Episode Transcript
Pushkin previously on revisionist history.
I think there was a pressure to have a method that looked more humane than electrocution and lethal gas on.
Speaker 2That van and I go back to the hotel where the other people had been in there praying with his family, and I have to go in and tell him.
Speaker 3You know, John's gone, and.
Speaker 2He was peaceful.
Speaker 4He didn't appear to suffer.
This is how lethal injection actually kills you.
It kills you by burning your lungs up, and you're also paralyzed, so you can't complain that this is happening.
Speaker 3Good afternoon, everybody, Thank you for being here.
I hope everybody had a one full holiday.
If I haven't seen you since, then call this press conference today because I believe that people of Alabama deserve an explanation on where things stand and where I stand with regard to capital punishment in our state.
Speaker 5It's early December twenty twenty two, Montgomery, Alabama.
Steve Marshall, the state's attorney General, is holding a press conference standing at the podium flanked by the Alabama and American flags.
Speaker 3What occurred on November seventeenth was a travesty, but not for the reasons that many death penalty opponents and death row sympathizers would have the public to believe.
Speaker 5My name is Malcolm Gladwell.
You're listening to the Alabama Murders our series on the Elizabeth Sennet case.
This is episode five, Cruel and Unusual.
It's about the second of her assailants, Kenny Smith, and what was done to him in the name of justice travesty of November seventeenth.
Kenny Smith was twenty two at the time of Elizabeth sentence murderer.
He had a girlfriend and two young children.
He was working in a factory.
He was slight, skinny, dark hair, thick, moon shaped eyebrows.
He was drunk a lot and high, but all was smiling.
Speaker 2They would come over to my house a lot and Keenie would it would just be granted because Michael will be sitting in the back seat in his car seat, and that Kenny would be high.
You know, they would be drinking.
Speaker 5This is Linda Smith, Kenny's mom, talking with a local reporter named Lee Hedgepeth.
Lee has covered the Kenny Smith case and knows his family.
Well, what kind of drunk.
Speaker 2Was skinny Hey with a happy drunk?
Yeah, it's hard to think of Kenny is anything.
Yeah, yeah, I mean what you're saying is what you get with him.
Speaker 5On the evening after the attack on Elizabeth Sennett, Smith's best friend came over to his house.
They went out to get beer.
Kenny's hand was swollen.
He hit it wrapped in a bandage.
On the way to the store, Kenny kept saying, I messed up.
I messed up.
He wouldn't say why.
Then back at home he started crying.
His mother lived close by.
In the days that followed before the police caught up to him, he went to see her.
Speaker 2And Kenny, you know, like I said, he would come over during that time.
I mean I look back on the times that he would come over and uh, he would be kind of distant, you know, and he would just I mean, it's disliked.
It was something he wanted to tail me, but you know he never did.
So when do you find out that he's implicated.
Speaker 1In some way?
Speaker 2Well I find out one afternoon when he calls me, oh, thank you just got home from work and they came and he said, Mom, can you come pick up Michael?
And I said, well, I'm washing my hair right now.
I said, I can't write this minute, and he said, well, Mom, can you come?
He said, the police are here, and I just thought it was, you know, for pot or drugs or something like that, and I said, well, you know, I'll be over there, you know, and just a mente.
Of course, it didn't take me long to get to their house.
And when I drove up over there in that driveway, I bet you there was ten ten cars out in front.
Speaker 5Kenny Smith met the same fate as his friend John Parker, who you heard about in the last episode.
Smith was charged with murder, can victed, sentenced by the jury to life without pearl by a vote of eleven to one, and then his judge did the same thing John Parker's judge did, overrode the jury's decision and sentenced him to death.
He got sent to home in prison and stayed there for decades, appealing his sentence, delaying the inevitable until November seventeenth, twenty twenty two, when the event that the Attorney General of the State of Alabama called a travesty happened.
Speaker 3It's been a great deal of media coverage, both local and national, about what happened in Kenney Smith's execution chamber.
Much of that coverage has seemingly been openly sympathetic to Smith and his cause, even with some going so far as to advocate for the abolishment of the death penalty.
And on what basis exactly because a cold blooded, convicted killer complains about the prodding and poking of a small abvy line really potting and poking with a needle.
Speaker 5Prodding and poking with a needle, Let's start there.
The state of Alabama has a detailed set of instructions for how executions are to be carried out in their prisons, a protocol.
The protocol was not supposed to be a public document, but Alabama was forced to disclose it during a death Bentley court case.
It's forty one pages of dry, precise language stipulating every step of the process.
When a condemned prisoner is supposed to be moved to a special holding cell, when he gets his last meal, what he gets to have in his cell, The people who are allowed to attend the execution, where the victim's family goes, where the offenders group goes, things like that.
The execution team is made up of about a dozen people.
It is a captain.
The team is supposed to do a walk through in the week leading up to the execution, batting practice, if you will, to make sure they have the killing procedure down pat As you may remember from the last episode, the seed of the idea behind lethal injection came from Ronald Reagan, who said, why don't we just execute people the same way we put down horses, to use the veterinarian's' euphemism, put them to sleep, clean, quick, professional, something that appears painless instead of all the messiness of the electric chair.
That's very much the spirit of the Alabama protocol.
Speaker 4What was so I think effective about lethal injection and sinister is the fact that when you observe an execution with lethal injection, generally it's a pretty bloodless event.
Not much happens.
It appears that a person kind of closes their eyes.
Maybe you can imagine that they fall asleep, and then they're dead.
Speaker 5Jill Zivitt the intensive care specialist from Emory University in Atlanta who fell into death boalty work a few years ago.
Speaker 4So this was a breakthrough in terms of the witness experience because every other kind of execution method that had ever occurred before then, you know, it was quite a lot more graphic, but lethal injection seemed to solve the problem of being outwardly peaceful, and that's why I think lethal injection took cold.
And on top of that, of course, there was this kind of impersonation of a medical act.
There was the use of terminology of medicine and even the use of physicians and other medical people which gave this kind of extra impression.
You know that this was legitimate, an endorsed kind of activity.
Speaker 5Which brings us to the portion of the protocol at issue.
On the evening of November seventeenth, twenty twenty two, in Section B Part one, Clause A quote, the IV team will be escorted into the execution chamber to start the IV.
The heart monitor leads will be applied to the condemned inmate.
If the condemned inmates veins make obtaining venus access difficult or problematic, qualified medical personnel may perform a central line procedure as set forth in section two of Appendix B ADEOC Lethal injection execution procedure.
A central line procedure involves inserting a long, thin, flexible tube into a large vein, like the jugular vein in the neck or the subclavian vein in the chest or the femoral vein in the thigh.
So you try for the arm the normal way, and if you fail, you go for a big vein.
That's the plan.
Only in real life things aren't always so straightforward, as outlined in Section B, Part one, Clause A in a case of Kenny Smith and in other cases, there have been these initial problems in finding a vein.
Speaker 4Yeah, I want to talk about this with you.
Speaker 5You talk about this because I yeah, as a non medical person, I'm I'm puzzled.
I don't understand this.
Speaker 4Sure, Yeah, So you walked me through.
Speaker 5Why why is that hard?
Speaker 4Alabama, you know, was the poster child of failure for this in a in an odd kind of cluster of cases.
And and to answer your question directly, why is it hard?
Well, it's hard because in order to put an intravenous into a vein, you know, it requires a certain you know, level of skill, and it also requires some cooperation.
You know, it hurts to stick someone with a needle.
So in someone who is sort of young and fit and well uh and well hydrated and relaxed, you know that the chance of getting a vein and a person like that is quite high.
You know, uh in someone who's who's dehydrated terriff I had been sick, had been in prison for two decades.
You know, it becomes a lot harder.
Plus you're also giving it over to people who are not expert.
Okay, you know, an antiseesiologist in good standing is not going to spend their wednesdays over at the you know, State corrections Sticking ivs in people for execution, it's not something that we do and people who you know, to learn to do in intervenous is a technical skill.
It can be learned, but I think also the people who are doing it themselves are nervous.
Speaker 5Alabama won't reveal exactly who is on the execution team, what their training is, how much experience they have, but it's safe to say this isn't a team full of doctors, since doctors have to take an oath to do no harm, and hooking someone up to an IV that will transport lethal drugs is definitely doing harm.
That's as if it's point, these are prison employees side contractors.
It's not the anesthesiologist from the nearest teaching hospital.
Speaker 4You know, there are some ways of making it more likely than not to succeed.
But you know what is taught either in nursing school or as an emt or as a doctor cannot be lifted into the death chamber like it's not the same place.
If these people are not patients, you know, they're not collaborators to you.
Speaker 5In some states with the death penalty, putting in the IVY is done in full view of the witnesses to the execution, but in Alabama it's done before the witnesses are invited into the execution chamber, which means that any outsider who is there to see the execution, the families and friends and reporters, are forced to guess how the IVY process is going.
The executioners are supposed to start at six the witnesses are all sequestered in a holding room away from the execution side, and if it gets to be seven pm or seven thirty or nine pm and the witnesses haven't yet been picked up by the bus to go take them to the execution chamber, then everyone starts to wonder is there a problem.
This is exactly what happened in the summer of twenty twenty two while Kenny Smith was still appealing his sentence, a condemned inmate at home and named Joe Nathan James was set to be executed.
Everything with James ran late afterwards.
The state insisted the procedure had gone according to plan, but Zivid was suspicious.
He asked to perform a second autopsy, and what he found was, in a word, gruesome, Consider yourself warned.
Speaker 4I was able to get his body, and I worked with a pathologist in Alabama and went there and with him, you know, we've performed this second autopsy, and I saw in his body evidence of, you know, multiple attempts at intravenouses and some of these things, you know, you could see bruising, which meant that they were you know, kind of getting in and getting out of a van.
And there was some bleeding under the skin, and there was these were both on you know, on multiple spots on his arms, up and down, both arms.
And then there was also evidence of something called a cutdown.
And a cutdown is where you take a knife to the skin and you open the skin to reveal, you know, a vein beneath that that you couldn't otherwise see or feel.
It's kind of an old style technique and it's been replaced by ultrasound, and the protocol at the time does not provide for the possibility of a cutdown.
And also the cut down along the edges of it had blood, which again meant that he had to have been alive and bleeding for this to have taken place.
So somehow they got some ivy in him, but it took them hours to do it.
So picture you know, Joe, Nathan James lying there, strapped down, you know, not cooperative as they poke and poke and poke him and finally just take a knife to his forearm to open up his forearm to try to get a vein there and that so that was Joe.
Speaker 5Then came Alan Miller two months later.
Under Alabama law, once a defendant has been convicted of a capital crime, he or she is given a death warrant.
A warrant is a writ issued by the court which lays out the facts of the conviction, the specific offense, the judgment of the court, and the time and place of execution, which in Alabama is a purpose built facility on the campus of Home and Prison in Atmore at the time, once a date had been set, the execution had to take place by midnight, so they start at six pm and give themselves six hours with Alan Miller.
They ran at a time, gave up, the state had to come back and kill him on another day.
Then came Kenny Smith.
Tell me your impressions of Kenny.
Speaker 2What was he like?
Speaker 6Kenny?
I obviously didn't know him when he was a twenty two year old person at the time of the events for which he was convicted.
But he truly was an example.
And I know this is going to sound right and a cliche, but he really got religion figuratively and literally.
You know, in prison he was a force for good.
Speaker 5This is Robert Grass, one of Kenny Smith's lawyers, the one who had been with him the longest.
He's a litigator for a prestigious corporate law firm in New York City.
He represents pharmaceutical companies, but he does pro bono death penalty work on the side.
He started representing Kenny Smith in two thousand and five.
How many times over the course of twenty years did you go to Alabama?
Speaker 6I don't have an exact number, but.
Speaker 4Many.
Speaker 5Home in prison where Smith was held is in the southern part of the state.
Grass was in New York, so that's New York to Atlanta, Atlanta to Mobile, ran a car in mobile drive an hour to add more, he made that journey for close to two decades.
Speaker 6I really felt as if we developed a friendship, I really would have liked to have had the opportunity to interact with them under different circumstances.
Speaker 5Grass is older, lean, dark suit, gray hair, ivy, lead degree cum laude, law school graduate.
He probably builds out at some astronomical number.
Whenever I read about some complicated legal negotiation that goes on into the wee hours of the morning, I imagine it's because someone like Robert Grass is involved as measured and dispassionate and implacable at three AM as they were at three in the afternoon.
You have to listen very closely when he talks.
He doesn't broadcast his feelings.
He sends out morse code signals.
Talk a little bit more about your friendship.
It's an unlikely friendship.
Speaker 6Yeah, you know, we obviously grew up in.
Speaker 5Different circumstances, different circumstances, morse code.
Speaker 6I've had other experiences with some folks on death Throw where I, you know, didn't feel the same bond.
But Kenny, as I said by the time I knew him, was just a decent man, incredibly gracious, and really seemed to have the best he could given the environment he was in to have been leading a productive life in that environment.
Speaker 5In the fall of twenty twenty two, Smith and his legal team suffered a serious setback.
Smith was finally given a death warrant, and the warrant set the date of the execution November seventeenth, twenty twenty two.
But those two botched execution cases, Alan Miller and Joe Nathan James, gave Grass one more chance.
The Supreme Court has long supported the idea the states can execute prisoners if they wish, but they have insisted that executions have to be done the right way, and what happened to Joe Nathan James and to Alan Miller didn't seem like it fit any definition of the right way.
So Smith's lawyers sued, the way Alabama is practicing lethal injection is cruel and unusual punishment.
The case was dismissed.
Grass appealed to the Eleventh Circuit in Atlanta.
Arguments were heard on November sixteenth, the day before Smith's death warrant.
Grass went directly from the hearing to the prison.
Speaker 6Then I went to at Moore, which is where Holman is visited with Kenny.
That morning, we were still waiting for the Eleventh Circuit's decision, and that day became a real rollercoaster of emotions.
Speaker 5Grass was in a hotel room a mile or two from the prison.
At eight pm, Grass heard that the prison guards at home and had taken Kenny out of his cell and were preparing him for execution.
But that wasn't right.
His appeal was still up in the air.
Then Grass got another call.
The Eleventh Circuit had ruled in Kenny's favor.
The execution was off, at which point the State of Alabama appealed to the US Supreme Court.
It was now after eight.
Speaker 6PM, and in the meantime, I'm kind of watching the clock tick because the death warn't expired at midnight, so I'm hoping to reach that point without this going forward.
But at about a quarter after ten or so, got a call from the emergency clerk at the United States Supreme Court, sometimes referred to as the death Clerk because a lot of the emergency involve capital cases.
But who said, there's no easy way to say this, and so I knew from that preferatory remark what was coming.
Speaker 5The Supreme Court ruled in favor of Alabama.
One of the reporters, who was at home in prison covering the story, emailed Grass to say they were moving the witnesses to the death chamber.
Grass sat in his hotel room waiting to hear what happened.
Nothing, silence.
The next morning he learned why.
Speaker 6So he was taken out of his cell, thinking that his execution was imminent, strapped to a gurney, and nothing is happening.
And he's asking, you know, the corrections officers who are with them, what's going on, and they, you know, tell him they don't know.
And then when they finally got going, you know, they've got three members of an IV team, none of whom are identified to him.
There are other people in the execution chamber with him that were not identified to him.
They're you know, jabbing him with a needle trying to find a vein, which they weren't able to do.
Then they tried something called a central line procedure to kind of stick a needle under his collarbone and reach one of his central veins.
But again they didn't tell him what they were doing.
What was going on.
They just kind of put a surgical gown over him.
You know, one of the IV team members came back into the room in surgical garb, and you know, Kenny is asking these people what's what they're doing.
No one is telling them.
Speaker 5I'm going to read from a report on that evening, commissioned by Grass and his team.
It includes a very detailed description of what Kenny said happened to him in the execution chamber.
He recalled seeing a clear plastic sheet over his chest with an open center.
He saw that the man had a stringe in his hand, and he unbuttoned mister Smith's shirt and injected a yellow liquid into his chest.
The man said, you will feel something cool, and the man slid a long needle into his chest.
He inserted the needle and as Kenny perceived it, moved the needle around while it was inserted in his chest.
Mister Smith noted that he quote lost all composure at this point, describing everything became surreal, Everything went out the window.
Mister Smith became terrified that he was being injected with a substance that would render him unable to communicate some that he knew would violate an existing court order.
He was again panicked that he would not be able to say his final words to his family and the victim's family, given what he heard had happened in a previous execution.
The man who had been injecting him in the chest and the IVY team all stepped back.
Mister Smith tried to gather himself and then said that they stepped back up and the man from behind his shoulder had a large gage needle with a large cylinder.
Mister Smith said he quote freaked out, quote demanding that someone call his lawyer.
Next, Deputy Warden Woods put his hands on mister Smith on both sides of his head and said, quote this is for your own good, pulling his head to the side.
Mister Smith then recalled searing pain as he was injected under his collarbone.
He said it took my breath away, and he recalled that he was gasping and trying to get away by bucking up off the table.
Mister Smith recounted that he believed the man tried approximately five times to get this large needle into a vein under his collarbone.
Speaker 6By the time this was done, that after three and a half or four hours being strapped to a gurney.
You know, he was unable to stand, walk, unbutton his shirt, you know, change his clothes, do any of that without assistance.
Speaker 5It was now almost midnight.
Ken, he couldn't stand.
He asked for a wheelchair, they refused.
He sat outside the chamber until the guards picked him up by the arms and carried him to the infirmary.
I can't help but think about the execution team in this moment, assuming they'd be able to carry out the most overwhelming of tasks on the pretense that it's a clean, professional, humane exercise, only to suddenly realize they can't do it.
They're over their heads, and they can't hide.
They're stuck in the execution chamber until midnight for reasons I can't fully explain.
Every time I think of the night of November seventeenth, I think of the lines from an old Graham Parker song.
The doctor gets nervous completing the service.
He's all rubber gloves and no head.
He fumbles the light switch.
It's just another minor hitch.
Wishes to God he was dead.
After a night like that, how could you not wish to God you were dead.
Kenny's miss failed execution was on a Thursday.
The following Monday, the Governor of Alabama, Kivy, paused all pending executions in the state and ordered a top to bottom review of the state's capital punishment protocol.
And then two and a half weeks after that came Steve Marshall's press conference.
Speaker 3Good after me, everybody call this press conference today because.
Speaker 5Attorney General's Office Montgomery, Alabama flags on both sides of the podium, Alabama's highest ranking legal officer.
Seeks to set the record straight.
And what was on his mind that six hour window that home and Prison had given itself to get someone ready to be executed.
Why were they starting so late in today?
It was letting murderers and their lawyers gain the system.
Speaker 3So if you're a defense lawyer representing an inmate, you simply know that you have to push the clock back as far as possible.
I think we saw that occur with the last two executions.
Speaker 5No form not to mention the prisoners themselves, they weren't helping matters.
Speaker 3But let's also acknowledge that inmates themselves have responsibility here, not just in the delay that's occurred.
But I think you've seen impletings that we have where inmates are resisting the efforts to put that IVY line in, which obviously makes it more difficult.
Speaker 5Can you believe it the condemned prisoners are not cooperating with their executioners.
A reporter raises his hand.
Is there anything the state legislature could do, like maybe adding another method of execution or increasing that window to forty eight or seventy two hours?
Yes, yes, Marshall says, that is the issue here.
We just don't have long.
Speaker 3Enough now, although we have a twenty four hour period right now, but really an actuality have a six hour window based upon policies and department corrections having in place long before the current commissioner, long before Governor Iby or myself.
And I'm sure that's one of the things that they will look at as part of their review.
Speaker 5I'm sure that's one of the things they will look at as part of their review.
And sure enough it was.
The Governor's top to bottom review turned out to be a new rule that said the guards at home in prison would have until the following morning to complete their service, six more hours to poke and prod and take a knife and peel back flesh and dig around the collarbone, and manage the rising sense of shame and self loathing and revulsion that comes to being asked to do a job without really knowing how to do a job.
Speaker 3It's been a great deal of media coverage, both local and national, about what happened in Kenney Smith's execution chamber.
Much of that coverage has seemingly been openly sympathetic to Smith and his cause, even with some going so far as to advocate for the abolishment of the death penalty.
And on what basis exactly because a cold blooded, convicted killer complains about the prodding and poking of a small ivy line really potting and poking with a needle.
Speaker 5As the moral failure cascade gains momentum, indifference turns to cruelty.
And through all of this, Kenny Smith was back in his cell, still alive.
What do you do after the state has tried to kill you and failed?
If the state botches the attempt the first time around, does that disqualify them from trying again?
Robert Grass and the rest of Kenny Smith's legal team realized they needed someone to do an assessment of Kenny's condition before they could do anything else.
They needed someone who knew what it might be like to be strapped to a gurney for three and a half hours while a group of people in surgical garb stabbed them with needles.
So they called Kate Porterfield coming up on Revisionist History.
Speaker 1One of the people on the team, who he didn't know, says to him, it's over and I'll be praying for you.
So these kinds of moments for Kenny were just unmanageable.
Afterwards, they were unmanageable moments with other humans.
Speaker 2I guess it started after Kenny was born.
What I think is he was doing stuff and A was thinking I was, you know, right, and he was jealous.
Yeah, but I wasn't you know, I had a kidom rise.
Speaker 1He really kind of got me.
He made me really pause and think a lot, Kenny Smith, because watching someone only start from a place of love after something so horrible was I've never seen that before.
Speaker 5Revision's History is produced by Lucy Sullivan, Ben the Daph Haffrey, and Nina Bird Lawrence.
Additional reporting by Benda Daph Haffrey and Lee Hedgepeth.
Our editor is Karen Schakerji.
Fact checking by Kate Furby.
Our executive producer is Jacob Smith, engineering by Nina Bird Lawrence, production support from Luke Clemond, original scoring by Luis Kerra with Paul Brainard and Jimmy Bodd.
Sound design and additional music by Jake Gorsky.
I'm Malcolm Glabo.
You can get this entire season now add free by subscribing to Revision's history on Pushkin Plus, sign up on the show page on Apple Podcasts, or at pushkin slash Plus.
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