UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
LISA MARIE MONTGOMERY,
Plaintiff,
Civil Action No. 20-3261 (RDM)
v.
JEFFREY A. ROSEN et al.,
Defendants.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Over the course of this case, Plaintiff Lisa Montgomery, a prisoner on federal death row,
has challenged her scheduled execution date on multiple grounds. She now renews her motion
for partial summary judgment on the claim that, when the Director of the Federal Bureau of
Prisons (“BOP”) rescheduled her execution for January 12, 2021, he violated Missouri law made
binding on the federal government through the Federal Death Penalty Act (“FDPA”), 18 U.S.C.
§ 3591 et seq. For the reasons explained below, the Court is unpersuaded and will therefore
deny Montgomery’s motion. Because this decision fully and finally resolves Montgomery’s
claim on the merits and because there is no just reason for delay, the Court will also enter partial
summary judgment in Defendants’ favor on Count II of the supplemental complaint.
I.
Because this Court has recited the underlying facts of this case in two recent opinions,
Montgomery v. Rosen, No. 20-cv-3261, 2020 WL 7695994 (D.D.C. Dec. 24, 2020)
(“Montgomery II”); Montgomery v. Barr, No. 20-cv-3261, 2020 WL 6799140 (D.D.C. Nov. 19,
2020) (“Montgomery I”), the Court will not repeat them here, except to describe developments
since this Court’s last opinion and order. On December 24, 2020, the Court granted
Montgomery’s motion to vacate her rescheduled execution date of January 12, 2021. See
generally, Montgomery II, 2020 WL 7695994. The Court entered partial summary judgment for
Montgomery, finding that the Director of BOP had violated federal regulation 28 C.F.R. § 26.3
by rescheduling her execution before the Court’s stay lifted. Id. at *2, *12; see also Dkt. 48.
The Court did not, however, reach Montgomery’s second claim—that her rescheduled execution
date also violated the FDPA by contravening Missouri state law requiring a minimum of 90
days’ notice and capping the number of executions allowed per month. As the Court explained,
the FDPA claim presented “a host of difficult issues that, if possible, [were] better left for
resolution on a less compressed timetable,” and furthermore, “the question whether a new order
must provide Montgomery with at least 90 days’ notice [was] hypothetical and not ripe for
resolution.” Montgomery II, 2020 WL 7695994, at *12. On January 1, 2021, the D.C. Circuit
reversed this Court’s judgment granting partial summary judgment. Montgomery v. Rosen, No.
20-5379, Order at 1 (D.C. Cir. Jan. 1, 2021); Dkt. 56. A few days later, on January 5, 2021, the
D.C. Circuit denied Montgomery’s motion for rehearing en banc, Montgomery v. Rosen, No. 20-
5379, Order at 1 (D.C. Cir. Jan. 5, 2021), and the court issued its mandate forthwith, Dkt. 56.
In light of the D.C. Circuit’s decision, Montgomery’s execution date of January 12, 2021,
has been reinstated. Shortly after 9:00 p.m. on January 5, 2021, Montgomery moved for leave to
file a renewed motion for partial summary judgment on her FDPA claim, Dkt. 58, and later that
same evening, the Court directed that Defendants respond by 9:00 p.m. the following evening
and that Montgomery file her reply by noon on January 7, 2021, Minute Order (Jan. 5, 2021).
The Court heard oral argument at 2:00 p.m. on January 7, 2021. At argument, the parties
consented to the Court’s treating Defendants’ opposition as a cross-motion for partial summary
judgment.
2
II.
As a threshold matter, the Court will grant Montgomery’s motion for leave to renew her
motion for partial summary judgment, Dkt. 58. Now that the D.C. Circuit has reversed the
Court’s judgment on Count I of Montgomery’s supplemental complaint, Dkt. 56, thereby
reinstating her January 12, 2020 execution date, Montgomery’s FDPA claim takes on new
significance and is ripe for decision. Indeed, even Defendants, who contest Montgomery’s filing
of an additional brief, acknowledge that her FDPA claim “is ripe for this Court’s consideration.”
Dkt. 59 at 9.
III.
In her renewed motion for partial summary judgment, Montgomery argues that in
resetting her execution date for January 12, 2021, Defendants violated the FDPA. Dkt. 58-2 at
10–14; Dkt. 35 at 16–18. In relevant part, that statute provides that “[w]hen the sentence [of
death] is to be implemented, the Attorney General shall release the person sentenced to death to
the custody of a United States marshal, who shall supervise implementation of the sentence in
the manner prescribed by the law of the State in which the sentence is imposed.” 18 U.S.C.
§ 3596(a). Montgomery contends that because she was sentenced in the Western District of
Missouri, see United States v. Montgomery, 635 F.3d 1074, 1079 n.1 (8th Cir. 2011), her
execution must be implemented in accordance with Missouri law, Dkt. 58-2 at 10; Dkt. 35 at 16–
17. According to Montgomery, Defendants failed to comply—in two respects—with a binding
Missouri regulation, Missouri Supreme Court Rule 30.30(f), which governs the setting of
execution dates.
As a state regulation, Rule 30.30(f) by its terms directs the conduct of state actors. It
provides that the “[Missouri Supreme] Court shall set dates of execution after consultation with
3
the director of the department of corrections.” Mo. Sup. Ct. R. 30.30(f). The rule constrains the
setting of dates in two ways. First, the rule requires that “[a]ny date of execution shall be at least
90 days but not more than 120 days after the date the order setting the date is entered.” Id.
Second, the rule provides that “[t]he department of corrections shall not be required to execute
more than one warrant of execution per month.” Id. Montgomery alleges that Defendants
violated both restrictions by providing her far less than 90 days’ notice of her rescheduled
execution date and by scheduling three federal executions for January 2021. Dkt. 58-2 at 10;
Dkt. 35 at 17.
Defendants do not (and could not) contest that the FDPA requires a United States marshal
to “supervise implementation of [Montgomery’s] sentence in the manner prescribed by the law
of the State in which [her] sentence was imposed,” 18 U.S.C. § 3596(a), or that she was
sentenced in Missouri. Nor do Defendants dispute that the Missouri Supreme Court’s rules carry
the force of law.1 Instead, Defendants primarily argue that Missouri’s Rule governing the
1
Although conceding that the Missouri Supreme Court’s rules carry the force of law,
Defendants contend that the FDPA does not incorporate Rule 30.30(f) because that Rule governs
only “the internal organization and operations of the Missouri state government” and is
“focus[ed] on state institutional roles.” Dkt. 37 at 31; see also Dkt. 59 at 15. And in a similar
vein, Defendants’ counsel suggested at oral argument that Rule 30.30(f) is only one of “pleading,
practice, or procedure in Missouri state court.” Dkt. 53 at 51 (Simpson). As such, Defendants
argue that “the rule’s framework cannot sensibly be translated to the federal level.” Dkt. 37 at
31; Dkt. 59 at 15. In Defendants’ view, it would be absurd to suggest that the Missouri Supreme
Court or even the United States Supreme Court would set the dates of federal executions. But at
least some adaptation of state law, which by its nature dictates the conduct of state actors, to the
federal context is a necessary result of Congress’s choice to incorporate state execution
procedures into the FDPA. As Montgomery points out, the statutory requirement that a United
States marshal “supervise implementation of the sentence in the manner prescribed by the law of
the State in which the sentence is imposed,” 18 U.S.C. § 3596(a), would have little meaning if
the government “could avoid any obligation under state law simply because a state’s laws
contemplate that all matters relating to implementation of an execution will be carried out by that
state’s institutions,” Dkt. 42 at 22. The Court is thus unpersuaded that the references in Rule
30.30(f) to the Missouri Supreme Court and to the state’s department of corrections necessarily
render the time limitations prescribed in the rule inapplicable. Nor is it absurd to suggest that
4
scheduling of executions is not part of the “implementation of the sentence in the manner
prescribed by the law of the State.” 18 U.S.C. § 3596(a); see also Dkt. 37 at 26. The questions
for the Court are thus (1) whether the phrase “implementation of the sentence in the manner
prescribed” should be read narrowly to include only the method of, and conduct immediately
surrounding, the execution itself, or should be read broadly to include antecedent steps leading to
the ultimate execution, and, if so, (2) whether setting the execution date is one of those
antecedent steps.
A.
Montgomery contends that the D.C. Circuit’s fractured decision In re Federal Bureau of
Prisons’ Execution Protocol Cases, 955 F.3d 106, 130 (D.C. Cir. 2020) (“Execution Protocol
Cases I”) answers these questions. In that case, the D.C. Circuit considered a challenge from
several death row inmates contending that the Department of Justice’s (“DOJ” or the
“Department”) adoption in 2019 of a single federal execution protocol violated the FDPA,
because that protocol did not incorporate the “procedural details” of each state’s execution
protocols, such as, with respect to lethal injections, “how the intravenous catheter is to be
inserted.” Id. at 111. The D.C. Circuit reversed this Court’s order granting a preliminary
injunction to the plaintiffs, but in doing so, the court divided three ways on the meaning of the
FDPA. Id. at 108 (“Each member of the panel takes a different view of what the FDPA
requires.”). As such, the D.C. Circuit issued four separate opinions: a short per curiam opinion
explaining its judgment, followed by two concurrences and a dissent.
federal courts could set executions dates; in fact, they have done exactly that throughout the
history of the country, as discussed below. As explained further below, however, the Court is
persuaded that Rule 30.30(f)’s limitation on the number of executions that may be conducted per
month does not translate to the federal setting in the manner Montgomery suggests.
5
In the first concurrence, Judge Katsas focused on the word “manner” within the statutory
provision, 18 U.S.C. § 3596(a), and concluded “that the FDPA regulates only the top-line choice
among execution methods such as hanging, electrocution, or lethal injection.” Execution
Protocol Cases I, 955 F.3d at 113 (Katsas, J., concurring). In the second concurrence, Judge Rao
took a broader view of the statutory language. She interpreted “manner prescribed by the law of
the State,” 18 U.S.C. § 3596(a), to include “the positive law and binding regulations of a state,”
id. at 130 (Rao, J., concurring). And she interpreted “implementation” to encompass “a range of
procedures and safeguards surrounding executions.” Id. at 133. As relevant here, Judge Rao
wrote:
In the death penalty context, the term “implementation” is commonly used to
refer to a range of procedures and safeguards surrounding executions, not just
the top-line method of execution. This is true of DOJ’s regulations, which were
promulgated during a period when no statute specified procedures for the federal
death penalty. DOJ’s 1993 execution regulation bears the title “Implementation
of Death Sentences in Federal Cases.” See 58 Fed. Reg. 4,898 (Jan. 19, 1993).
That regulation governs very minute aspects of executions, including the
“[d]ate, time, place, and method,” whether and when the prisoner has access to
spiritual advisors, and whether photographs are allowed during the execution.
Id. at 4,901–902.
955 F.3d at 134 (Rao, J., concurring) (brackets in original) (emphasis added). Judge Rao
nevertheless concluded that the federal protocol passed muster because the state procedures that
plaintiffs sought to enforce were drawn from “informal procedures or protocols” that did not
constitute “the law of the State.” Id. at 130. And Judge Rao also read the federal protocol as
flexible enough to permit the incorporation of state-mandated procedures in a given case. She
explained that the federal protocol included a “carveout” allowing officials to “depart from its
procedures in the face of superseding legal obligations.” Id. at 129, 143.
In dissent, Judge Tatel “agree[d] with Judge Rao that the term ‘manner’ refers to more
than just general execution method,” and he agreed with her “thorough[]” response to “the
6
government’s arguments and convincing[] respon[se] to Judge Katsas’s survey of the historical
record.” Id. at 146 (Tatel, J., dissenting). He disagreed, however, with Judge Rao’s conclusion
that state execution protocols are not “prescribed by the law of the State.” Id. at 149. Although
the protocols themselves are not usually codified in statutes, state laws “delegate to state prison
officials the task of developing specific execution procedures,” and “[s]tate officials adopt such
protocols not just to comply with state law, but also to ensure that executions comply with the
Constitution.” Id. at 146. As such, “‘by law,’ each state directed its prison officials to develop
execution procedures, and ‘by law,’ those officials established such procedures and set them
forth in execution protocols.” Id. at 147. Judge Tatel thus concluded that those protocols are
state law that the FDPA requires the federal government to follow when implementing a death
sentence. Id. at 148–50. As for whether the federal protocol included an exception requiring the
government to depart from its prescribed procedures whenever necessary to comply with a
state’s manner of execution, Judge Tatel found no such provision in the protocol. Id. at 149–50.
He therefore concluded that the federal protocol violated the FDPA. Id. at 146. Finally, Judge
Tatel noted that the case then-before the D.C. Circuit did not present any line-drawing challenges
because it concerned procedures “obviously integral to ‘implement[ing]’ a death sentence”—that
is, “procedures that effectuate the death, . . . including choice of lethal substances, dosages, vein-
access procedures, and medical-personnel requirements.” Id. at 151 (internal brackets omitted).
Montgomery sifts these differing opinions and finds a clear rule. She contends that Judge
Rao’s opinion is controlling and that this Court is bound to follow its reading of
“implementation” to include the “date” of execution. Dkt. 35 at 17 (quoting Execution Protocol
Cases I, 955 F.3d at 130 (Rao, J., concurring)). And she further argues that, in the context of
denying en banc reconsideration of a separate appeal in the same case, seven judges on the court
7
of appeals, representing a majority, acknowledged that Judge Rao’s opinion is controlling. See
In re Fed. Bureau of Prisons’ Execution Protocol Cases (“Execution Protocol Cases II”), No.
20-5361, slip op. at 3–4 (D.C. Cir. Dec. 10, 2020) (en banc).
If Montgomery’s reading of the opinions in Execution Protocol Cases II were correct,
then the en banc court’s determination that Judge Rao’s opinion is binding would itself be
binding on this Court. And it is true, at a minimum, that Judge Wilkins, joined by three other
judges, refers in his dissent from the denial of en banc reconsideration to “Judge Rao’s
controlling opinion.” Id. at 4 (Wilkins, J., dissenting). But the Court cannot agree with
Montgomery that Judge Katsas’s separate concurring opinion, joined by two other judges,
recognized the controlling nature of Judge Rao’s earlier opinion, at least not with respect to her
broad reading of “implementation” within the FDPA. Judge Katsas discussed Judge Rao’s
earlier concurrence, but distinguished it, contending that the prior decision concerned only the
meaning of “manner” and not of “implementation.” Id. at 3 (Katsas, J., concurring). And Judge
Katsas did not give any indication that he viewed Judge Rao’s opinion as binding. Id. Indeed, it
is implausible to suggest that Judge Katsas viewed Judge Rao’s concurrence as binding on the
point that “implementation” includes the setting of an execution date, given that (1) the exact
issue before the en banc court was whether “implementation” includes setting the execution date
as required by Texas law and (2) Judge Katsas concluded that “‘implementation’ does not
include scheduling the execution, but instead presupposes a set time and date.” Id. That leaves
Montgomery with only four votes on the en banc court of appeals for the proposition that Judge
Rao’s concurrence is a binding precedent.
Beyond pointing to the competing opinions in Execution Protocol Cases II,
Montgomery’s renewed motion contends that Judge Rao’s opinion is binding based on the
8
technique that the Supreme Court announced in Marks v. United States, 430 U.S. 188 (1977), for
determining which of its own opinions is controlling in cases where no opinion garners a
majority of votes. See Dkt. 58-2 at 11–12. Under Marks, when the Supreme Court issues
fragmented opinions, the opinion of the Justices concurring in the judgment on the “‘narrowest
grounds’” represents the Court’s holding. Marks, 430 U.S. at 193 (quoting Gregg v. Georgia,
428 U.S. 153, 169 n.15, (1976) (opinion of Stewart, Powell, and Stevens, JJ.)). The D.C. Circuit,
however, has read Marks narrowly: “Marks is workable—one opinion can be meaningfully
regarded as ‘narrower’ than another—only when one opinion is a logical subset of other, broader
opinions.” King v. Palmer, 950 F.2d 771, 781 (D.C. Cir. 1991) (en banc). That is, “the
narrowest opinion must represent a common denominator of the Court’s reasoning; it must
embody a position implicitly approved by at least five Justices who support the judgment.” Id.
Marks becomes “problematic,” however, when “one opinion supporting the judgment does not
fit entirely within a broader circle drawn by the others.” Id. at 782. If applied in those situations,
Marks would “turn a single opinion that lacks majority support into national law.” Id. In short,
“[w]hen eight of nine Justices do not subscribe to a given approach to a legal question, it surely
cannot be proper to endow that approach with controlling force, no matter how persuasive it may
be.” Id. In support of this holding, the en banc court of appeals explained that its conception of
Marks is consistent with how the Supreme Court itself has applied the rule, including in the
death penalty context. Id. at 781; see also United States v. Epps, 707 F.3d 337, 348 (D.C. Cir.
2013) (applying the Marks rule as interpreted by King v. Palmer); cf. United States v. Duvall,
740 F.3d 604 (D.C. Cir. 2013) (en banc) (debate in separate concurring opinions by Rogers,
Kavanaugh, and Williams, JJ., about the proper interpretation of Marks in light of King v.
Palmer).
9
Here, the Court concludes that Judge Rao’s opinion is not controlling, at least not on the
question of whether “implementation” as used in the FDPA encompasses the setting of execution
dates—an issue that was not presented in Execution Protocol Cases I. As an initial matter,
unlike a fractured Supreme Court decision in which no opinion garners more than four votes, the
D.C. Circuit’s decision in Execution Protocol Cases I opens with a per curiam opinion on behalf
of the court, which is binding. See 955 F.3d at 108–13. That opinion at least arguably represents
the panel’s own distillation of which propositions of law garnered two votes.
But even assuming that it makes sense to apply a Marks-like analysis to determine which
opinion in Execution Protocol Cases I was narrowest and therefore controlling, none of the three
separate opinions in that case “fit entirely within a broader circle drawn by” one of the others in
interpreting the scope of “implementation.” King, 950 F.2d at 782; see also Duvall, 740 F.3d at
618 (William, J., concurring) (using a Venn diagram to explain why “[w]ithout King’s
requirement that one [opinion] be a subset of the other [opinion], the idea of ‘narrowness’ is
inherently confusing and in fact indeterminate”). Because Judge Rao read “implementation of
the sentence in the manner prescribed by [state] law,” 18 U.S.C. § 3596(a), more broadly than
Judge Katsas, one might argue that she ruled for the defendants on narrower grounds, but there is
no way in which her decision is a subset of Judge Katsas’s, and indeed those two judges
disagreed entirely on the meaning of the statute. They even disagreed about whether it was
necessary in the context of that case to interpret the word “implementation” within the statutory
phrase “implementation of the sentence in the manner prescribed by [state] law,” id., with Judge
Katsas focusing exclusively on the meaning of “manner,” see Execution Protocol Cases I, 955
F.3d at 113 (Katsas, J., concurring).
10
Nor can the Court find two votes for an interpretation of “implementation” that includes
the setting of execution dates by adding together Judge Rao’s concurrence and Judge Tatel’s
dissent. Montgomery argues that Judge Rao and Judge Tatel both concluded that the FDPA
incorporates formal state laws and regulations. Dkt. 58-2 at 11–12. That is true, but while Judge
Tatel adopted Judge Rao’s interpretation of “manner” and approved of her responses to “the
government’s arguments” and “Judge Katsas’s survey of the historical record,” Execution
Protocol Cases I, 955 F.3d at 146 (Tatel, J., dissenting), he neither joined her opinion in relevant
part nor expressed a view on whether setting execution dates falls within the ambit of
“implementation.” To the contrary, the issue of setting dates was not presented in the case, and
Judge Rao briefly touched on that question merely to support her understanding of the broad
scope of the word “implementation.” Id. at 133–34 (Rao, J., concurring). As the D.C. Circuit
explained in King, where a concurring jurist does not join a separate opinion or clearly adopt its
reasoning on a particular point, that is insufficient to form binding precedent on that point. King,
950 F.2d at 778, 783. In short, Judge Rao’s observation that the FDPA’s reference to
“implementation” includes the setting of the date of execution does not constitute binding circuit
precedent.
B.
Even though Judge Rao’s observation is not binding, her opinion still offers a persuasive
analysis of the statutory text for the Court to consider. In contrast to Judge Rao’s thorough
opinion, the recent out-of-circuit precedents that Defendants invoke provide little analysis. Dkt.
59 at 10; Dkt. 37 at 26. These precedents posit that “implementation” encompasses only
“procedures effectuating death,” without expounding on what that means. See United States v.
Vialva, 976 F.3d 458, 461–62 (5th Cir. 2020); Peterson v. Barr, 965 F.3d 549, 554 (7th Cir.
11
2020); United States v. Mitchell, 971 F.3d 993, 996–97 (9th Cir. 2020). The most relevant of
these decisions, Vialva, concerned whether the FDPA requires the government to follow a Texas
state notice procedure. 976 F.3d at 461–62. The Fifth Circuit’s analysis, however, is
conclusory. Beyond citing to the other precedents Defendants invoke here, the entirety of the
court’s analysis is as follows:
[W]e conclude that that § 3596(a) is at least limited to procedures effectuating
death and excludes pre-execution process requirements such as date-setting and
issuing warrants. The text of the provision explicitly refers to the
“implementation of the sentence” prior to referencing state law. 18 U.S.C.
§ 3596(a). The text simply does not extend to pre-execution date-setting and
warrants. . . . The FDPA simply does not reach warrant and date-setting
provisions.
Id. at 462. As a result, Vialva and these other out-of-circuit cases shed no more light on the
question presented than the bare (and less than pellucid) statutory text.
That leaves the Court with four opinions from the D.C. Circuit, none of which are
binding, addressing the meaning of “implementation” in the FDPA: Judge Rao’s concurring
opinion in Execution Protocol Cases I; Judge Tatel’s dissenting opinion in Execution Protocol
Cases I; Judge Katsas’s concurring opinion for three judges in Execution Protocol Cases II; and
Judge Wilkins’s dissenting opinion for four judges, including Judge Tatel, in Execution Protocol
Cases II. Adding these opinions together, it appears that at least five judges on the court of
appeals have embraced a broad reading of “implementation” in § 3596(a). As noted above,
Judge Rao explained that by deferring to state law on “implementation” of death sentences, the
FDPA’s “broad language encompasses more than earlier federal death penalty statutes, which
incorporated state law only to define the ‘manner of inflicting the punishment of death.’”
Execution Protocol Cases I, 955 F.3d at 133 (Rao, J., concurring) (citing An Act to Provide for
the Manner of Inflicting the Punishment of Death § 323, 50 Stat. 304, 304 (June 19, 1937); An
12
Act for the Punishment of Certain Crimes § 33, 1 Stat. 112, 119 (Apr. 30, 1790)). In her view,
“[i]n the death penalty context, the term ‘implementation’ is commonly used to refer to a range
of procedures and safeguards surrounding executions, not just the top-line method of execution”
and includes, for instance, setting the date and time of executions. Id. at 134–35 (Rao, J.,
concurring). In dissent, Judge Tatel agreed with Judge Rao’s interpretation of “manner” in the
statutory text. Id. at 146 (Tatel, J., dissenting). But because the plaintiffs in the case directed
their arguments only at whether “implementation” reached “those procedures that effectuate the
death, including choice of lethal substances, dosages, vein-access procedures, and medical-
personnel requirements,” Judge Tatel limited his analysis to those issues. Id. at 151 (internal
quotation marks, citations, and alterations omitted). But he emphasized that the case before the
court did not require any difficult line-drawing because those procedures were “obviously
integral to ‘implement[ing]’ a death sentence.” Id. (alteration in original).
In Execution Protocol Cases II, Judge Tatel and two other judges joined Judge Wilkins’s
dissenting opinion concluding that the FDPA’s reference to “implementation of the sentence in
the manner prescribed by the law of the State in which the sentence is imposed,” 18 U.S.C.
§ 3596(a), requires the government to follow state-law notice procedures, Execution Protocol
Cases II, slip op. at 4 (Wilkins, J., dissenting). Judge Wilkins concluded that “prescribing the
date that the sentence will be carried out is something that falls within the ‘manner’ of
‘implementation’ of the death sentence.” Id. Notification of the execution date, Judge Wilkins
reasoned, is “a critical part of the process of carrying out the death sentence” that “informs the
condemned prisoner, his counsel, the warden, the victims, the public, as well as the President
who has pardon and clemency power, and the courts which have power to enjoin, when the
execution is actually going to occur.” Id. And even on the narrower reading that
13
“implementation” entails only procedures that “effectuate the death,” Judge Wilkins reasoned
that “prescribing the date and time for the execution to occur is a necessary element of
effectuating the death sentence” and noted that nothing in Judge Tatel’s prior dissenting opinion
was to the contrary (a characterization that Judge Tatel confirmed by joining Judge Wilkins’s
opinion). Id. In sum, Judge Wilkins wrote that “setting the date for the execution to take place is
such a fundamental part of its implementation that it is reasonable to hold that it must be
incorporated” under the FDPA. Id.
Judge Katsas, joined by two other judges, disagreed. Relying on a dictionary definition
of “implementation,” he concluded that the FDPA “requires the marshal to follow only those
state laws that concern how a state conducts an execution, not when it does so.” Id. at 3 (Katsas,
J., concurring) (emphasis in original). Next, Judge Katsas argued that “implementation” must
“involve[] only conduct that immediately precedes the execution” based on what the statute says
about transferring custody of the condemned prisoner. Id. While a person who is sentenced to
death appeals her conviction or sentence, she is in the custody of the Attorney General. 18
U.S.C. § 3596(a). The FDPA then provides that “[w]hen the sentence is to be implemented, the
Attorney General shall release the person sentenced to death to the custody of a United States
marshal, who shall supervise implementation of the sentence.” Id. Judge Katsas reasoned that
“[t]his language makes clear that the prisoner is transferred to the marshal only ‘[w]hen the
sentence is to be implemented,’ and that the ‘implementation of the sentence’ covers only
conduct that follows the transfer.” Execution Protocol Cases II, slip op. at 3 (Katsas, J.,
concurring) (quoting 18 U.S.C. § 3596(a)). As such, “‘implementation’ does not include
scheduling the execution, but instead presupposes a set time and date.” Id. Judge Katsas also
concluded that a broad reading of “implementation,” combined with a broad reading of
14
“manner,” would threaten to “construe the FDPA—which was designed to expand availability of
the federal death penalty—to create significant practical problems in carrying it out.” Id.
Although these competing opinions offer helpful guidance, none is binding, and the Court
must therefore undertake its own analysis. The Court begins, as it must, with the text. The
FDPA calls on “a United States marshal [to] supervise implementation of the sentence in the
manner prescribed by the law of the State in which the sentence is imposed.” 18 U.S.C.
§ 3596(a). Starting with the word “implementation,” the Court concludes that dictionary
definitions, including those cited by both Judge Katsas and Judge Wilkins, support a reading of
“implementation” that is capacious enough to encompass more than just “conduct that
immediately precedes the execution.” Execution Protocol Cases II, slip op. at 3 (Katsas, J.,
concurring). The version of the Oxford English Dictionary that was current when the FDPA was
enacted defines “implementation” as “the act of implementing; fulfillment,” and defines
“implement,” in turn, as “[t]o complete, perform, carry into effect (a contract, agreement, etc.);
to fulfil (an engagement or promise)” or “[t]o carry out, execute (a piece of work).” Oxford
English Dictionary (2d ed. 1989). Webster’s Third New International Dictionary (3d ed. 1993),
on which Judge Katsas relied, defines “implement” as “to carry out: accomplish, fulfill.”
Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014)2 defines “implementation plan” as “[a]n outline of steps
needed to accomplish a particular goal.” Likewise, an online dictionary invoked by Judge
Wilkins provides that “implementation” means “the process of making something active or
effective.” Implementation, Merriam-Webster.com,
https://www.merriamwebster.com/dictionary/implementation (last visited Jan. 7, 2021).
2
Although the edition of Black’s Law Dictionary that Judge Katsas cited was published after the
passage of the FDPA, it appears that Black’s Law Dictionary has included the same definition of
“implementation plan” since at least 1947.
15
Although some of these definitions refer to completion, which might imply the final step in a
process, the most common definitions treat implementation as a process with multiple steps.
Implementation is about action, about taking a plan from paper to reality, about carrying
something into effect. Because implementation is best understood to refer to a series of steps
taken toward a goal, the statute is most naturally read as encompassing the administrative
process that leads from the end of a prisoner’s judicial appeals to the final carrying out of the
sentence, including both preparatory steps and the attendant safeguards that surround an
execution.
Other words in the statutory text confirm this understanding. The Court agrees with
Judge Rao’s conclusion in Execution Protocol Cases I that the word “manner” has a “broad,
flexible meaning,” which can be either general or specific, depending on context. 955 F.3d at
130 (Rao, J., concurring). In the context of the FDPA, implementation must be “in the manner
prescribed by the law of the State,” 18 U.S.C. § 3596(a), such that it is the law of the state that
sets the level of generality for the manner of implementation, and “the federal government is . . .
bound by the FDPA to follow the level of detail prescribed by state law.” Id. at 133 (Rao, J.,
concurring). Furthermore, again picking up on Judge Rao’s analysis, the Court concludes that
the statutory direction that a United States marshal “supervise” the implementation of the
execution in the manner prescribed by state law means that the government is not free to displace
state law completely with its own execution procedures. Id. at 134. Supervise means to
“oversee” and, while it might admit of some discretion, “it does not include authority to create
new law or to act in contravention of law.” Id. Although not dispositive, these additional textual
clues suggest that Congress intended for the government to carry out the administrative process
leading to an execution in accordance with state law.
16
But the Court must also consider Judge Katsas’s textual response, which is substantial.
The statute provides that “[w]hen the sentence is to be implemented, the Attorney General shall
release the person sentenced to death to the custody of a United States marshal, who shall
supervise implementation of the sentence.” 18 U.S.C. § 3596(a). Implementation thus begins
only after the transfer of custody to the United States marshal. Judge Katsas inferred from this
that “‘implementation’ of a death sentence involves only conduct that immediately precedes the
execution.” Execution Protocol Cases II, slip op. at 3 (Katsas, J., concurring). But his analysis
depends on an assumption that Congress envisioned that transfer to the marshal would occur
only immediately preceding the execution, and neither the statute nor any other source specifies
when the transfer should take place. The insight that “implementation” begins when the
“Attorney General . . . release[s] the person . . . to the custody of a United States marshal, who
shall supervise implementation of the sentence in the manner prescribed by the law of the State
in which the sentence is imposed,” 18 U.S.C. § 3596(a), simply invites the question of when
Congress believed that the person would be released to a United States marshal and what role the
marshal would play.
The history of the marshals’ oversight of federal executions is difficult to square with
Judge Katsas’s reading of “implementation,” which depends on an assumption that the marshal
would play only the limited role of putting the defendant to death. To the contrary, United States
marshals have traditionally been responsible for nearly every aspect of carrying out federal
executions. In the early days of the republic, before the Department of Justice existed, the
marshals, as America’s oldest law enforcement agency, were solely responsible for
implementing death sentences. The first federal death penalty statute assigned the marshals the
task of carrying out executions. See An Act for the Punishment of Certain Crimes Against the
17
United States § 4, 1 Stat. 112, 113 (1790). The first federal execution in American history was
carried out by U.S. Marshal Henry Dearborn of Maine on June 25, 1790. See History –
Historical Federal Executions, U.S. Marshals Service,
www.usmarshals.gov/history/executions.htm (last visited Jan. 7, 2021). To complete the task, he
spent money to build the gallows and the coffin. Id. The history of the marshals’ role in
executions, including how execution dates were set, is recounted in an internal memorandum that
the U.S. Marshals Service historian Ted Calhoun wrote in 1992. See Memorandum from Ted
Calhoun to Henry Hudson, Dir. of the U.S. Marshals Serv. (July 21, 1992) [hereinafter “Calhoun
Memo”].3 As the memorandum explains, in 1937, Congress provided that the “the manner of
inflicting the punishment of death shall be the manner prescribed by the laws of the [s]tate within
which the sentence is imposed.” An Act to Provide for the Manner of Inflicting the Punishment
of Death § 323, 50 Stat. 304, 304 (June 19, 1937). To implement this provision, the marshal
would “contract with a local state facility (or one in a neighboring district if the marshal’s state
had no such facility).” Calhoun Memo at 2. The marshal then “hired up to three doctors,
arranged for the presence of government witnesses, provided the condemned with the spiritual
consoling of his choice, and allowed certain representatives of the news media to be present.”
Id. at 2–3. The marshals also carried out the last federal death sentence before the passage of the
FDPA, when U.S. Marshal Covell Meek of the Northern District of Iowa oversaw the execution
by hanging of convicted murderer and kidnapper Victor Fueger on March 15, 1963. Id. at 3.
That execution took place at the Iowa State Penitentiary, and “Marshal Meek actually pulled the
lever dropping the trap door.” Id.
3
The document was produced in response to a Freedom of Information Act Request and is
available online at https://files.deathpenaltyinfo.org/documents/United-States-Marshals-Federal-
Execution-Documents.pdf.
18
This history also calls into question some of the recent out-of-circuit caselaw that reads
“implementation” narrowly. The Seventh Circuit concluded that “implementation” in § 3596(a)
does not encompass the selection of execution witnesses, Peterson, 965 F.3d at 554, and the
Eleventh Circuit held that “implementation” does not reach the presence of counsel at the
execution, see LeCroy v. United States, 975 F.3d 1192, 1198 (11th Cir. 2020). But the U.S.
marshals traditionally wielded broad authority to oversee the federal execution process, and
Congress appears to have codified the marshals’ substantial role in § 3596(a).
Contrary to Defendants’ arguments, Dkt. 59 at 10–11, the structure of the FDPA presents
further difficulties for Judge Katsas’s reading of the statute. Reading implementation narrowly
to include only the immediate lead-up to the execution and the execution itself would leave a
significant lacuna in the statutory scheme. The successive sections of the statute follow the steps
of imposing and carrying out a death sentence. The FDPA first lists crimes for which a sentence
of death is available. 18 U.S.C. § 3591. It then lists aggravating and mitigating factors to be
considered by a jury in determining whether a death sentence should be imposed on an
individual defendant, id. § 3592, and provides for a separate sentencing hearing at which those
factors can be considered, id. § 3593. Next, the FDPA requires the trial judge to impose a
sentence of death if the jury unanimously finds that an aggravating factor exists and the
aggravating factors outweigh the mitigating factors. Id. § 3594. And once the sentence is
imposed, the statute sets parameters for direct review of the death sentence in the courts of
appeals. Id. § 3595. That all then leads to the provision at issue in this case, § 3596. That
section begins by providing that “[a] person who has been sentenced to death pursuant to this
chapter shall be committed to the custody of the Attorney General until exhaustion of the
procedures for appeal of the judgment of conviction and for review of the sentence.” Id.
19
§ 3596(a). After that, “[w]hen the sentence is to be implemented, the Attorney General shall
release the person sentenced to death to the custody of a United States marshal.” Id.
On Judge Katsas’s reading, transfer of the prisoner to a United States marshal occurs only
immediately before the execution is to be carried out. But that leaves a gap in the statutory
scheme. If implementation does not begin until the period immediately preceding the execution,
what is supposed to happen to the prisoner after “exhaustion of the procedures for appeal,” when
the Attorney General’s custody expires, id., but before transfer to a marshal? And, more to the
point, to whom does the statute assign the task of making the initial preparations leading up to
the carrying out of the sentence? The statutory scheme comes together, however, if
“implementation” of the sentence includes the preparatory steps and attendant safeguards that
surround an execution. On that reading, the Attorney General holds the prisoner while her
appeals are pending. Then, once those appeals are resolved, the Attorney General transfers the
prisoner to a U.S. marshal for implementation of the sentence, and the marshal takes it from
there. The statute thus sets a default that a United States marshal is responsible for supervising
the various steps leading from the end of the judicial process (i.e., “appeal of the judgment of
conviction and . . . review of the sentence,” id.) to the carrying out of the execution. As such, the
process following the completion of appeals that leads up to the infliction of death falls within
the meaning of “implementation” in the statute and therefore must be done “in the manner
prescribed by the law of the State in which the sentence is imposed.” Id.
Of course, as a matter of current practice and the Department’s regulations, the BOP is
responsible for several of the steps between the completion of a prisoner’s appeals and the
prisoner’s execution. See generally 28 C.F.R. part 26. That does not, however, undermine the
20
Court’s interpretation of the statute.4 The FDPA assigns certain tasks to the Attorney General
and certain tasks to the supervision of a U.S. marshal. But the Attorney General can depart from
that default, because he has separate statutory powers to assume any authorities that statutes
grant to his subordinates and to reassign authorities among his subordinates. See 28 U.S.C.
§ 509 (“All functions of other officers of the Department of Justice and all functions of agencies
and employees of the Department of Justice are vested in the Attorney General.”); id. § 510
(“The Attorney General may from time to time make such provisions as he considers appropriate
authorizing the performance by any other officer, employee, or agency of the Department of
Justice of any function of the Attorney General.”). Indeed, the Department recently amended its
regulations concerning capital punishment to allow the Attorney General to reassign even more
of the duties that the statute gives to a U.S. marshal. See Manner of Federal Executions, 85 Fed.
Reg. 75,846, 75,849–50 (Nov. 27, 2020). What matters for interpreting the statute is just which
tasks are assigned to which actor by default in the statute, since “implementation” includes any
task that the statute originally assigned to the marshal’s supervision. But the Attorney General is
4
Nor are the regulations themselves, which predated the FDPA by a year, sufficient to fill the
statutory lacuna. The difficulty with the narrow view of implementation is that it fails to explain
what Congress intended to happen during the period following the exhaustion of the prisoner’s
appeals, when the Attorney General’s responsibility comes to an end, and the period immediately
preceding imposition of death, when all agree that the U.S. marshal bears responsibility. There
is no indication in either the legislative history or the text of the FDPA that Congress intended to
leave that gap in the statutory scheme for the 1993 regulations to fill. Indeed, if Congress had
intended to rely on the 1993 regulations, it would have had no need to assign the U.S. marshals
responsibility for supervising execution of the sentence of death, which the regulations had
already covered. See 28 C.F.R. § 26.3(a)(3). In any event, although the regulation preceded the
passage of the statute, the relevant statutory language had already been drafted long before the
regulations, with the text of § 3596(a) appearing in its current form as of a Senate report in 1989.
Compare S. Rep. No. 101-170, at 12 (1989) with Implementation of Death Sentences in Federal
Cases, 57 Fed. Reg. 56,536 (Nov. 30, 1992) (notice of proposed rulemaking). It is thus highly
unlikely that Congress drafted the text of § 3596(a) with the regulations in mind.
21
free to reassign those tasks in practice, so long as whichever actor he assigns to implement the
sentence of death within the meaning of the FDPA complies with state law.
Finally, the statutory purpose provides additional, albeit cumulative, confirmation for the
Court’s reading of the FDPA. Judge Katsas’s opinion in Execution Protocol Cases II posits that
a narrow reading of “implementation” is necessary because a broader reading “would construe
the FDPA—which was designed to expand availability of the federal death penalty—to create
significant practical problems in carrying it out.” Execution Protocol Cases II, slip op. at 3
(Katsas, J., concurring). But as Judge Rao explained in Execution Protocol Cases I, “Congress
was balancing at least two competing values: the need to effectively implement federal death
sentences and an interest in federalism,” and “Congress [may have] simply decided to duck
controversial specifics by leaving some questions to state law.” Execution Protocol Cases I, 955
F.3d at 141 (Rao, J., concurring). To be sure, requiring federal executions to be carried out in
different ways in different states may from today’s vantage point seem like a pointless
administrative headache, but in the historical context in which the FDPA was passed, Congress’s
decision made sense. In 1972, in a decision that fractured nine ways, the Supreme Court
invalidated all state death penalty systems then in effect as too arbitrary to comply with the
Constitution. See Furman v. Georgia, 408 U.S. 238 (1972). But in 1976, the Court permitted
the death penalty to resume under reformed state statutes that sought to reduce the arbitrary
nature of the punishment. See Gregg, 428 U.S. 153. In the period that followed, the Supreme
Court imposed a complicated regime of constitutional regulation on the administration of capital
punishment. See Carol S. Steiker & Jordan M. Steiker, Courting Death: The Supreme Court and
Capital Punishment (2016). In light of these new rules of capital punishment, the federal
government did not have a workable method for carrying out executions.
22
The FDPA, then, was aimed at providing a viable federal death penalty system. As
explained in the Senate Judiciary Committee Report for the FDPA, the statute’s purpose was to
“establish procedures for the implementation of a [f]ederal death penalty.” S. Rep. No. 101-170,
at 1 (1989). The legislation was necessary because then-extant procedures to carry out death
sentences were insufficient to meet modern requirements. Id. at 3 (“[T]hese sentences have been
unenforceable because they fail to incorporate a set of procedures to govern the determination
whether a sentence of death is warranted in a particular case.”). For instance, the FDPA
incorporated aggravating and mitigating factors to comply with Supreme Court precedent
holding that consideration of such factors was necessary to make capital sentencing decisions
less arbitrary. Id. at 20 (citing Skipper v. South Carolina, 476 U.S. 1 (1986); Lockett v. Ohio,
438 U.S. 586 (1978); Barclay v. Florida, 463 U.S. 939 (1938); Zant v. Stephens, 426 U.S. 862
(1983)).
During that same post-1976 period, many states had struggled to restart their capital
punishment systems, in part because of objections to their execution protocols, which focused on
both the top-line method of execution and the more specific details of execution procedures.
See, e.g., Glass v. Louisiana, 471 U.S. 1080, 1081, 1089–90 (1985) (Brennan, J., dissenting from
denial of cert.) (arguing that the electric chair constituted cruel and unusual punishment, in part
based on the specific details of certain botched executions); State v. Williams, 800 P.2d 1240,
1250 (Ariz. 1987) (challenging Arizona’s use of lethal gas); State v. Rupe, 683 P.2d 571, 594
(Wash. 1984) (rejecting a claim that giving a prisoner a choice of execution method was cruel
and unusual); Fitzpatrick v. State, 638 P.2d 1002, 1011 (Mont. 1981) (evaluating a claim that a
prisoner’s execution would violate the Eighth Amendment because “there are no competent
hangmen in Montana”). Every state eventually transitioned its method of execution to lethal
23
injection, which was seen as more humane than the electric chair, firing squad, gas chamber, or
gallows. See generally Baze v. Rees, 553 U.S. 35, 40–41 (2008) (recounting this history and
rejecting an Eighth Amendment challenge to Kentucky’s lethal injection protocol). But states’
various lethal injection protocols themselves spawned further litigation, especially in the years
leading up to the passage of the FDPA. See, e.g., State v. Deputy, 644 A.2d 411, 421 (Del.
Super. Ct. 1994), aff’d, 648 A.2d 423 (Del. 1994); Hunt v. Smith, 856 F. Supp. 251, 259 (D. Md.
1994), aff’d sub nom. Hunt v. Nuth, 57 F.3d 1327 (4th Cir. 1995); State v. Perry, 610 So. 2d 746,
768 (La. 1992) (holding unconstitutional the state’s plan to administer antipsychotic drugs as part
of a lethal injection protocol). Although much of this litigation was unsuccessful, it still caused
delays.
Unlike with aggravating and mitigating factors, Congress did not attempt to create a
separate statutory federal execution protocol, which would have been daunting and could have
delayed the resumption of the federal death penalty even further. Instead, it stuck with
established practice. Congress provided that U.S. marshals would supervise the implementation
of death sentences pursuant to state law, using either federal or state facilities. By piggybacking
on state execution protocols that courts had already approved, Congress avoided the potential for
protracted litigation. Thus, Judge Katsas is correct that the FDPA was designed to make
administration of the federal death penalty easier. But Congress sought to attain that goal by
requiring the federal government to execute prisoners according to state law.
Based on the foregoing, the Court concludes that the FDPA’s reference to
“implementation of the sentence in the manner prescribed by the law of the State in which the
sentence is imposed,” 18 U.S.C. § 3596(a), is best read to include the steps of the administrative
process by which the government carries out an execution after a prisoner has exhausted her
24
appeals. But that still leaves a more difficult question: Is the setting of an execution date one of
those steps?
C.
The dueling opinions in Execution Protocol Cases II addressed that question, albeit
inconclusively. The Court agrees with Judge Wilkins that the setting of an execution date is the
first essential step in carrying a death sentence to completion. See Execution Protocol Cases II,
slip op. at 4 (Wilkins, J., dissenting). Setting the date is the on-switch that sets in motion the
bureaucratic machinery that carries out executions. It provides notice to the prisoner, who can
arrange her affairs and prepare for death, to the lawyers and courts who will file and decide the
prisoner’s final appeals, to the executive branch that will consider whether to grant clemency,
and to the officials responsible for carrying out the execution itself. But if setting an execution
date is the switch that starts the implementation process, does that make it the first step of
implementation or the last step of whatever comes before? In response to this question, Judge
Katsas notes that “the prisoner is transferred to the marshal only ‘[w]hen the sentence is to be
implemented,’” and, from this premise, he concludes that “the ‘implementation of the sentence’
covers only conduct that follows the transfer” and that “implementation” in the FDPA
“presupposes a set time and date.” Id. at 3 (Katsas, J., concurring) (quoting 18 U.S.C. § 3596).
But Judge Katsas does not say how—or by whom—that presupposed date would be set. If the
authority to set those dates is not assigned to the United States marshal and thus does not flow
from the word “implementation” in the FDPA, it is unclear what statutory authority the
government would have to set execution dates. It is difficult to conclude with confidence that
the marshals are not supposed to set execution dates, without a theory for who actually is
25
responsible for discharging that task. Otherwise, the hole in the statutory scheme would remain
unfilled.
As explained above, the U.S. marshals traditionally exercised broad discretion in
supervising federal executions. But matters are different with respect to execution dates. The
first federal death penalty statute, like the FDPA, did not “specify who would set the date of the
execution.” Calhoun Memo at 1. As a result, “there was originally some question over whether
the president or the courts would set the actual date.” Id. at 3. In 1818, Attorney General
William Wirt issued an opinion concluding that in states where the governor issued death
warrants, the President would set the execution date, but in states where the courts issued death
warrants, the federal courts would do so. See Death-Warrants, 1 Op. Att’y Gen. 228 (1818),
1818 WL 440. Then in 1830, President Andrew Jackson deferred to the courts to set the date in
all cases, “in full confidence that the courts will give a reasonable time for the interposition of
executive clemency in cases where it ought to be interposed.” Death Warrants, 2 Op. Att’y Gen.
344, 345 (1830), 1830 WL 856. As of 1855, this had become “the established practice. The
court sentences[] and fixes the day of execution; and unless the President interpose, the Marshal
of the United States proceeds to execution in due time.” Pardoning Power, 7 Op. Att’y Gen. 561,
563 (1855), 1855 WL 2343. Based on this history, Calhoun explained that “since 1830, the trial
judge alone has set the date of the execution.” Calhoun Memo at 4. In some cases, however,
“only a particular week was specified” by the trial court, and that “allow[ed] the marshal to pick
the exact day and hour.” Id. Consistent with this view, at the time that the death penalty was
declared unconstitutional in 1972, the U.S. Marshals Manual provided that “[t]he day upon
which the execution shall take place shall be fixed in the judgment or order of the court which
imposed the sentence.” United States Marshals Manual, § 621.07 (Dec. 15, 1971). But “[i]f
26
only the week is designated, the marshal shall fix the day of the week.” Id. And “[i]f the court
order does not fix the time of day, the execution shall take place at ‘about sunrise’ on the day
fixed.” Id.
Based on the historical record, the Court is persuaded that primary responsibility for
setting the dates of federal executions has traditionally rested, at least since President Jackson’s
decision in 1830, with the sentencing court. There is nothing in the text or legislative history of
the FDPA, moreover, to suggest that Congress meant to depart from the historical practice that
courts set execution dates. And even before President Jackson’s decision, the principal debate
was about whether the President or the courts should set the dates; the possibility of the marshals
setting dates does not seem to have even been contemplated. Although in practice the U.S.
marshals occasionally exercised discretion over the exact date and time, they did so within
parameters set by the sentencing courts, and the historical record is devoid of any indication that
the marshals ever set dates on their own. In short, it was the courts that supervised the marshals
in the setting of execution dates, and not the other way around. Setting execution dates was thus
not among the tasks that fell to the marshals in implementing death sentences.
Regulations governing executions that the Department promulgated in 1993, just one year
before the passage of the FDPA, generally confirm this understanding. The regulations directed
the government’s lawyers to file a proposed order asking the court to direct that “[t]he sentence
shall be executed on a date and at a place designated by the Director of the Federal Bureau of
Prisons.” 28 C.F.R. § 26.2(a)(3) (Nov. 2020 version). As the Department explained when first it
proposed this rule, it was intended to “obviate the practice . . . of seeking a new execution date
from the sentencing court each time a higher court lifts a stay of execution that caused an earlier
execution date to pass.” Implementation of Death Sentences in Federal Cases, 57 Fed. Reg.
27
56,536, 56,536 (Nov. 30, 1992) (to be codified at 28 C.F.R. pt. 26). Although the Department
hedged on whether the executive branch might have authority to set an execution date without a
court order, see id., the notice of proposed rulemaking and regulation reflected the historical
practice and prevailing understanding that courts—and certainly not the U.S. marshals—set
execution dates.
In the notice accompanying the final rule in 1993, the Department addressed comments
contending that “the Executive Branch lacks the authority to establish the time, place, and
method of executions.” Implementation of Death Sentences in Federal Cases, 58. Fed. Reg.
4,898, 4,899 (Jan. 19, 1993). The Department responded:
[T]he Department does not need explicit authority to issue regulations
establishing death penalty procedures. The Department is authorized to rely on
the authority of the federal courts, acting pursuant to the All Writs Act, 28
U.S.C. [§] 1651(a), to order that their sentences be implemented. Thus, § 26.2
directs the governments’s [sic] attorney in a capital case to file with the court a
proposed Judgment and Order consistent with the regulations. Officers and
employees of the Department have the duty and authority to comply with such
orders . . . . The authority and duty of the Marshals Service to execute court
orders includes the authority to specify procedures for execution consistent with
the court order.
Id. The Department thus explicitly acknowledged that its own statutory authority to set
execution dates derived from that of the courts, through the All Writs Act. Turning to the
historical record, however, the Department again hedged. The Department recognized “that
federal practice for some time was for the court to fix the date of execution” but posited that
there was “no reason why this procedure is the only one permissible under the Constitution.” Id.
Instead, the Department read the 1818 and 1855 Attorney General opinions as “describing a
‘contrariety’ of practice in which sometimes it was the President who fixed the date of
execution.” Id. (quoting 7 Op. Att’y Gen. at 562). But the Department provided no explanation
for what independent authority the executive branch would have to set execution dates, and it
28
ultimately returned to the power of the courts: “Finally, far from contemplating the unilateral
exercise of executive authority . . . the proposed rule directs government attorneys to seek a
court order directing that execution be by lethal injection, and at a date and place determined by
the Department of Justice.” Id. at 4,900 (emphasis added).
The regulatory history of § 26.2 thus confirms the federal courts’ authority and historical
role in setting execution dates. Although the record contains some references to the President’s
authority to set dates (at least for executions in states where governors, rather than courts, were
responsible for issuing execution warrants) there is no suggestion that the U.S. marshals ever set
execution dates without express authorization from the courts or the President. When Congress
drafted the FDPA, it was presumably aware of this historical practice, dating back at least to
President Jackson’s deferral to the courts in 1830, of courts setting execution dates.5 There is no
indication that Congress, in assigning the U.S. marshals the task of supervising implementation
5
In its recent revision of the regulations, which was finalized after the filing of this case, the
Department deleted 28 C.F.R. § 26.2. Commenters argued that removing “the requirement that
the court’s Judgment and Order include a statement that the sentence be executed on a date and
at a place designated by the Director of the BOP . . . runs afoul of a claimed legal principle that
BOP’s authority to set an execution date is derived solely from the authority of the courts.” 85
Fed. Reg. 75,846, 75,850 (Nov. 27, 2020) (to be codified at 28 C.F.R. pt. 26). In response, the
Department argued that § 26.3 gives BOP authority to set execution dates independent of the
courts, id., despite the fact that, as explained above, the Department premised its authority to
promulgate § 26.3 in the first place on courts’ power to set execution dates under the All Writs
Act. The Department then once again fell back on courts’ authority, explaining that “even if
BOP’s authority to set an execution date were derived from the authority of the courts, nothing
would compel the court to use the precise ‘magic words’ contained in § 26.2 to effectuate the
delegation of its authority to BOP.” Id. And the Department further argued that the courts
would retain oversight of the setting of execution dates, based on both courts’ inherent power to
issue stays and injunctions and the qualification in § 26.3 that BOP has the power to set dates
“[e]xcept to the extent a court orders otherwise.” Id. In any event, the question before the Court
is not whether the Department has correctly stated its constitutional authority to set executions
dates in this new regulation, but rather what Congress meant by “implement[]” in the FDPA.
Only the prior regulation provides relevant background for interpreting the statute passed in
1994.
29
of executions, intended to reassign the task of setting execution dates from the courts to the U.S.
marshals.
Nor can 18 U.S.C. § 3596(a) sensibly be read as directing the marshal to “supervise”
date-setting by the courts. In her reply brief, Montgomery clarifies that she “has never argued
that the FDPA requires the marshal to set an execution date.” Dkt. 60 at 6. Instead, she takes the
position that “in supervising the ‘implementation’ of a death sentence, the marshal is ensuring
that the execution complies with ‘a range of procedures and safeguards surrounding executions,’
including those dictating the ‘date, time, and place.’” Id. at 6–7 (quoting Execution Protocol
Cases I, 955 F.3d at 133-34 (Rao, J., concurring)). Montgomery contends that this conception
“aligns with the marshal’s historic role: implementing executions in keeping with date and time
requirements prescribed by law, even as the applicable source of law has changed.” Id. at 7. But
the fact that the marshals historically complied with court orders setting the dates of executions
provides scant support for the proposition that Congress intended § 3596(a) to grant the marshals
authority to supervise the courts in the setting of those dates. It is highly implausible, moreover,
to suggest that Congress assigned the U.S. marshals the (constitutionally suspect) task of
overseeing the federal courts in the setting of execution dates. And, even beyond that, if a
federal court orders a U.S. marshal to carry out an execution on a certain date, the marshal has no
authority to ignore that order because he determines that the court’s order conflicts with a state
law. Rather, the statutory text is best understood as providing that the marshal’s supervision
begins after the setting of the date.
The judgment in this case provides further confirmation of the long-standing role of the
federal courts in setting execution dates and the fact that the U.S. marshals neither set executions
dates nor supervised the scheduling of executions. Here, the U.S. District Court for the Western
30
District of Missouri ordered that the execution date would be set by the Attorney General—or,
presumably, his delegee—within certain narrow limits. The court ordered:
The time, place and manner of execution are to be determined by the Attorney
General, provided that the time shall not be sooner than 60 days nor later than
90 days after the date of this judgment. If an appeal is taken from the conviction
or sentence, execution of the judgment shall be stayed pending further order of
this Court upon receipt of the Mandate of the Court of Appeal.
Dkt. 32-1 at 2. The power to designate an execution date thus rested with the sentencing court in
the first instance, and the sentencing court here explicitly entered an order permitting the
Attorney General to set the execution date “not . . . sooner than 60 days nor later than 90 days
after the” entry of judgment. Id.
This understanding of how execution dates are set also fills any gaps in the FDPA’s
statutory scheme and provides a sensible and coherent conception of the FDPA and the process
of implementing federal executions. The sentencing court’s judgment in this case provided that
the Attorney General would set the date of execution (within narrow limits), but the court also
provided that “execution of the judgment shall be stayed pending further order of this Court upon
receipt of the Mandate of the Court of Appeal.” Id. This is consistent with the text of the FDPA,
and, moreover, bridges the gap between the first and second sentences of § 3596(a). The
sentencing court’s order was stayed pending direct appeals, consistent with the statutory
requirement that a condemned prisoner “shall be committed to the custody of the Attorney
General until exhaustion of the procedures for appeal of the judgment of conviction and for
review of the sentence.” 18 U.S.C. § 3596(a). Once those appeals concluded and the sentencing
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court received the mandate of the court of appeals, the Department was free to set an execution
date, subject to the court’s order (and subject to collateral review). 6
The Court thus concludes that the FDPA’s direction that the “United States marshal . . .
shall supervise implementation of the sentence in the manner prescribed by the law of the State
in which the sentence is imposed,” 18 U.S.C. § 3596(a), grants broad authority to U.S. marshals
to oversee federal executions, codifying the marshals’ historical role in the process. This would
likely reach such matters as the attendance of witnesses and the provision of spiritual advisers,
all of which the FDPA requires the marshal to “implement[] . . . in the manner prescribed by
[state] law.” Id. This delegation to the marshal does not, however, include the power to set
execution dates or to supervise the setting of execution dates, and thus does not require that those
dates be set in accordance with state law. The FDPA, in other words, did not disturb the
background rule, set by President Jackson and confirmed by decades if not centuries of practice,
that the sentencing court retains the authority to set execution dates, unless the court orders
otherwise.
6
Admittedly, consideration of this question is somewhat confounded by the fact that it is
unclear how the current execution date complies with the sentencing court’s order. The
sentencing court, for example, stayed execution of its judgment “pending further order of [the]
Court upon receipt of the Mandate of the Court of Appeal[s],” Dkt. 32-1 at 2, and the parties
have not produced any evidence that the stay was ever formally lifted. Even if the stay did
expire automatically upon conclusion of Montgomery’s appeal, moreover, the Department does
not seem to have complied with the time limitation specified in the original judgment. The
sentencing court entered its judgment on April 4, 2008, Dkt. 32-1 at 1, and far more than ninety
days will have passed between then and Montgomery’s January 12, 2021 execution date. And,
likewise, more than ninety days will have passed from the time Plaintiff’s collateral challenges
were finally resolved according to Defendants. But, because Montgomery has not raised any
challenge based on the sentencing court’s order, and because, in any event, this is not the proper
forum to address compliance with an order entered by a sister U.S. district court, the Court will
not reach the question of the Department’s compliance with that order here and will assume, for
present purposes, that the January 12, 2021 date is in compliance with the sentencing court’s
judgment.
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Because setting an execution date is not part of the “implementation” of the death
sentence that the U.S. marshals have responsibility for supervising, § 3596 does not require that
it be done in accordance with state law. Defendants therefore did not violate the FDPA by
rescheduling Montgomery’s execution without providing the minimum 90 days’ notice required
by Missouri Supreme Court Rule 30.30(f).
Separate and apart from the foregoing analysis, the authority of the sentencing court to
set the execution dates poses a further hurdle to Montgomery’s claim. Here, as noted above, the
sentencing court ordered that “[t]he time, place and manner of execution are to be determined by
the Attorney General, provided that the time shall not be sooner than 60 days nor later than 90
days after the date of this judgment.” Dkt. 32-1 at 2. And, in the event of an appeal, the
sentencing court stayed its order “pending further order of this Court upon receipt of the
Mandate of the Court of Appeal.” Id. To the extent that Montgomery’s claims are properly
construed as challenging whether that original order complied with the FDPA, the sentencing
court, and not this Court, is likely the proper venue for raising that challenge. In other words,
even if Montgomery were right that, pursuant to the FDPA, Missouri law governs when her
execution may occur, it is far from clear that this Court—as opposed to the sentencing court—
would have the authority, in effect, to modify the sentencing court’s order. Montgomery,
however, has not sought clarification or relief from the sentencing court.
IV.
The same logic applies in large part to the separate sentence in the same section of the
Missouri Supreme Court Rules, which provides that “[t]he department of corrections shall not be
required to execute more than one warrant of execution per month.” Mo. Sup. Ct. R. 30.30(f).
But the Court need not rest its decision on that ground because there are other compelling
33
reasons to reject Montgomery’s contentions based on the one-per-month provision. Most
conclusively, (1) the limitation applies to what can be “required” of the Missouri Department of
Corrections and does not seem to bestow any right or privilege on death row inmates, and, (2) in
any event, Montgomery’s execution is the first federal execution scheduled in January. Dkt. 59
at 18. Montgomery contends that “[t]he logical purpose of limiting the number of executions
that can be conducted in one month is to reduce strain on the judicial system and prison
administrators and staff, as well as avoid any specter of mass executions, which might undermine
confidence in the justice system.” Dkt. 60 at 9. Those concerns, Montgomery contends, are just
as applicable to BOP as to the Missouri Department of Corrections. That may be true, but the
FDPA requires executions to comply with Missouri law only when the prisoner was sentenced in
Missouri. If the Court were to apply Missouri’s one-per-month rule to all of the executions that
the Director has scheduled for January, it would in essence be subjecting death sentences
imposed in other states to Missouri law. The FDPA does not require such a result.
* * *
Finally, because the Court concludes that the government did not violate the FDPA in
setting Montgomery’s execution date, it need not consider her arguments as to how the alleged
violations prejudiced her or as to the proper remedy.
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CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court will deny Montgomery’s renewed motion for partial
summary judgment, Dkt. 58-2, and will grant summary judgment in Defendants’ favor on Count
II of Montgomery’s supplemental complaint. Because the D.C. Circuit’s decision reversing this
Court’s vacatur of Montgomery’s January 12, 2021 execution date fully resolves Count I of her
supplemental complaint, the Court will enter final judgment in this matter.
A separate order will issue.
/s/ Randolph D. Moss
RANDOLPH D. MOSS
United States District Judge
Date: January 8, 2021
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