December 18, 2009 8:23 AM

The Justices Deliver Fuzzy Ruling

By
Andrew Cohen
(CBS)  Attorney Andrew Cohen analyzes legal issues for CBS News and CBSNews.com.
It starts off like a bad joke: what do you get when you have seven different opinions from nine judges? Only there is nothing funny about the weak, fuzzy and ultimately counterproductive way in which the Supreme Court has just handled the issue of how prison officials are supposed to lethally inject death-row prisoners on execution day.

It's one thing to unanimously punt the ball in a controversial case-the Justices unfortunately do that all the time. But in the closely-watched Baze v. Rees they couldn't even agree upon what they couldn't agree upon when it comes to the constitutionality of injection protocols in Kentucky. Seven different opinions! And not a one of them particularly profound. With neither the Court's right nor its left satisfied with the mushy result? That's not exactly making lemonade out of lemons, if you ask me.

Instead of issuing clear directives to the dozens of states eagerly awaiting instructions on how to implement execution protocols, the Court's majority mustered only this: lethal injection protocols in Kentucky are not "objectively intolerable," the majority declared, because they are "widely tolerated" in other states around the country and by the federal government. There you have it - the law is why it is because it is - the ultimate in judicial restraint with a Yes, We Have No Bananas flair.

Instead of announcing a legal standard that would narrow the pipeline of future litigation over injection procedures, the Court's feckless majority only invited future cases, a point brought out by one Justice who agreed with the result (Justice John Paul Stevens) and one who did not (Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg). Perhaps it was inevitable, as was made clear during oral argument a few months ago, that any ruling in the case would have generated a new generation of lawsuits about injection methods-how many drugs, the skill of the technicians, etc. But these hodgepodged rulings only guarantee that unhappy result.

Alas, it's arguable that things are going to get worse from here on in because the several of the Justices seemed to open up fresh wounds in the fight over capital punishment. Instead of the peace, love and understanding that Chief Justice John G. Roberts, Jr. all but promised during his confirmation hearing a few years ago, the Court in Rees acted like a bunch of intemperate brats. Go ahead and read Justice Antonin Scalia's screed against Justice Stevens and tell me you think the Supremes were able and willing to keep their eyes on the ball in this case.

Reading the two opinions - Stevens and Scalia - makes you think of the family fight taking place at the dinner table or the great ESPN commercial feature Peyton and Eli Manning. In future lawsuits, advocates on all sides of the debate over capital punishment will cite chapter and verse their strong words. And if it weren't painfully obvious before now we surely can say that Chief Justice Roberts has been as unsuccessful in herding the eight other cats who make up the Court as almost all of his illustrious predecessors have been. If this is the Roberts Court, in other words, and I'm Chief Justice Roberts? I am asking for a do-over.

Of the impact of the ruling there is very little good to say. As a practical matter it opens up the spigot again for executions in this country; a practice that was effectively put on hold by the run-up to this ruling. The irony in this is that the Court Wednesday did not declare all lethal injection protocols to be constitutionally sound so, theoretically anyway, a man or woman might be executed over the next few weeks or months through methods that are actually worse than Kentucky's. Such is the crapshoot that capital punishment is and always has been in America.

From a legal view, officials in states which use lethal injection as the method of execution now have a choice to make. They can use this ruling to do nothing, figuring that by the time the legal challenges against them get any traction we'll be years down the road. Certainly the Court's majority did nothing to make them tremble that they'll ultimately have to pay a price. Or, these public servants can take the productive, constructive approach and fix their injection problems without a "court order" to do so. They can make sure - far more so than Kentucky has done - that there are no "substantial or imminent" risks inherent in the injection procedures.

This is a choice these men and women had last year and the year before that. The Supreme Court Wednesday refused to order them to make lethal injection more professional, more humane, and less susceptible to horrible abuse. The Court refused to require the states to lethally inject prisoners at least as humanely as Kentucky requires its veterinarians to euthanize the Commonwealth's beloved pets. But that doesn't preclude states from doing the right thing themselves, somewhat voluntarily. And, already, some are, including the biggies of Florida, Texas and California.

Proof, I suppose, that some public officials are able to fill the void when the highest court in the land falls flat on its face.

Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment
by pescirulz April 19, 2008 9:16 PM EDT
If liberals are so concerned about inflicting pain on convicted murders, why do they show so little sympathy for the thousands of babies that are executed
(aborted) every year?
Reply to this comment
by it_oldtimer April 19, 2008 2:45 AM EDT
The death penalty is a purely ignorant redneck thing. When the majority of Americans begin to get a real education again, it will swiftly disappear.
Reply to this comment
by it_oldtimer April 19, 2008 2:42 AM EDT
When you have a total idiot appointing justices, can you really expect anything other than "fuzzy" decisions?
Reply to this comment
by pescirulz April 18, 2008 3:54 PM EDT
It is obvious in the article that liberals continue to have a cow that there are not five votes to outlaw capital punishment. As long as Scalia, Kennedy, Thomas, Roberts, and Alito have seats on the bench the death penalty will continue,because it is the will of the majority of Americans it be retained.
Reply to this comment
by sparks224 April 18, 2008 2:59 AM EDT
Remember, this is the same court that gave us the Bush v Gore ruling.
Reply to this comment
by cvbg-2009 April 18, 2008 2:03 AM EDT
sorry for double post, you really need to fix the "the publish button has been disabled" message, it doesn''t make any sense. (http://blogs.zdnet.com/Berlind/?p=506)
Reply to this comment
by cvbg-2009 April 18, 2008 1:59 AM EDT
I think you are way off. The rule was that to challenge the procedure the plaintiff has to SHOW a substantial risk of serious harm (here, gratuitous pain). In this case, although there were alternatives that would obviate those concerns, the state was not obligated to implement them because the court presumes that all the procedures function correctly, and it was conceded that when Kentuky''s procedures functioned correctly there was no pain at all.

I get really tired of people jumping to attribute bad faith to the Court just to score points and that is exactly what you have done here.
Reply to this comment
by cvbg-2009 April 18, 2008 1:58 AM EDT
I think you are way off. The rule was that to challenge the procedure the plaintiff has to SHOW a substantial risk of serious harm (here, gratuitous pain). In this case, although there were alternatives that would obviate those concerns, the state was not obligated to implement them because the court presumes that all the procedures function correctly, and it was conceded that when Kentuky''s procedures functioned correctly there was no pain at all.

I get really tired of people jumping to attribute bad faith to the Court just to score points and that is exactly what you have done here.
Reply to this comment
by melcarnahan April 17, 2008 9:07 PM EDT
I agree with the previous poster that there is no humane way to kill someone. But according to comments in the Washington Post, the risk of pain from maladministration of a lethal injection protocol is an all-American way to sadistically and quietly administer cruel and unusual punishment.

The argument against the three-drug protocol is that if the initial anesthetic does not take hold, the other two drugs can cause excruciating pain. One of those drugs, a paralytic, would render the prisoner unable to express his discomfort; - the American way of death.

Executions in Florida took much longer than usual, with strong indications that the prisoners suffered severe pain in the process. Workers had trouble inserting the IV lines that are used to deliver the drugs.

We are a compassionate society.
Reply to this comment
by bobk4752 April 17, 2008 6:17 PM EDT
Guess what! It''s a lethal injection - they are going to die. What is a humane way to give a person an injection that will kill them. Political correctness has gone way overboard at this point.
Wake up people, there is no humane way to kill someone.
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