Policy

ACLU Sues Missouri to Open Up Info About Executions

In response to bad press, state passed a law concealing names of people involved

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After a Post-Dispatch investigation seven years ago revealed the identity of Missouri's lead executioner, exposing a history including public discipline from the state medical board and false statements in court, the Legislature took action.

It enacted a law to ban any person from "knowingly disclosing the identity of a current or former member of an execution team.''

The Department of Corrections announced on Tuesday it was adding a compounding pharmacy to the execution team and invoked the 2007 law protecting the pharmacy's workers from disclosure.

On Wednesday, the American Civil Liberties Union of Missouri sued in U.S. District Court in St. Louis to try to overturn the law so "we can post documents that identify execution team members on our website without fear of violating any statutes," said its legal director, Tony Rothert. Under the law, an executioner whose identity was revealed could file a lawsuit and recover actual and punitive damages from the person who revealed the name.

(Hat tip to Mark Sletten)