By Kimberely Blackburn –
Delta Digital News Service –
VARNER, Ark. â The last man Arkansas plans to execute in April is not a saint.
Sentenced to life for the 1998 death of University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff cheerleader Dominique Hurd, Kenneth Williams escaped in 1999 after 19 days in prison.
Williams robbed and killed Cecil Boren of Grady, who lived not far outside of the prison. A high-speed chase while evading police in Borenâs stolen truck led to an accident and death of delivery driver Michael Greenwood of Culligan, Missouri. Williams later confessed to killing Jerrell Jenkins on the same day as Hurd.
The state sentenced Williams to die by lethal injection April 27. But his and four other inmatesâ fates remain uncertain following the United States Supreme Court refusal late Monday night to vacate the Arkansas Supreme Courtâs stay of execution for Don Davis.
STATE MOVING FORWARD
Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson said in a statement following the SCOTUS decision that the state would proceed in carrying out the sentences of the other inmates. The SCOTUS decision came just hours after a temporary restraining order barring the state from carrying out a controversial seven executions in 11 days was overturned by the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
That decision prompted McKesson Corp., which manufactures one of three drugs â vecuronium bromide â used in Arkansasâ lethal injections, to pursue further legal action Tuesday.
âMcKesson has filed a new action in Pulaski County Circuit Court for review by the new judge who has now been assigned to these matters and again seeks a restraining order to prevent the use of our product for something other than a legitimate medical purpose. McKesson is committed to ensuring that its property is only used in a manner consistent with our supplier agreement,â said Kristin Hunter, director of Corporate Public Relations for McKesson.
DRUG COCKTAIL CONTROVERSY
The drug cocktail slated for use in the lethal injections contains a drug encompassed in a political firestorm.
The ACLU claims one of the drugs used in Arkansasâ lethal injections may violate the ban on cruel and unusual punishment by causing a long and painful death. An Alabama inmate given the drug experienced painful, burning sensations before death.
The McKesson Corp. claimed the state misled the drug manufacturer to obtain vecuronium bromide. A prepared statement said McKesson believed its drug would be used for medicinal purposes in the Department of Correctionâs in-house medical facility. After learning of the drugâs true intention, McKesson asked for the productâs return.
âUpon learning that ADC was potentially holding the product for lethal injection purposes, McKesson immediately requested and was assured by ADC that the product would be returned. McKesson issued a full refund to ADC and made several additional requests for the product, but the product was never returned,â Hunter said.
Requests for comments from the Department of Corrections remain unanswered.
Brandon White, a Paragould pharmacist with Arkansas Methodist Medical Center said vecuronium bromide is used in long-term paralysis cases such as a patient being placed on a respirator. He said usually, healthcare professionals administer the drug with a strong pain reliever due to the potential of an internal burning sensation.
If McKessonâs vecuronium bromide is used for lethal injection, it could result in legal action against the state. Joseph Rukus, assistant professor of Criminology at Arkansas State University, said McKesson could sue Arkansas for damages to its reputation and as an example to other states considering using their drug for lethal injections.
âBottom line,â he said, âthis could cost the state some money.â
Ruckus said the stateâs lack of transparency in such cases concerns him. He said when it comes to a penalty as final as death, all parts of due process must be transparent.
By not being truthful to obtain this drug for lethal injections, he said the stateâs behavior resembles one as an addict.
âIf an individual wants to get oxycodone, but canât get them through legal means, the state would put someone in prison for getting them through illegal means. The state is doing the same thing,â Rukus said.
DEATH PENALTY SUPPORT
National public support for the death penalty has waned in the past five-to-10 years partially due to the Innocence Project, an organization that attempts to exonerate those wrongly convicted through DNA testing. Rukus said the project resulted in those who believe in the death penalty in principle but are wary of innocents being put to death.
Ruckus said the appeals process takes 10-15 years and results in the death penalty being more costly than an inmate being incarcerated for life without the possibility of parole. Proponents of the death penalty support a shorter appeals process as a result, he said.
Considering convictions overturned after 10-15 years, Ruckus said the state is not always getting death penalty convictions right. However, a recent Talk Business & Politics-Hendrix College poll shows 61 percent of Arkansans support the death penalty, while only 29 percent support life without parole.
Sen. Tom Cotton praised the death penalty at a Town Hall and condemned the pharmaceutical companies âtrying to interfere with the justice system n the state of Arkansas.â Sen. John Boozman did not wish to comment. Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge issued a tweet.
The families have waited far too long to see justice, and I will continue to make that a priority. #arpx #ARexecutions â Leslie Rutledge (@AGRutledge) April 18, 2017
Meanwhile, Williams awaits his fate. In a âLife Insideâ series article penned earlier this month, he wrote of his mindset, apologized to the victimâs families, claimed to be transformed by religion, and discussed the drugs to be used to kill him. As far as the upcoming date?
âDeath, one step closer. Tick, tick.â
—
Republished with permission from Delta Digital News Service.
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