RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
File Name: 20a0188p.06
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
ROMELL BROOM, ┐
Petitioner-Appellant, │
│
> No. 19-3356
v. │
│
│
TIM SHOOP, Warden, │
Respondent-Appellee. │
┘
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Ohio at Cleveland.
No. 1:10-cv-02058—Christopher A. Boyko, District Judge.
Argued: April 7, 2020
Decided and Filed: June 23, 2020
Before: BATCHELDER, MOORE, and GIBBONS, Circuit Judges.
_________________
COUNSEL
ARGUED: Timothy F. Sweeney, LAW OFFICE OF TIMOTHY FARRELL SWEENEY,
Cleveland, Ohio, for Appellant. Charles L. Wille, OFFICE OF THE OHIO ATTORNEY
GENERAL, Columbus, Ohio, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Timothy F. Sweeney, LAW OFFICE
OF TIMOTHY FARRELL SWEENEY, Cleveland, Ohio, S. Adele Shank, LAW OFFICE OF S.
ADELE SHANK, Columbus, Ohio, for Appellant. Charles L. Wille, OFFICE OF THE OHIO
ATTORNEY GENERAL, Columbus, Ohio, for Appellee.
_________________
OPINION
_________________
KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge. In an infamous September 2009 incident,
the state of Ohio tried to execute death-row inmate Rommel Broom, and failed. More
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specifically, the state tried to execute Broom by way of lethal injection, but was forced to
abandon the effort when the execution team concluded—two hours into the process—that it
could not maintain a viable IV connection to Broom’s veins. The state then returned Broom to
his cell, to await a second execution attempt on another day. That second execution attempt has
not yet happened, however, because the parties have spent the last eleven years litigating whether
the U.S. Constitution bars Ohio from ever trying to execute Broom again—Broom relies on both
the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition on “cruel and unusual” punishment and the Fifth
Amendment’s prohibition on “double jeopardy.” The state courts, including the Ohio Supreme
Court, have rejected Broom’s contentions on the merits, as did the district court below on habeas
review. Broom’s case now comes before us.
We in no way condone Ohio’s treatment of Broom; that it took two hours of stabbing and
prodding for the state to realize that it could not maintain a viable IV connection to Broom’s
veins is disturbing, to say the least. But because the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty
Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”) permits us to reverse state court merits decisions in only a narrow set of
circumstances, and because the Ohio Supreme Court’s decision rejecting Broom’s constitutional
claims on the merits does not fall within that set of circumstances here, we AFFIRM the district
court’s judgment denying Broom habeas relief.
I. BACKGROUND
Ohio’s lethal injection protocol has been the subject of federal litigation for over a
decade. See generally In re Ohio Execution Protocol (Fears), 860 F.3d 881 (6th Cir. 2017) (en
banc); Cooey v. Strickland (Biros), 589 F.3d 210 (6th Cir. 2009); In re Ohio Execution Protocol
Litig. (Hartman), 906 F. Supp. 2d 759 (S.D. Ohio 2012). Most of this litigation has consisted of
death-row inmates bringing lawsuits pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that Ohio’s protocol
is unconstitutional because it risks causing them unnecessarily severe pain during the final
minutes of their lives and because more humane alternatives to Ohio’s protocol exist. See U.S.
Const., amend. VIII (prohibiting the “inflict[ion]” of “cruel and unusual punishment[]”); Glossip
v. Gross, 135 S. Ct. 2726 (2015) (setting forth relevant legal standard); Baze v. Rees, 553 U.S. 35
(2008). Although Ohio has repeatedly modified its protocol in response to this litigation—such
as by changing the drugs used in its lethal injection “cocktail” and by increasing oversight of its
No. 19-3356 Broom v. Shoop Page 3
execution team—the courts have by and large affirmed the constitutionality of Ohio’s system at
every turn (over the dissent of some members of this court, see, e.g., In re Ohio Execution
Protocol (Fears), 860 F.3d at 892–909 (Moore, J., dissenting)).
Romell Broom’s case is different. Unlike the typical death-row inmate, Broom is not
challenging the state’s lethal injection protocol writ large (at least in this proceeding). Rather,
Broom makes the novel argument that his forthcoming execution is unconstitutional because
Ohio has already tried—and failed—to execute him once before. The facts of that failed
execution are described by the Ohio Supreme Court as follows:
Broom was transported to the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility (“Lucasville”)
on September 14, 2009, in anticipation of his execution scheduled for the next
day. Upon his arrival at Lucasville, a nurse and a phlebotomist conducted a vein
assessment and found that Broom’s right-arm vein appeared accessible, but his
left-arm vein seemed less so. Prison officials communicated this information to
Edwin C. Voorhies Jr., the regional director for the Office of Prisons of the Ohio
Department of Rehabilitation and Correction (“ODRC”), and the medical team
assured him that this would not present a problem.
At 1:59 p.m. on September 15, the warden finished reading the death warrant to
Broom. One minute later, Team Members 9 (a female) and 21 (a male) entered
the holding cell to prepare the catheter sites.
Team Member 9 made three attempts to insert a catheter into Broom’s left arm
but was unable to access a vein. At the same time, Team Member 21 made three
unsuccessful stabs into Broom’s right arm. After a short break, Member 9 made
two more insertions, the second of which caused Broom to scream aloud from the
pain.
Member 21 managed to insert the IV catheter into a vein, but then he lost the vein
and blood began running down Broom’s arm. When that occurred, Member 9
rushed out of the room, saying “no” when a security officer asked if she was
okay.
Director Voorhies testified that he could tell there was a problem in the first 10 to
15 minutes. Warden Phillip Kerns saw the team make six or seven attempts on
Broom’s veins during the same 10–to–15–minute period. According to Kerns, the
team members did hit veins, but as soon as they started the saline drip, the vein
would bulge, making it unusable.
About 15 minutes into the process, Kerns and Voorhies saw Member 9 leave the
holding cell. Voorhies described her as sweating “profusely” and heard her say
No. 19-3356 Broom v. Shoop Page 4
that she and Member 21 had both accessed veins, but the veins “blew.” Member
17 then entered the holding cell and made “several attempts” to access a vein in
Broom's left arm. Simultaneously, Member 21 continued his attempts on Broom's
right arm.
Terry Collins, who was then the director of the ODRC, called a break about 45
minutes into the process to consult with the medical team. The break lasted 20 to
25 minutes. The medical team reported that they were gaining IV access but
could not sustain it when they tried to run saline through the line. They expressed
“clear concern” about whether they would get usable veins. But because they said
that there was a reasonable chance of establishing venous access, the decision was
made to continue.
By this time, Broom was in a great deal of pain from the puncture wounds, which
made it difficult for him to move or stretch his arms. The second session
commenced with three medical team members—9, 17, and 21—examining
Broom’s arms and hands for possible injection sites. For the first time, they also
began examining areas around and above his elbow as well as his legs. They also
reused previous insertion sites, and as they continued inserting catheter needles
into already swollen and bruised sites, Broom covered his eyes and began to cry
from the pain. Director Voorhies remarked that he had never before seen an
inmate cry during the process of venous access.
After another ten minutes or so, Warden Kerns asked a nurse to contact the
Lucasville physician to see if she would assess Broom’s veins and offer advice
about finding a suitable vein. Broom later stated that he saw “an Asian woman,”
whom he erroneously identified as “the head nurse,” enter the chamber. Someone
handed her a needle, and when she inserted it, she struck bone, and Broom
screamed from the pain. At the same time, another team member was attempting
to access a vein in Broom's right ankle.
The Lucasville physician confirmed that she came to Broom’s cell, examined his
foot, and made one unsuccessful attempt to insert a needle but quickly concluded
that the effort would not work. By doing so, she disobeyed the warden’s express
instructions to observe only and not get involved. The physician examined
Broom’s foot but could see no other vein.
After the physician departed, the medical team continued trying to establish an IV
line for another five to ten minutes. In all, the second session lasted
approximately 35 to 40 minutes.
During the second break, the medical team advised that even if they successfully
accessed a vein, they were not confident that the site would remain viable
throughout the execution process. The governor’s office had signaled its
willingness to grant a reprieve, and so the decision was made to halt the execution
for the day.
No. 19-3356 Broom v. Shoop Page 5
Dr. Jonathan Groner examined and photographed Broom three or four days
afterward. The photographs show 18 injection sites: one on each bicep, four on
his left antecupital (forearm), three on his right antecupital, three on his left wrist,
one on the back of his left hand, three on the back of his right hand, and one on
each ankle. Prison officials later confirmed that he was stuck at least 18 times.
Dr. Mark Heath met with Broom one week after the event. Dr. Heath observed
“considerable bruising” and a lot of “deep and superficial” tissue damage
consistent with multiple probing. Dr. Heath also posited that the actual number of
catheter insertions was much higher than the number of needle marks, because
according to what Broom told him, the medical team would withdraw the catheter
partway and then reinsert it at a different angle, a procedure known as “fishing.”
State v. Broom, 51 N.E.3d 620, 623–25 (Ohio 2016).
Shortly after this failed execution attempt Broom filed a Section 1983 lawsuit in federal
court, claiming that any attempt to execute him again would violate either the Eighth
Amendment’s prohibition on cruel and unusual punishments or the Fifth Amendment’s bar on
“double jeopardy.” See U.S. Const., amend. V (“[N]or shall any person be subject for the same
offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb[.]”). The district court dismissed most of
Broom’s suit without prejudice, reasoning that, because Broom sought to prevent Ohio from
executing him at all (as opposed to from executing him in a certain manner), his claims were
best classified as a habeas challenge to “the fact[] of [his] sentence itself.” Broom v. Strickland,
2010 WL 3447741, at *3–4 (S.D. Ohio Aug. 27, 2010); see also In re Campbell, 874 F.3d 454,
462 (6th Cir. 2017) (holding that a “death-penalty challenge is . . . cognizable in habeas” only if
it alleges “a defect [that] impairs the very fact of the death sentence itself”). Consequently,
Broom filed a placeholder habeas suit in federal court, see Broom v. Bobby, 2010 WL 4806820
(N.D. Ohio Nov. 18, 2010), and then proceeded to litigate his “no second execution” Eighth
Amendment and Fifth Amendment claims in Ohio state court, see 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(1)(A)
(requiring state prisoners to exhaust state-court remedies before bringing a federal habeas claim).
In the state trial court, Broom argued that Ohio’s conduct during the failed execution
attempt was reckless at best, malicious at worst. And as evidence of this contention, Broom
pointed both to eyewitness testimony recounting the state’s prolonged and painful effort to
execute him (which we set forth above), and to expert testimony stating, among other things, that
the execution team failed to abide by its own protocols and that Broom’s veins “should have
No. 19-3356 Broom v. Shoop Page 6
been easily accessed.” Cooey v. Strickland (Biros), 2009 WL 4842393, at *70 (S.D. Ohio Dec.
7, 2009), aff’d, 589 F.3d 210 (6th Cir. 2009).1 Therefore, Broom reasoned, his first execution
attempt was analogous to purposeful torture, and it would be cruel and unusual to allow the state
to subject him to its lethal injection protocol again. The state trial court, however, rejected
Broom’s arguments, and denied Broom’s request for an additional evidentiary hearing.
Although the trial court acknowledged “that repeated needle sticks are indeed unpleasant,” it
concluded ultimately that such “needle sticks” “are not torture when performed to establish IV
lines and the procedure is not such that a substantial risk of serious harm is present, especially
where, as here, the procedure [was] halted out of an abundance of caution prior to the
administration of any substance (including saline).” R. 19-3 (Tr. Court Order) (Page ID #1319).
The Ohio Court of Appeals affirmed. See State v. Broom, 2012 WL 504504 (Ohio Ct. App. Feb.
16, 2012).
Broom’s case then went to the Ohio Supreme Court. In a 4–3 decision, the court held
that neither the Eighth Amendment nor the Fifth Amendment barred a second execution attempt.
As for Broom’s Eighth Amendment claim, the majority first analyzed the Supreme Court
decision Louisiana ex rel. Francis v. Resweber, 329 U.S. 459 (1947)—in which the Supreme
Court upheld the constitutionality of a second execution attempt, in the context of a failed
electrocution—and then concluded that, “[b]ased on Resweber,” a second execution attempt
would not violate the Eighth Amendment here because Ohio’s “intention in carrying out the
execution is not to cause unnecessary physical pain or psychological harm, and the pain and
emotional trauma Broom already experienced do not equate with the type of torture prohibited
by the Eighth Amendment.” Broom, 51 N.E.3d at 631. The majority also held that, because
1This testimony came from a hearing U.S. District Judge Gregory Frost conducted on the constitutionality
of Ohio’s lethal injection protocol in December 2009. Although Broom was not a direct participant in this hearing,
his failed execution was the primary subject at hand. This was because other death-row inmates seized on Ohio’s
inept treatment of Broom to argue that Ohio’s protocol subjected them (the inmates with pending executions) to an
unconstitutionally high risk of pain. As a result, those inmates’ lawyers spent a substantial amount of time gathering
information about Broom’s execution, including soliciting testimony from medical experts. Although this
constitutional argument ultimately proved unavailing, see, e.g., Cooey, 589 F.3d at 228 (allowing a post-Broom
execution to proceed, despite the “unfortunate” Broom “incident,” because, although Ohio’s protocol “is regrettably
open to the possibility of mistaken application,” “[w]hen administered properly,” it is “humane and constitutional”),
the evidence collected at this December 2009 hearing still constitutes the best and most thorough accounting of
Broom’s first attempted execution.
No. 19-3356 Broom v. Shoop Page 7
Ohio had revamped its lethal injection protocol since Broom’s failed execution and because the
state had conducted over 20 executions under those revamped protocols (with the federal courts’
approval), Broom had not established that the state was likely to repeat its past errors. Id. at
631–32 (citing Ohio’s public execution database and In re Ohio Execution Protocol Litig.
(Wiles), 868 F. Supp. 2d 625, 629–32 (S.D. Ohio 2012)). As for Broom’s Fifth Amendment
claim, the majority reasoned that, because the state’s first execution attempt “did not proceed to
the point of injection of a lethal drug into the IV line, jeopardy never attached,” and, as a result, a
second execution attempt did not implicate “the Fifth Amendment protection against double
jeopardy.” Id. at 627.
Three justices dissented. In the principal dissent, Justices French and Pfeifer argued that,
because there was “an unresolved dispute of fact at the heart of the case, namely, the reason for
the state’s inability to establish IV access at the start of Broom’s attempted execution,” Ohio law
entitled Broom to at least an evidentiary hearing. Id. at 634 (French, J., dissenting). “If the state
cannot explain why the Broom execution went wrong,” the dissent reasoned, “then the state
cannot guarantee that the outcome will be different next time.” Id. at 637. The justices did not,
however, take a position on the merits of either of Broom’s constitutional claims.
Justice O’Neill also dissented. And, in his dissent, he contended that a second execution
attempt would violate the Eighth Amendment—full stop—in large part because, in his view,
standards of decency have “evolved substantially” since the Supreme Court’s decision in
Resweber. See id. at 639–40 (O’Neill, J., dissenting) (describing the state’s initial execution
attempt as “torture”). Justice O’Neill did not address Broom’s Fifth Amendment claim.
His state remedies exhausted, Broom resumed litigating his (still-pending) habeas
petition in federal court. After first rejecting Broom’s request for permission to conduct
additional discovery—a decision that is not on appeal here—the district court determined, in a
thoughtful and thorough 71-page order, that Broom’s Eighth Amendment and Fifth Amendment
claims could not proceed. Guided by the demanding standards imposed on federal habeas
review by the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”), the district
court reasoned that, although “[f]ew would disagree that Ohio’s failed attempt to execute Broom
was a deeply unfortunate incident,” given the exceedingly limited on-point Supreme Court
No. 19-3356 Broom v. Shoop Page 8
precedent, “Broom ha[d] not demonstrated that the [Ohio Supreme Court] was objectively
unreasonable in deciding that the pain and trauma he endured as a result of the State’s initial
execution attempt and the psychological pain he may experience in a second attempt do not rise
to the level of an Eighth Amendment violation.” Broom v. Jenkins, 2019 WL 1299846, at *31
(N.D. Ohio Mar. 21, 2019); see also id. at *34 (similar conclusion with respect to Broom’s Fifth
Amendment claim).
This appeal followed.
II. DISCUSSION
When a habeas petitioner raises a claim that has already been adjudicated on the merits
by a state court, AEDPA requires federal courts to defer to the state court’s decision unless the
court’s decision “was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established
Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1).
AEDPA deference is a “difficult” bar to overcome, requiring the petitioner to “show that the
state court’s ruling on [his] claim . . . was so lacking in justification that there was an error well
understood and comprehended in existing law beyond any possibility for fairminded
disagreement.” Harrington v. Richter, 562 U.S. 86, 102–03 (2011). Deference to the state court
is particularly warranted, moreover, when the governing Supreme Court precedent is itself
unclear or ambiguous. See, e.g., Wright v. Van Patten, 552 U.S. 120, 126 (2008) (per curiam)
(“Because our cases give no clear answer to the question presented, let alone one in [the
petitioner’s] favor, it cannot be said that the state court unreasonably applied clearly established
Federal law.” (citations omitted)); Mitchell v. Esparza, 540 U.S. 12, 17 (2003) (per curiam)
(“A federal court may not overrule a state court for simply holding a view different from its own,
when the precedent from this Court is, at best, ambiguous.”).
A.
At the outset, the parties dispute a threshold matter. Was the Ohio Supreme Court’s
ruling “on the merits,” such that it is entitled to deference under § 2254(d)(1)? We think it was.
No. 19-3356 Broom v. Shoop Page 9
Harrington v. Richter teaches that, “[w]hen a federal claim has been presented to a state
court and the state court has denied relief, it may be presumed that the state court adjudicated the
claim on the merits in the absence of any indication or state-law procedural principles to the
contrary.” 562 U.S. at 99 (emphasis added). This is a “strong” presumption “that may be
rebutted only in unusual circumstances,” such as when a state court rejects a federal claim
because “of sheer inadvertence,” without “evaluat[ing] . . . the intrinsic right and wrong of the
matter.” Johnson v. Williams, 568 U.S. 289, 302–03 (2013).
Regardless of what one thinks of the Ohio Supreme Court’s decision, there is no doubt
that the court in fact adjudicated Broom’s Eighth Amendment and Fifth Amendment claims on
the merits, by “evaluat[ing] . . . the intrinsic right and wrong of the matter[s].” Id. And although
Broom points out, correctly, that the court leaned on extra-record evidence at one point in its
decision, see Broom, 51 N.E.3d at 632 (citing Ohio’s online public execution database as proof
that “[t]he state has executed 21 death-row inmates since the attempted execution of Broom”),
there is no reason to think that this citation rendered the court’s decision “non-merits” for
purposes of AEDPA review. This is especially so because the extra-record citation was to a
governmental website. See, e.g., United States v. Garcia, 855 F.3d 615, 621 (4th Cir. 2017)
(“This court and numerous others routinely take judicial notice of information contained on state
and federal government websites.”). Similarly, there is no reason to think that the court’s
decision became “non-merits” simply because new factual developments occurred after the court
issued its decision in March 2016. See Appellant Reply Br. at 11 (arguing, without citation to
precedent, that the Ohio Supreme Court’s decision was not “on the merits” because, in October
2016, Ohio changed the drugs used in its lethal injection protocol). And there is likewise no
force to Broom’s contention that “judgment on a materially incomplete record is not an
adjudication [on the merits],” Appellant Br. at 40 (quoting Winston v. Kelly, 592 F.3d 535, 555
(4th Cir. 2010)), because this court has twice rejected the strain of case law cited by Broom,
describing it as incompatible with the Supreme Court’s decisions in Harrington and Cullen v.
Pinholster, 563 U.S. 170 (2011). See Loza v. Mitchell, 766 F.3d 466, 494–95 (6th Cir. 2014);
Ballinger v. Prelesnik, 709 F.3d 558, 561–62 (6th Cir. 2013).
No. 19-3356 Broom v. Shoop Page 10
B.
With this threshold question resolved, we now turn to the parties’ chief dispute: whether
the Ohio Supreme Court unreasonably applied “clearly established” Supreme Court precedent
when it ruled that Ohio could attempt to execute Broom a second time without running afoul of
the Eighth Amendment’s bar on “cruel and unusual” punishments.
For starters, we first clarify what the clearly established Supreme Court precedent
governing Broom’s claim is, exactly. Ohio argues that Lousiana ex rel. Francis v. Resweber,
329 U.S. 459 (1947), is the only such precedent, because it is the only Supreme Court precedent
dealing with a factual scenario even remotely analogous to the one presented here, i.e., the
constitutionality of a second execution attempt. Broom, by contrast, argues that a later Supreme
Court decision, Trop v. Dulles, 356 U.S. 86 (1958), is the most on-point precedent because,
although Trop’s facts are nothing like the facts here—Trop concerned the constitutionality of
using denationalization as a punishment—that decision established the important principle that
the Eighth Amendment “must draw its meaning from the evolving standards of decency that
mark the progress of a maturing society,” id. at 101 (plurality opinion).
Ohio is right. For a Supreme Court precedent to be “clearly established” the decision’s
holdings must “squarely address[] the issue in [the] case,” Wright, 552 U.S. at 125; “abstract”
constitutional principles, or dicta more broadly, do not suffice, see Lopez v. Smith, 574 U.S. 1,
6 (2014) (per curiam) (reversing circuit court for holding that certain Supreme Court decisions
provided “clearly established” law when the cited decisions did not “address[], even remotely,
the specific question presented by [the] case” (emphasis added)); White v. Woodall, 572 U.S.
415, 419 (2014) (noting that “clearly established Federal law . . . includes only the holdings, as
opposed to the dicta, of this Court’s decisions” (citations omitted)). Because Resweber is the
only Supreme Court precedent to address the issue presented by this case—the constitutionality
of a second execution attempt after a botched first attempt—it was the only Supreme Court
precedent capable of providing a clear Eighth Amendment holding for the Ohio Supreme Court
to follow. And although Broom suggests that Trop, and its progeny, have implicitly overruled
Resweber, see Appellant Br. at 47 (describing the Resweber court’s “understanding of the impact
of trauma” as “no longer valid”), not only does this argument actually undermine Broom’s
No. 19-3356 Broom v. Shoop Page 11
point—if Resweber is no longer good law that just means there is no clearly established law in
this realm at all—but also the Supreme Court’s continued citation of Resweber shows that the
Court still views the decision as binding. See, e.g., Glossip, 135 S. Ct. at 2732, 2739; Baze,
553 U.S. at 50.
With this issue clarified, our inquiry becomes twofold: First, what did Resweber hold, as
a matter of Eighth Amendment law? And, second, did the Ohio Supreme Court unreasonably
apply that holding when it denied Broom’s Eighth Amendment claim?
1.
Resweber’s facts are straightforward. In 1945, a Louisiana jury convicted a young
African-American man named Willie Francis of murder and sentenced him to death. 2
Consequently, on May 3, 1946, the state’s execution team read Francis his last rites and strapped
him into the electric chair. Similar to the case at hand, however, when “[t]he executioner threw
the switch . . . death did not result”; this was “presumably because of some mechanical
difficulty.” Resweber, 329 U.S. at 460. Francis was then “removed from the chair and returned
to prison.” Id. The question thus became whether the Constitution permitted Louisiana to
attempt to execute Francis by electric chair again, despite the fact that the state had not only put
Francis “through the difficult preparation for execution,” to no avail, but had also sent “through
[Francis’s] body a current of electricity intended to cause death,” also to no avail. Id. at 461.
The Court said yes, the Constitution did not prohibit Louisiana from attempting to
execute Francis a second time. Its opinion, however, was a fractured one.
The plurality opinion. Justice Reed—writing for himself, Chief Justice Vinson, Justice
Black, and Justice Jackson—ruled that a second execution attempt would not violate the Eighth
Amendment’s bar on “cruel and unusual” punishments because neither the “psychological
strain” endured by Francis nor “the fact that [Francis] ha[d] already been subjected to a current
2As Justice O’Neill explained in dissent, Francis’s murder conviction and resulting death sentence were the
product of a deeply racist and unfair criminal justice system. See Broom, 51 N.E.3d at 640 (O’Neill, J., dissenting)
(citing Miller & Bowman, Death by Installments: The Ordeal of Willie Francis (1988)). Because this aspect of
Francis’s story is not relevant for present purposes, however, we do not emphasize it here.
No. 19-3356 Broom v. Shoop Page 12
of electricity” rendered “his subsequent execution any more cruel in the constitutional sense than
any other execution.” Id. at 464. “The cruelty against which the Constitution protects a
convicted man is cruelty inherent in the method of punishment, not the necessary suffering
involved in any method employed to extinguish life humanely,” the Court added. Id. The Court
then emphasized that this conclusion held especially true in Francis’s circumstance because
“[t]here [was] no purpose to inflict unnecessary pain [during the failed execution] nor any
unnecessary pain involved in the proposed [second] execution.” Id.; see also In re Kemmler,
136 U.S. 436 (1890) (upholding the constitutionality of the electric chair, as a general matter). In
other words, the Court reasoned, Francis was just the “unfortunate victim” of an “accident,” akin
to a prisoner injured by a “fire in the cell block.” Resweber, 329 U.S. at 464.
The Frankfurter opinion. Justice Frankfurter took a different approach. In his view, the
Eighth Amendment did not apply to the states at all, only the Fourteenth Amendment did.3 And
because the Fourteenth Amendment demanded only that the state not “offend[] a principle of
justice rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people,” and because the state’s initial
failure to execute Francis was simply “an innocent misadventure” (and hence not in violation of
any deeply-rooted “principle of justice”), the Constitution permitted Louisiana to attempt to
execute Francis a second time. Id. at 470 (citation omitted). Still, Justice Frankfurter cautioned,
“a series of abortive attempts at electrocution or even a single, cruelly willful attempt,” may
“raise different questions,” even under the more state-friendly Fourteenth Amendment standard.
Id. at 471.
The dissent. Justice Burton—writing for himself, Justice Douglas, Justice Murphy, and
Justice Rutledge—dissented. Like Justice French’s principal dissent here, see supra at 7, the
Resweber dissenters did not argue that a second execution attempt would necessarily violate the
Eighth Amendment. Rather, the dissenters reasoned, the case needed to be remanded so that a
state trial court could discern “the extent, if any, to which electric current was applied to
[Francis] during his attempted electrocution.” Id. at 472. But, the dissenters went on, if “a
3The Supreme Court has since rejected this view, and has “incorporated” the Bill of Rights, or most of
them anyway, so that they apply to the states. See, e.g., Robinson v. California, 370 U.S. 660 (1962) (confirming
that state governments must comply with the Eighth Amendment).
No. 19-3356 Broom v. Shoop Page 13
current of electricity was caused to pass through [Francis’s] body,” intentionally subjecting
Francis to that pain again would be cruel and unusual, if not “torture,” and would “present[]
more tha[n] a case of mental anguish.” Id. at 476–77 (emphasis added). “The contrast,” the
dissenters observed, “is that between instantaneous death and death by installments—caused by
electric shocks administered after one or more intervening periods of complete consciousness of
the victim.” Id. at 474.
2.
With this context, and AEDPA’s demanding standard of review, in mind, we now ask
whether the Ohio Supreme Court reasonably applied Resweber when it rejected Broom’s Eighth
Amendment claim. We conclude that it did. Although Broom makes a compelling case on the
merits, one that some members of the panel might be tempted to accept were this case before us
on direct review, cf. Sireci v. Florida, 137 S. Ct. 470, 471 (2016) (Breyer, J., dissenting from
denial of certiorari) (stating that he “would have heard Broom’s claim” on direct review from the
Ohio Supreme Court, to determine if a “second [execution] attempt amount[ed] to a ‘cruel and
unusual’ punishment”), Broom cannot show that the Ohio Supreme Court’s decision “was so
lacking in justification that there was an error well understood and comprehended in existing law
beyond any possibility for fairminded disagreement,” Harrington, 562 U.S. at 103. For better or
for worse, five justices in Resweber agreed that the Constitution does not prohibit a state from
executing a prisoner after having already tried—and failed—to execute that prisoner once, so
long as the state (1) did not intentionally, or maliciously, inflict unnecessary pain during the first,
failed execution, and (2) will not inflict unnecessary pain during the second execution, beyond
that inherent in the method of execution itself. And, for better or for worse, that essentially is
what the Ohio Supreme Court held here. Specifically, the court held that (1) “[t]he state’s
intention in carrying out the execution [was] not to cause unnecessary physical pain or
psychological harm,” and (2) Broom is unlikely to suffer severe pain during his second
execution—or to endure yet another failed execution—because the state has since amended its
execution protocols (with the federal courts’ approval), and has executed numerous prisoners
under those revamped protocols. Broom, 51 N.E.3d at 631–32. And thus, the court concluded,
the Eighth Amendment did not prohibit Ohio from attempting to execute Broom a second time.
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Whatever one may think of that conclusion, it was not an “unreasonable” application of Supreme
Court precedent. If anything, it was a direct application of Supreme Court precedent (albeit of a
precedent that may have since outlived its usefulness).
Broom’s two principal counterarguments do not persuade us otherwise.
First, Broom at times emphasizes the views of the Resweber dissent, as if to argue that
that opinion, not the plurality, would constitute the “clearly established” law today, were the
Supreme Court to review the issue afresh. See, e.g., Appellant Br. at 57. On one level this
argument makes sense. Justice Frankfurter’s fifth vote hinged on an outdated understanding of
constitutional procedure, see supra at n.3, and Justice Frankfurter himself suggested that, but-for
that understanding, he might have voted with the dissenters, see, e.g., Resweber, 329 U.S. at 471
(Frankfurter, J., concurring) (“Strongly drawn as I am to some of the sentiments expressed by my
brother Burton . . . .”). But not only does this argument make Resweber even more ambiguous
than it already is, which does not help Broom’s case on AEDPA review, see Mitchell, 540 U.S.
at 17, but also it is far from clear that Broom would prevail even under the Resweber dissenters’
understanding of the Eighth Amendment.
Recall the key fact emphasized by the Resweber dissenters: Louisiana had (allegedly, at
least) caused a “current of electricity . . . to pass through the body of [Francis]” during its first
attempt at electrocution. Resweber, 329 U.S. at 477 (Burton, J., dissenting). Consequently, the
dissenters reasoned, a second execution attempt would not only cause Francis needless “mental
anguish,” but it would physically be akin to “death by installments [of electricity],” or, more
bluntly, “torture.” Id. at 474, 476–77. Here, by contrast, however inept Ohio’s treatment of
Broom was during the first execution attempt, at no point during the two-hour ordeal did the
state actually inject Broom with any part of its three-drug cocktail. As a result, Ohio is not
requesting that it be allowed “two injections per prisoner,” the way Louisiana was requesting
“two electrocutions per prisoner” with Francis. This distinction may seem trite, but it is the
distinction that the Resweber dissenters found dispositive, and it would not help Broom here.
Second, Broom attacks the reasonableness of the Ohio Supreme Court’s conclusion that
he is unlikely to face severe pain—or another botched execution—the next time Ohio attempts to
No. 19-3356 Broom v. Shoop Page 15
execute him, citing changes to Ohio’s lethal injection protocol that occurred in October 2016,
after the Ohio Supreme Court’s decision. See Appellant Br. at 41–42; Appellant Reply Br. at 6–
11. Indeed, Broom points out, on November 15, 2017, Ohio tried to execute another inmate,
Alva Campbell, under the new, October 2016 protocol, only to give up after “four unsuccessful
attempts at IV access.” Appellant Br. at 42.4
That the Ohio Supreme Court did not have the opportunity to consider these new
developments is notable, to be sure. But that fact alone cannot justify habeas relief. For one, this
kind of “challenge to the protocol” argument is indistinguishable from the “method of execution”
arguments this court reserves for section 1983 suits, see supra at 5, and so it is unclear the extent
to which this argument is even cognizable on habeas review. After all, the question Broom
asked us to answer is whether the Eighth Amendment prohibits Ohio from making an “additional
attempt” to execute him at all, not whether Ohio’s post-October 2016 protocols risk causing an
unconstitutional amount of pain, as a general matter. App. R. 16 (COA Order at 3).5 But even
leaving that procedural concern aside, we are hard pressed to conclude that the Ohio Supreme
Court’s failure to consider the effect of the October 2016 protocol on Broom’s future execution
renders its decision “unreasonable,” and therefore worthy of reversal, when this court has (for
better or for worse) since affirmed the constitutionality of that exact protocol, on three different
occasions, including after the botched Alva Campbell execution. See In re Ohio Execution
Protocol Litig. (Henness), 946 F.3d 287 (6th Cir. 2019); In re Ohio Execution Protocol Litig.
(Campbell & Tibbetts), 881 F.3d 447 (6th Cir. 2018); In re Ohio Execution Protocol (Fears),
860 F.3d 881 (6th Cir. 2017) (en banc); see also Glossip, 135 S. Ct. at 2731 (approving virtually
identical procedure from Oklahoma). That is to say, there is no reason to think that, had the
Ohio Supreme Court had access to all the information Broom wishes it had access to, it would
have come out the other way (much less that clearly established Supreme Court precedent
required it to come out the other way).
4As Broom notes, Campbell subsequently died of natural causes, before Ohio could again attempt to
execute him. See Appellant Br. at 42 n.8.
5Indeed, it appears that Broom is still intent on bringing a section 1983 “method of execution” lawsuit after
the conclusion of this habeas appeal, see In re Ohio Execution Protocol Litig. (Broom), 2020 WL 401130 (S.D. Ohio
Jan. 24, 2020), in which he will presumably challenge the extent to which Ohio’s current protocol risks subjecting
him to an unreasonably severe amount of pain during the injection process.
No. 19-3356 Broom v. Shoop Page 16
All of that said, we emphasize that we do not address the merits of any future “method of
execution” challenge Broom may bring. See supra n.5. Nor do we suggest that we would reach
this same conclusion were Ohio to try and fail to execute Broom again. Rather, we hold simply
that the Ohio Supreme Court did not unreasonably apply clearly established Supreme Court
precedent when it rejected Broom’s “no second execution” Eighth Amendment claim in this
instance.
C.
This leaves Broom’s Fifth Amendment claim. The Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth
Amendment states that no person shall “be subject for the same offence to be twice put in
jeopardy of life or limb.” And in this context the phrase “to be . . . put in jeopardy of life or
limb” refers to “[t]he risk of conviction and punishment that a criminal defendant faces at trial.”
Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) (defining “jeopardy”). In most circumstances, the
Clause stands for the proposition that, if a state puts a defendant on trial for a crime (and
jeopardy attaches), and the defendant is then acquitted and released (and jeopardy terminates),
the government may not try that defendant a second time for the same offense (because that
would subject the defendant to double jeopardy). See, e.g., Sattazahn v. Pennsylvania, 537 U.S.
101, 106 (2003); Richardson v. United States, 468 U.S. 317, 325 (1984); see also Currier v.
Virginia, 138 S. Ct. 2144, 2149 (2018) (stating that the Clause exists to prevent prosecutors from
“treat[ing] trials as dress rehearsals until they secure the convictions they seek”).
The Supreme Court has long held, however, that the Clause also protects criminal
defendants “against multiple punishments for the same offense.” North Carolina v. Pearce, 395
U.S. 711, 717 (1969) (emphasis added) (citing, among other cases, Ex parte Lange, 85 U.S. 163,
168 (1873)). Although this additional protection is enigmatic, and the source of some
controversy, see, e.g., Dep’t of Revenue of Montana v. Kurth Ranch, 511 U.S. 767, 798–805
(1994) (Scalia, J., dissenting) (arguing that the Clause prohibits only successive prosecutions, not
successive punishments), in more recent times the Court has clarified that this facet of double
jeopardy serves a “limited” purpose: to “ensure that sentencing courts do not exceed, by the
device of multiple punishments, the limits prescribed by the legislative branch of government, in
which lies the substantive power to define crimes and prescribe punishments.” Jones v. Thomas,
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491 U.S. 376, 381 (1989); see, e.g., Ex Parte Lange, 85 U.S. at 175–76 (holding that the
sentencing court violated the Double Jeopardy Clause when it punished a criminal defendant
with imprisonment and a fine when the criminal statute explicitly stated that such a defendant
could be punished only with imprisonment or a fine). In other words, “if a legislature permits
multiple punishments, a court can impose such punishments; if a legislature prohibits multiple
punishments, a court cannot impose such punishments.” Palmer v. Haviland, 273 F. App’x 480,
484 (6th Cir. 2008).
The Supreme Court has never applied the Double Jeopardy Clause in the particular
context of a second execution. Although Willie Francis raised a double jeopardy concern in
Resweber, the Court declined to apply the Fifth Amendment Double Jeopardy Clause because,
under a then-prevailing precedent, Palko v. Connecticut, 302 U.S. 319 (1937), the Double
Jeopardy Clause did not even apply to the states. See Resweber, 329 U.S. at 462–63. Instead,
the Court’s plurality opinion stated that under Palko and the Fourteenth Amendment, there was
“no double jeopardy [in Resweber] which can be said to amount to a denial of federal due
process.” Id. at 463. Although Palko has since been overruled, see Benton v. Maryland, 395
U.S. 784, 793–94 (1969), the Supreme Court has not had occasion to address the question since.
A logical application of the more general Double Jeopardy Clause precedent described above,
however, suggests that the Clause does not prohibit a second attempt at execution. This is
because, when a capital-punishment state attempts to execute a death-row inmate a second time,
following a failed first attempt, the state is neither (1) attempting to subject that defendant to a
second trial following an acquittal, nor (2) attempting to impose a “second” punishment beyond
that permitted by the legislature.
Nonetheless, we need not reach a definitive conclusion regarding the scope of the Double
Jeopardy Clause in the second-execution context because, regardless of the correctness of the
Ohio Supreme Court’s reasoning, that court plainly did not misapply clearly established Supreme
Court precedent. Indeed, not only is the Ohio Supreme Court’s conclusion consistent with the
Supreme Court’s general double jeopardy jurisprudence, as outlined above, but also the Ohio
Supreme Court reached its conclusion without the benefit of any on-point Supreme Court
guidance, thus rendering AEDPA deference particularly appropriate. See, e.g., Litschewski v.
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Dooley, 792 F.3d 1012, 1016–17 (8th Cir. 2015) (rejecting petitioner’s novel double jeopardy
claim on AEDPA review and deferring to state court’s decision, in large part because the
Supreme Court had addressed the issue at only a “high level of generality”); see also Wright,
552 U.S. at 126 (“Because our cases give no clear answer to the question presented, let alone one
in [the petitioner’s] favor, it cannot be said that the state court unreasonably applied clearly
established Federal law.” (citations omitted)).6
Broom makes two arguments to the contrary. Neither convinces.
First, Broom makes a textualist argument that, because the state put his life “in jeopardy”
once (during the first execution), it would violate the plain language of the Clause to put his life
“in jeopardy” again (during a second execution). U.S. Const., amend. V (“[N]or shall any person
be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb[.]”); see, e.g.,
Appellant’s Br. at 64. But this argument confuses textualism with literalism. Again, in the
context of the Fifth Amendment, it is well established that the phrase “to be . . . put in jeopardy
of life” refers to “[t]he risk of conviction and punishment that a criminal defendant faces at
trial.” Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) (defining “jeopardy”) (emphasis added); see also
Random House Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary 1026 (2d ed. 1993) (distinguishing between
jeopardy’s ordinary meaning and jeopardy’s “legal” meaning). Accepting Broom’s contrary,
literal definition of “jeopardy” would require the panel to ignore that context, which of course
even the most ardent of textualists would not do. Cf. Deal v. United States, 508 U.S. 129, 132
(1993) (Scalia, J.) (“Petitioner’s contention overlooks, we think, this fundamental principle of
statutory construction (and, indeed, of language itself) that the meaning of a word cannot be
determined in isolation, but must be drawn from the context in which it is used.”).
6If anything, the Ohio Supreme Court’s reasoning may have been more favorable to Broom than U.S.
Supreme Court precedent required it to be. That is because the court implied that, had the first execution attempt
proceeded “to the point of injection of a lethal drug into the IV line,” and failed, the Clause would have prevented
Ohio from attempting to execute Broom again. See Broom, 51 N.E.3d at 627 (stating that because the state’s first
execution attempt “did not proceed to the point of injection of a lethal drug into the IV line, jeopardy never
attached,” and, as a result, a second execution attempt would not implicate “the Fifth Amendment protection against
double jeopardy”). For the reasons explained above, this proposition is debatable. But because the state court’s
ultimate conclusion was not in defiance of clearly established Supreme Court precedent, we need not say more here.
No. 19-3356 Broom v. Shoop Page 19
Second, Broom latches onto the phrase “no man can be twice lawfully punished for the
same offence”—a double jeopardy maxim dating back to Ex parte Lange—to argue that, if Ohio
attempts to execute him again, it would run afoul of this well-established command (presumably
because a second execution attempt would constitute a verboten “second punishment”).
Appellant Reply Br. at 16. But just as Broom’s prior argument read the term “jeopardy” out of
its definitional context, this argument reads the Lange maxim out of its precedential context. As
the Supreme Court explained in Jones v. Thomas, Lange “stands for the uncontested proposition
that the Double Jeopardy Clause prohibits punishment in excess of that authorized by the
legislature . . . not for the broader rule suggested by its dictum.” 491 U.S. at 383 (emphasis
added). And because allowing Ohio to complete its execution of Broom would not go beyond
what Ohio’s legislature has authorized—for better or for worse, Ohio still permits capital
punishment—the Lange maxim cannot help Broom here.
III. CONCLUSION
For these reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment.