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Ernest Lee Johnson |
The Supreme Court on Tuesday night halted a scheduled execution in Missouri, saying that the lethal injection should be delayed until after a lower court rules.
Ernest Lee Johnson was sentenced to death for killing 3 people with a claw hammer in 1994.
His attorneys wrote in filings asking the Supreme Court to stay the execution that Johnson had brain surgery in 2008 to remove a tumor, but that part of the tumor could not be removed.
Johnson is missing between 15 and 20 % of his brain, the attorneys wrote. As a result, Johnson has brain damage and a doctor cited as a medical expert believes he could suffer seizures due to the lethal injection, his attorneys said.
The office of Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster argued in court filings that the execution should proceed, writing that Johnson waited too long to make his argument.
In an unsigned order, the justices said they were granting the stay request pending an appeal in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit.
The complaint from Johnson "alleges that Missouri's method of execution violates the Eighth Amendment as applied to a person with his particular medical condition," the justices wrote.
In the order, the justices continued:
A supporting affidavit by a medical expert states that "[a]s a result of Mr. Johnson's brain tumor, brain defect, and brain scar, a substantial risk of serious harm will occur during his execution as result of a violent seizure that may be induced by [the] Pentobarbital injection."
They went on to say that the appeals court will have to decide whether a complaint of Johnson's that was dismissed was properly dismissed or should have been allowed to progress.
Johnson was scheduled to be executed at 6 p.m. local time.
Source: Washington Post, November 3, 2015