The State of Tennessee executed Byron Black last month, a 69-year-old Black man who had a documented intellectual disability, end-stage kidney disease, congestive heart failure, and cardiomyopathy that required a pacemaker.
His lawyer, public defender Kelley Henry, had tried to get a court order to, at a minimum, force the Tennessee Department of Corrections to deactivate Black’s defibrillator before they killed him to prevent the device from being triggered when they injected him with pentobarbital. Otherwise, she told the court, the execution “will deliver shocks that will restart his heart during the execution and thereby inflict pain and suffering amounting to unconstitutional cruel and unusual punishment.” The court denied her request, and, although data collected from the pacemaker after the execution indicated that the implanted defibrillator did not shock him while he was being injected with pentobarbital, he nevertheless endured a torturous death at the hands of the state.
The Tennesseean reported that as the “pentobarbital flowed through his veins,” Black groaned, and told his spiritual advisor, “‘It’s hurting so bad.'” According to the Tennessean, Henry is now awaiting the results of Black’s autopsy to try to understand what happened. “Make no mistake, we all saw with our own eyes that the pentobarbital did not work like the state’s expert testified that it would. Mr. Black suffered.”
Henry also issued a public statement declaring that, “What happened here was the result of pure, unbridled bloodlust and cowardice. It was the brutal and unchecked abuse of government power. It was the result of a failed criminal legal system that countenanced, even rewarded, attorneys who told half-truths and untruths.
“Today, the State of Tennessee killed a gentle, kind, fragile, intellectually disabled man in violation of the laws of our country simply because they could. No one in a position of power, certainly not the courts, was willing to stop them.
“And if you think that what happened is just about one man, you are wrong. We are witnessing the erosion of the rule of law and every principle of human decency on which this country was founded. Today, it is Byron. Tomorrow, it will be someone you care about.”
You can read Henry’s statement in its entirety here. It is a perfect summation of everything that is wrong with state killing, beautifully written and emotionally devastating.