High Court won't hear anti-death penalty Arkansas judge suit

FILE — Pulaski County Circuit Judge Wendell Griffen lies on a cot outside the Governor’s Mansion during a vigil against capital punishment on April 17, 2018. Griffen did the same thing at an anti-capital-punishment rally last year and was subsequently barred by the state Supreme Court from hearing capital punishment cases.
FILE — Pulaski County Circuit Judge Wendell Griffen lies on a cot outside the Governor’s Mansion during a vigil against capital punishment on April 17, 2018. Griffen did the same thing at an anti-capital-punishment rally last year and was subsequently barred by the state Supreme Court from hearing capital punishment cases.

WASHINGTON -- The Supreme Court is leaving in place a decision dismissing a lawsuit filed by a judge in Arkansas who was barred from overseeing execution-related cases after he participated in an anti-death penalty demonstration.

The justices said Tuesday that they wouldn't get involved in the lawsuit filed by Pulaski County Circuit Judge Wendell Griffen.

Griffen participated in an anti-death penalty demonstration outside the governor's mansion in 2017 during which he was photographed laying on a cot wearing an anti-death penalty button. Earlier that day, Griffen blocked Arkansas from using a lethal injection drug over the claims that the state misled a medical supply company.

Arkansas' highest court removed Griffen from that case and prohibited him from hearing death penalty cases. Griffen sued but a federal appeals court dismissed the case.

NW News on 02/20/2019

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