AUSTIN –
Today in the United States Supreme Court, Texas Attorney General Ken
Paxton defended the Texas Department of Criminal Justice’s decision
to disallow John Ramirez, who was sentenced to death for the brutal murder of
Pablo Castro in 2005, from having a pastor speak out loud and
touch Ramirez during his execution by lethal injection. Ramirez was scheduled
to be executed on September 8, 2021, until the Supreme Court granted his
last-minute request for a stay of execution and expedited review of his
claim for religious accommodations in the execution chamber. Ramirez should not
be given yet another reprieve, the Attorney General argued this morning in the
Supreme Court.
TDCJ cannot
safely accommodate Ramirez’s demands for physical touch and vocalization
while ensuring an orderly and dignified execution procedure, the
Attorney General explained to the Court. In addition to the security risk of
having an outside spiritual advisor touching Ramirez, physical contact and
vocalization creates an unacceptable risk that medical personnel will
be unable to monitor the execution to prevent unnecessary pain and suffering. In
addition, Ramirez’s conduct shows his requests for religious accommodations are
pretext meant to delay his execution, not motivated by
sincere religious belief. A year ago, Ramirez filed
another federal lawsuit stating his religious beliefs did not require
his pastor to touch him during his execution. And the first time he asked that
the pastor speak out loud during the lethal injection was less than a month
before the execution. Ramirez also failed to follow prison protocol in
requesting these accommodations from TDCJ.
“Ramirez’s failure to exhaust
is inexcusable,” Attorney General Paxton said. “Ramirez provides no evidence
that his requests for touch and vocalization are based on sincere religious
belief and not his desire to put off his death sentence. Prisoners on death row should not be
allowed to manipulate our justice system to delay
execution for their heinous crimes.”