Texas Executes Man Using Expired Drugs
A last-minute injunction gets tossed, allowing the state to give Robert Fratta a lethal dose of pentobarbital.

Texas used lethal injection to execute 65-year-old Robert Fratta on Tuesday night despite an ongoing legal fight over the state's use of allegedly expired drugs.
Fratta, a former Houston cop convicted of hiring two people to kill his wife in 1994 amid a custody battle, was pronounced dead Tuesday night just before 8 p.m. after a lethal injection of pentobarbital.
For a short time on Tuesday afternoon, Fratta's fate hung in the balance because of an injunction ordered by Judge Catherine A. Mauzy of the 345th District Court of Travis County in response to a lawsuit by Fratta and three other death row inmates. These prisoners have been fighting what they claim is the use of expired pentobarbital for executions. According to their lawsuit, the pentobarbital stocks Texas is using expired years ago, and they claim the drugs will "act unpredictably, obstruct IV lines during the execution, and cause unnecessary pain." The plaintiffs also argued that using these expired drugs violates several Texas laws. They weren't asking the court to spare their lives, they insisted, but that the court forbid Texas from using expired drugs.
The state of Texas objected to this characterization, claiming it retests the doses to make sure they're still potent and then relabels the pentobarbital with a new expiration date. The state also argues that the restrictions on the use of pharmaceutical drugs don't apply to executions because the drugs aren't being used for treatment but to kill. Attorney General Ken Paxton turned to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals to attempt to stop civil judges of district courts (where this lawsuit was being heard) from attempting to interfere with any upcoming executions, claiming that this is all under the jurisdiction of criminal courts.
Last week, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals agreed and put out an order telling judges of the 345th District Court to "refrain from issuing any order purporting to stay the January and February executions" of these inmates.
On Tuesday afternoon, however, Mauzy attempted to thread the needle with her injunction. She declined to issue a stay of execution (noting that she lacks the power to do so) and instead ruled that Texas cannot execute these defendants with the expired pentobarbital. The state can still execute the men with pentobarbital, just not the expired pentobarbital allegedly in its possession. Mauzy approached the conflict as a drug safety question, one more normally decided by civil courts, not criminal courts.
While this may seem to be a simple order, it would have stopped all pending executions. The simple reason is that over the past two decades, most drug companies have stopped making their products available to prisons for use in executions. States that insist on using drugs to execute prisoners struggle to maintain unexpired supplies of them.
In response to the dwindling supply of execution drugs, Texas passed a law in 2015 to keep providers of their lethal injection drugs secret in order to prevent death penalty opponents from pressuring the drug companies and compound pharmacies that supply Texas. In November, The Texas Tribune calculated that the state had enough remaining doses for seven executions. As of last April, the state had 199 inmates on death row, one less now that Fratta has been executed.
Mauzy's attempt at an injunction was promptly overturned Tuesday afternoon when the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals overruled her, again on the grounds that she lacked jurisdiction on how executions are handled. The Texas State Supreme Court then quickly rejected an appeal, so Texas moved forward with Fratta's execution.
Texas is clinging to expired drugs because it doesn't want to stop executing people. The ethics of the death penalty are already troubling—the state taking lives in an imperfect and heavily politicized justice system. By using expired drugs in violation of state and federal laws and consumer safety regulations, Texas and other lethal injection states are undermining the justice system.
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At least we know there won't be any malpractice lawsuits afterwards.
Wtf
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Horrible news out of Brazil. Arrested protestors are being forcibly injected with the Covid shots against their will.
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"The simple reason is that over the past two decades, most drug companies have stopped making their products available to prisons for use in executions."
And the simple reason for that? Oh, it was the anti-death-penalty activists and foreign governments putting pressure on them?
Kind of a 'Heads I Win, Tails You Lose' sort of setup there, isn't it? You put them in that situation and then try to shame them for attempting to deal with it.
I'm no fan of the death penalty, but that's not a very honest or convincing tactic, frankly.
And it's become kind of a soft attempt to ban the death penalty by making lethal injection the only method available, and then banning access to the drugs used for it. It's all pretty weasel-y, and part of the point is to get the lacking-context headlines of "Texas executes man with expired drugs." Trying to make the whole thing seem quite barbaric because they've made it impossible to do the job properly.
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If I am ever executed, please use expired drugs. Also, you get one shot.
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a former Houston cop
What a twist!
Can't they get any fentanyl? There's plenty just to their south I hear.
There's plenty in the prison. Just go to a shot caller and Bob's your uncle.
So there is no mention in the article if any of the parade of horribles speculated to occur if the drugs were used for the execution happened. I suspect that means the legalistic hail mary throw was nonsense on stilts to begin with.
The closing paragraph whinge about why Texas simply won’t give up capital punishment is kind of pathetic.
You expect better from Jacob?
I'm fine with everything tried to overturn the death penalty except the last minute "you're not murdering correctly" gambit. If there is some defect in the judgement, fine. Some general problem with State sanctioned executions, fine. Even limiting to certain humane methods, fine. But fighting for delays then using the delays you cause as justification for cancellation seems a bit dishonest.
This is Shackford's article, and no, I do not.
The opposition to capital punishment has largely created this situation as an end run around normal political debate about the moral status of the death penalty so they do not care what the individual condemned prisoners suffer as a result, despite their legal arguments. Yes, their tactics are slimy.
Sullum, Shackford what difference at this point does it make? But thanks for the correction.
This is the problem throughout the articles today, the novel end-run tactics become the point instead of the central issue. Here it is State execution overshadowed by the technical details of the execution. The pot articles all ignore that the favored tactic of decriminalization left the law on the books so erasing the associated prior felonies isn't an option and there are ramifications there.
I can understand getting tired of banging your head against a wall and just going for an easy win but at least be responsible for what you've done.
but at least be responsible for what you’ve done.
Find me a politician who holds himself responsible for the effects of his own policies. One. Pick one from history if that makes it easier.
Hillary took full responsibility for the classified information on her server. Politicians always say they take full responsibility, it just means: okay, let's move. It is the consequences that they want to avoid.
Well, now we know. Expired drugs do just fine administering justice.
Next.
The inmate, like the drugs, has expired.
Great to have you back, man.
Now I just want to know: If sour cream goes bad, does it taste sweet? 😉
Am I the only one who first read that as, "Texas Executes Man for Using Expired Drugs", and though, wow, they sure are strict in Texas?
I would have edited the headline to read "Texas Using Expired Drugs To Execute Man", but that is just me.
So the uxoricide expired too, right? So the scales of justness look balanced for a change.
By using expired drugs in violation of state and federal laws and consumer safety regulations,
This some serious through-the-looking-glass shit right here.
Not following safety regulations could end up with someone being seriously hurt, or even killed.
I hope they used a clean needle and wiped the area with alcohol.
I hope they stuck the needle in his eye and broke it off.
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Hey, the law says you can't use expired drugs, and you have to follow the law because it's the law. That's what the lawn order crowd tells me, anyway.
I heard Zyklon B is pretty effective. It's now called Cyanosil.
Misek has assured us there is no such thing.
I assume you would be glad to see it used on slaves forced to build the V-2, right?
You mean the collaborators who chose to work for the Nazis instead of an honorable death?
If you compare the V2's fired at England to the V2's the English noticed falling on them, about 50% didn't get there. In a place as crowded as the south and east of England, I don't think a 1-ton warhead goes unnoticed very often, so about half must have malfunctioned and either broke apart in flight, or managed to miss an island hundreds of miles across.
Maybe building these with slave labor on loan from death camps wasn't a good idea.
Operation Double Cross had compromised Nazi spies sending messages that the rockets were missing London so the Germans recalibrated and when the rockets were missing London the spies sent messages they were right on target.
Soooo...The captured Nazi spies were collaborators with the good side. Why no calls for their "honorable death"?
It wasn't good for the Nazis and it confirms what I said to IceJunkie earlier that the forced laborers were saboteurs on the good side.
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The three ringleaders of this movement: Glenn Greenwald, Tulsi Gabbard, Matt Taibbi.
And Russell Brand, Bret Weinstein, Joe Rogan, Tim Robbins, Jordan Peterson, Julian Assange, etc. All these leftists rejecting the corporatist authoritarianism of his supposed "center".
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I might throw Vinay Prasad in there, and maybe Brie Joy or Joy Brie or whatever her name is.
Brie is nasty French cheese that makes me puke, so either way, wouldn’t.
Brendan O'Neil seems to be joining the club.
Oh, so Left-Populists and Right-Populists are docking? At least they won't make young. 🙂
Somebody take an organic chem class. It can't be that hard to synthesize this stuff.
Or just reimport them from Canada.
(no state should have the power to execute) were there deleterious side effects like death or something?
Not even if they're shooting at people out of hotel window?
okay with exigent real-time execution because expedited sixth amendment benefits ...
Using deadly force to stop deadly force is fine. Government executing someone based on charges is a no-go unless the convicted works for government and committed said act(s) as part pf their employment.
There is also the little problem that Omniscience does not exist, especially with human judges.
My earlier suggestion in your absence was that people who are "too mean for the peoples" should be exiled on man-made islands for one with eco-systems all their own, patrolled by gunships, airplanes, satellites, and drones.
Allow monthly visits from an attorney with Nexus-Lexus in case the exiled wants to argue for exoneration, but other than that, no outside contact and the one rule for the exiled is "Root, Hog, or Die."
It rids dangerous people from society without the problems of capital punishment gone wrong.
So what you're saying is that they should put him in a dark room with a bunch of scared cops and let nature take its course? Maybe dress him up in a dog costume?
Or a donut, but cannibalism is definitely cruel and unusual. 🙂
Funny, I didn't know Jack Ruby used lethal injection on Lee Harvey Oswald! 😉
But then again, when I heard the radio commercial, I thought Zip Recruiter was the name of the film-maker. 😉
Eternal Life. See my question below. 🙂
Jacob should move to Canada, they don't execute prisoners up their... They execute everyone else but not prisoners
“Up their” what?
😉
Surely there aren’t lethal enemas are there? That would be scary!
If MAID involves enemas, I don't really want to know.
And how do they determine the expiration date? They just make it one year after the drug is compounded by the pharmacy. That date does not mean there is anything wrong with the drug when the magical year elapses. The one year expiration date is a *public* health consideration, not an individual health consideration. As long as you trust that Texas' drug quality testing is adequate then expiration dates are meaningless. And of course I don't trust the Texas penal system, but that's a different issue.
"And of course I don’t trust the Texas penal system, but that’s a different issue."
I tend to mistrust state penal systems in general, and while I'd love to see the death penalty being administered according to a high standard, I'm not aware of this actually happening.
Too bad, some crimes are heinous enough to deserve execution - eg, ordering a hit on your wife.
I suspect that using it for executions is an off-label use anyway, so different regulations probably apply.
Why did they give up hanging in the first place?
Let me guess - not humane enough.
To escape the troubling association of modern executions with the grotesque spectacle of public hangings.
Not sure what the issue is here. He's dead right? The expired drugs did the job. If you are opposed to expired drugs, we can always go back to hanging or sooting them. Maybe you would like that better.
Bottom line, dead is dead. All is well.
>>sooting them
Joan of Arc treatment probably 8A violation
But it worked for her. A well-sooted criminal rarely reoffends.
So the Maude theme says: "She was a Sister who really cooked."
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Hell, I loved the whole Norman Lear franchise as a kid. Maude Findley was Archie Bunker’s opposite sex, Left-Wing, equally maniac counter-part.
And I loved Fred Sanford for being an Urban Survivalist, with a stash of booze, a hidden drawer for his Federal Reserve Notes, a Louieville Slugger for interlopers, and since he had a successful junk business in the middle of Watts in the Sixties and Seventies, you know he probably had to have a WWI water-cooled machine gun on his rooftop. Fred Sanford was a bad-ass MoFo!
🙂
I applaud Texas for not letting them go to waste. Most drug expiration times are highly conservative and anything that has a two-year expiration is completely arbitrary, as that the maximum allowed, even if the drug doesn't "go bad."
Well next time, they should hang him with an unexpired rope. Oh wait, the drugs worked. There won’t be a next time.
Use fresh fentanyl instead of expired phenobarbital!
After examining the trapdoor he was to stand on for the hanging, the infamous physician and poisoner William Palmer reportedly asked the executioner, “Are you sure it’s safe?”
If lethal injection drugs are outlawed, will back-alley chemists try to make them and end up with Ponce De Léon’s Fountain of Youth?
😉
Probably the only good unintended consequence of the “War On (Some) Drugs” and it would be completely unavailable for good people! Ain’t that some shit!
I don't support the death penalty but let's be honest, what's the worst that could happen with using expired drugs? They don't work? They do work?
The claimed concern (I'm opposed to the Death Penalty, but I tend to view these types of a appeals as similar to SLAPP filings; the people filing the appeals don't actually believe their own concerns, but want to gum up the works by whatever means necessary) is that the drugs will lead to a drawn out, painful death for the convict rather than his going to sleep painlessly (except for the needle sticks) and then dying in his sleep.
So the alternative--taxation of millions to keep red-handed, unquestioned murderers alive--is the preferable and better thing, right? What about the underlying assumption that taxes can be collected to feed and house city-sized murderer populations without the initiation of deadly force? Killings to collect taxes are not so different from the deadly force initiated by the cons who were were convicted by clear and convincing evidence, right? I'd expect more murders are committed to coddle killers than are committed by the killers who got caught. LP platform committee infiltrators imagine the science is settled. Is it?
There is more injustice in how Bogdan Vechirko was treated than this POS getting the big jab.
Please. Why even use drugs? Two rounds in the back of the head. Cheaper, effective, and the beauty is that in Texas you can get volunteers to do it for gas and lunch money.
Shooting is messy - and in the evolution of execution methods from short-drop hanging to long-drop hanging and the guillotine to the electric chair and gas chamber, not being messy has clearly been more important in the USA than avoiding suffering. So with the three-drug lethal injection protocols, we have a method that's sure not to get very messy, but might cause a few minutes of suffering if not done just right.
Note that we could give lethal injections with just a huge overdose of heroin or fentanyl and be sure it wasn't painful except for the needle stick. There'd be no supply problem - there are always lots of drugs in the evidence locker from cases that are over. Or go to any country veterinarian for a drug dose that will kill a horse humanely. But the condemned might twitch grotesquely while he died, so instead we administer an anesthetic so (we hope) he won't feel the paralytic that stops the twitching, followed by the fatal dose last. If the anesthetic is botched, it's not so humane but the paralytic ensures we won't know...
SO the same State of Texas that taxes voters to send goons with guns out to corral pregnant ladies fleeing the very involuntary servitude into life-threatening forced reproduction that the 13th Amendment makes illegal… executes some killer. Why? Because he instead of a gubmint bounty hunter collected the scalp? What’s the point of subsidized, mandatory girl-bullying if you can’t kill a few and make examples of them on the altar of Televangelism?
I can't wait until we get rid of the death penalty. Never mind that we appropriately limit it to only the most heinous of crimes -- treason, murder, and at one point, rape -- we might execute someone who's really innocent.
Never mind that all those people who seem so concerned about innocent people on death row don't really seem all that concerned about all the people who aren't on death row. What's wrong with innocent people in prison, after all, losing decades of their lives hoping that maybe evidence can eventually come out, proving their innocence? If they're innocent, they can always be let out on the street, sometimes literally just outside the prison doors, with nothing but the clothes on their back and a little money in their pockets, with little to no family connections, no friends, and decades of having no career.
And who knows? Maybe some of them might even get out on parole, at least, and have to rebuild their innocent lives labeled as a convict, and treated as such. Some of these people won't even bother appealing their decisions, because, being wrongfully convicted of manslaughter, they know their appeals would take longer to wend their ways through the court systems, than they could get out on good behavior and parole.
Nope, this isn't a concern at all! Once we stop executing innocent people, we don't have to look good and hard at the "justice" system, and we don't have to address the difficult question of "why the heck are we convicting innocent people -- death penalty or not -- in the first place?"
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