trying to delay his
death.
"It is difficult to see his litigation strategy as
anything other than an attempt to delay his execution," Thomas wrote.
The second case involved Patrick Henry Murphy, who argued that
he should not be executed in Texas because the state would not allow his
Buddhist spiritual adviser to be present in the death chamber.
In that case, the court stayed Murphy's execution.
On Monday, Alito, joined by Thomas and Gorsuch, said he
wanted to take the opportunity to explain why "the court's decision to
grant the stay was seriously wrong."
Alito, picking up on the same theme from the Alabama case,
said that Murphy was "egregiously delayed" in raising his claims.
"By countenancing such tactics, the court invites
dispute," Alito wrote.
But Kavanaugh, joined by Roberts, wrote to explain their
votes to allow the stay. They noted that under Texas' policy at the time,
inmates who were Christian or Muslim could have their spiritual advisers in the
room. But inmates of other religions could not.
"That discriminatory state policy violated the
Constitution's guarantee of religious equality," Kavanaugh wrote. They
noted that Texas has now changed the policy and no longer allows any religious
ministers in the viewing room.
"In sum, this court's stay in Murphy's case was
appropriate, and the stay facilitated a prompt fix to the religious equality
problem in Texas' execution protocol," Kavanaugh said.
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