Outing the Lethal Injectors
The March 31 resignations of a four-member execution team at the Washington State Penitentiary in Walla Walla appeared to have been provoked by the likelihood that their identities would surface in a court battle over the constitutionality of injections. News reports indicated the four anonymous volunteers, who administer the injections to death-row inmates, quit their posts over concern that attorneys for three condemned inmates could leak personal information being gathered for legal challenges.
The reports may be only half right, says Prison Legal News editor Paul Wright. It was likely because of him that the team resigned, he suspects. And the four volunteers should be worried their names will be made public, since Wright might reveal them in his magazine.
A former inmate who served 17 years for the second-degree murder of a drug dealer, Wright filed a public records request with the state Department of Corrections in January asking for the identities of those who participate in executions. “The history of state murder is there’s never a shortage of executioners,” says Wright. “But if we are going to have the death penalty, the public should know who its killers are.”
A controversial figure who regularly challenges the state to release sensitive documents, Wright sometimes has to go to court over them; he won a record $541,000 fine from the state in 2007 after officials illegally withheld the disciplinary records of prison medical providers. His latest request came after the resignation late last year of the department’s top medical officer, Dr. Marc Stern, who said it was unethical for him—a physician sworn to save lives—to supervise executions. Wright, whose publication has frequently reported on questionable medical procedures in U.S. prisons, says, “Knowing doctors, I figured if one resigned, at least a dozen would be happy to kill people. Hence the records request.”
In part, he wants to find out who on the team is a doctor. If any show up on the records he obtains, says Wright, “I will review their medical discipline, criminal, and litigation histories, and see what turns up. And PLN will most likely alert medical licensing authorities to the fact that medical personnel are violating their professional and ethical responsibilities.”
And yes, he’ll publish their names.