Alabama won’t try lethal injection again on “execution survivor” Alan Eugene Miller, but it may try new method

Death Penalty Alabama
Officials escort murder suspect Alan Eugene Miller away from the Pelham City Jail in Alabama, in an August 5, 1999 file photo. Miller was sentenced to death after being convicted of a 1999 workplace rampage.

Dave Martin/AP


Montgomery, Alabama — Alabama won’t seek another lethal injection date for an inmate whose September execution had been halted because of problems establishing an intravenous line, according to the terms of a settlement agreement approved on Monday. The state agreed to never use lethal injection again as an execution method to put Alan Eugene Miller to death.

Any future effort to execute Miller will be done by nitrogen hypoxia, an execution method authorized in Alabama, but one that has never been used to carry out a death sentence in the U.S. There is currently no protocol in place for using nitrogen hypoxia.
 
On Tuesday, U.S. District Judge R. Austin Huffaker Jr. approved the settlement agreement in a lawsuit brought by Miller seeking to prevent another lethal injection attempt. Miller had argued that the state lost paperwork stating he picked nitrogen hypoxia as his execution method and then subjected him to torture during the failed execution attempt. At the time, Miller’s attorneys called him the “only living execution survivor in the United States.”

alan-miller.jpg
An undated photograph provided by the Alabama Department of Corrections shows inmate Alan Eugene Miller.

Alabama Department of Corrections via AP


Miller was scheduled to be executed by lethal injection on Sept. 22, but the state called off the execution after being unable to connect an IV line to the 351-pound inmate. Miller said that when prison staff tried to find a vein, they poked him with needles for over an hour and at one point left him hanging vertically as he lay strapped to a gurney.
 
Alabama has acknowledged problems with IV access during at least four executions since 2018. Three of those had to be halted.
 
Earlier this month the execution of Kenneth Eugene Smith was halted after the execution team tried for an hour to connect an IV line. 

Last week, attorneys for Smith filed a lawsuit against the prison system, saying that the state violated the U.S. Constitution, various court orders and its own lethal injection protocol during the botched execution attempt earlier this month. Smith’s attorneys are asking a federal judge to forbid the state from making a second attempt to execute him, saying Smith was already “subjected to ever-escalating levels of pain and torture” on the night of the failed execution.

Kenneth Eugene Smith
Kenneth Eugene Smith

Alabama Department of Corrections


Alabama also called off the 2018 execution of Doyle Lee Hamm for the same reasons. He reached an agreement with the state that prevented further execution attempts, although he remained on death row. He later died of natural causes.

Prison officials blamed time constraints, specifically the midnight deadline, for the three halted executions.
 
The state’s July execution of Joe Nathan James was carried out, but only after a three-hour delay caused at least partly by the same problem with accessing an IV line.

Alabama executes inmate convicted in girlfriend's 1994 murder
An undated photo of Joe Nathan James Jr., who was convicted of murder in the 1994 shooting death of his ex-girlfriend.

Alabama Department of Corrections


Last week Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey announced a pause on executions in order to review the procedures. The Republican governor cited concern for victims’ families.

Miller was sentenced to death after being convicted of a 1999 workplace rampage in which he killed Terry Jarvis, Lee Holdbrooks and Scott Yancy.
 
The settlement agreement likely prevents another execution attempt in the near future as Alabama has not announced procedures for using nitrogen hypoxia, and there will be litigation over the humaneness of the method before a state tries to use it.

Seventeen men have been executed in the U.S. this year, according to data compiled by the Death Penalty Information Center. The center says Alabama has carried out 70 executions since 1976, and there are currently 170 inmates on death row in the state.

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