LETHAL INJECTION
When the Execution Order Is Received
As soon as the execution order is received, the condemned inmate is moved into a special security area of the prison. Based on hourly checks, staff document his/her behavior and bring anything unusual to the warden?s attention.
The inmate receives priority visiting privileges; no visitors are turned away without authorization of the warden. Every effort is made to accommodate visits by the inmate?s attorney including weekend or holiday visits if necessary.
Pre-Execution Reports
Two reports are prepared within three weeks of the established scheduled execution date. The first is 20 days before the scheduled execution; the second is seven days before the scheduled execution. Each report includes:
Psychiatric report - Results and interpretation of examinations, interviews and history of the inmate by three psychiatrists which will be used to determine the inmate?s sanity.
Chaplain report - Comments on the inmate?s spiritual and emotional well-being.
Summary of behavior - Observations noted by the case worker and custody staff.
Cover letter from warden - Includes firsthand information from interviews, observations or communication with the inmate and his/her family or friends.
The seven day pre-execution report discusses any changes that have occurred since the first report.
Sanity Review Requests
Within 30 to seven days before the scheduled execution, the inmate?s attorney may submit current psychiatric information that may have a bearing on the sanity of the condemned inmate. This information will be provided to the panel of psychiatrists to consider in completion of the pre-execution psychiatric reports.
Last 24 Hours
During the day before the scheduled execution, the warden will make special arrangements for visits by approved family members, spiritual advisors, and friends.
At about 6 p.m. the day before the scheduled execution, the inmate will be moved to the death watch cell which is adjacent to the execution chamber. From then on, a three-member staff unit will provide a constant death watch.
Soon after he/she is re-housed, the inmate will be served his/her last dinner meal. The prison makes every effort to provide the meal requested by the inmate.
Between 7 and 10 p.m., the inmate may be visited by the assigned state chaplain and the warden. The inmate may read, watch television, or play the radio. He/She can request special food items and coffee or soft drinks.
The family, spiritual advisors and friends the inmate has selected as witnesses may arrive up to two hours before the scheduled execution.
At about 30 minutes before the scheduled execution, the inmate is given a new pair of denim trousers and a blue work shirt to wear. He/She is escorted into the execution chamber a few minutes before the appointed time and is strapped onto a table. [The chairs previously used for lethal gas executions have been removed.]
The inmate is connected to a cardiac monitor which is connected to a printer outside the execution chamber. An IV is started in two usable veins and a flow of normal saline solution is administered at a slow rate. [One line is held in reserve in case of a blockage or malfunction in the other.] The door is closed. The warden issues the execution order.
The Execution
In advance of the execution, syringes containing the following are prepared:
5.0 grams of sodium pentothal in 20-25 cc of diluent
50 cc of pancuronium bromide
50 cc of potassium chloride
Each chemical is lethal in the amounts administered.
At the warden?s signal, sodium pentothal is administered, and then the line is flushed with sterile normal saline solution. This is followed by pancuronium bromide, a saline flush, and finally, potassium chloride. As required by the California Penal Code, a physician is present to declare when death occurs.
After all witnesses have left, the body is removed with dignity and care. Typically, the family claims the body. If not, the State makes the arrangements.
Chamber Description
The California execution chamber is a self-contained unit at San Quentin State Prison which includes:
Witness area - Entered through a door to the outside, the witness area has a view of the chamber through five windows.
Execution chamber - An octagonal vacuum chamber, approximately 7-1/2 feet in diameter. It is entered through a large oval door at the rear of the chamber.
Anteroom - Contains three telephones. One is kept open for use by the Governor; the other is for use by the State Supreme Court and Attorney General?s Office; the third is connected to the Warden's office. The lethal injections are administered from the anteroom. The area also includes the valves and immersion lever used for executions by lethal gas.
Chemical room - Includes storage cabinets and a work bench, plus the chemical mixing pots, pipes and valves used for executions by lethal gas.
Two holding cells - Each contains a toilet and room for a mattress.
Kitchen/officers? area - Includes a sink, cabinet, counter area and resting area for staff.
Witnesses
Up to 50 individuals may witness an execution. The following are specified in the California Penal Code:
Warden,* 1
Attorney General, 1
Reputable citizens, 12
Physicians,* 2
Inmate family/friends, 5 (if requested)
Inmate spiritual advisors, 2 (if requested)
State procedures also allow for:
News media representatives, 17
State-selected witnesses, 9
Staff escorts, 4
*The warden and physicians are in the anteroom of the chamber and are not included in the total number of witnesses.