Idaho Death Row Prisoner Thomas Creech’s Execution Is Delayed

Idaho’s longest-serving death row inmate, Thomas Creech, evaded execution on Wednesday because executioners were unable to establish an IV for the lethal injection procedure, according to the Idaho Department of Corrections.

His attorneys, advocates, the judge who sentenced him to death and the attorney who prosecuted him have all called for his life to be spared.

The 73-year-old had been sentenced to death twice: once after being convicted in the killing of two people in Valley County in 1974, and again in 1981, while serving out his sentence, when he was convicted of the killing of his cellmate. He has been convicted of five murders in all.

After multiple courts denied numerous appeals from his attorneys asking for mercy, Creech was set to be killed by lethal injection Wednesday at 10 a.m. local time.

“Mr. Creech will be returned to his cell and witnesses will be escorted out of the facility. As a result, the death warrant will expire. The State will consider next steps,” according to a statement from the IDOC.

His execution had been condemned by numerous people connected to his convictions, including at least one judge who played a role in him being put on death row.

When Creech received his sentences, judges were previously allowed to put individuals on death row without a decision from a jury. Jonah Horwitz, one of Creech’s attorneys, believes that’s cause for Creech to not be executed.

“You have essentially no one being executed in America today who is sentenced by a judge outside of Idaho,” Horwitz argued before the state’s Supreme Court, according to local outlet KMVT.

Judge Robert Newhouse, a judge who sentenced Creech to death, has argued that Creech’s execution is unnecessary and would only serve the purpose of vengeance as Creech has already spent decades on death row, according to The Associated Press.

Jim Harris, a former Ada County prosecutor who requested that Creech be sentenced to death for the killing of his cellmate, also spoke against Creech’s execution in November 2019.

“I don’t believe, quite frankly, that Tom Creech, at least based on the murder that he committed in the penitentiary, should be executed. And I don’t say that easily,” Harris told KIVI, calling it a “waste of time” and a “terrible waste of money.”

Creech was previously scheduled to be executed on Nov. 8 but was granted a stay of execution as the Idaho Commission of Pardons and Parole considered commuting his sentence in a January hearing. The effort was rejected with a tie vote of three to three because the seventh member had recused themself from voting. A majority vote is necessary for a commuted sentence.

When requesting Creech’s clemency hearing, his attorneys said in an October press release that he is a changed man who is remorseful for the killings and has formed bonds with inmates and prison staff inside the prison.

“He has steered younger prisoners onto better paths. He has found faith and shared it with others. He has improved himself and those around him, and lifted countless spirits through his poetry and music,” his attorneys said. “Mr. Creech’s execution will be devastating to the staff members and others who have grown close to him, and could trigger secondary trauma that they may never recover from.”

The Ada County Prosecutor’s Office has pushed for Creech’s execution to go forward, pointing to the murder of his previous cellmate. Creech also stabbed another inmate three months prior to that killing.

“If his sentence is commuted, he would go back into the general prison population where he would have more access to inmates, putting them at risk,” prosecutors argued in a January press release.

Creech has taken responsibility for dozens of murders in multiple states, but one of Creech’s attorneys, Horowitz, argued that those numbers were inflated.

Last month, Creech was named as the suspect in an October 1974 murder in San Bernardino County, California, after the county sheriff’s office renewed the investigation in November 2023, according to the San Bernardino County Sheriff.

Creech has also had notable mental health struggles, attempting suicide at least once and having previously spent time in a psychiatric hospital. Death penalty experts and anti-death penalty advocates argue that the punishment is unfairly used against those who are most vulnerable, including individuals who have struggled with mental illnesses.

Idaho Gov. Brad Little (R), who has the authority to halt or delay executions in the state, declined to call off Creech’s execution.

“Thomas Creech is a convicted serial killer responsible for acts of extreme violence,” Little said in a January statement. “His lawful and just sentence must be carried out as ordered by the court. Justice has been delayed long enough.”

Creech’s execution would have marked Idaho’s first execution since 2012.

In 2023, Little signed a law that would designate execution by firing squad as the backup for lethal injection, according to The Idaho Statesman, in case state officials are ever unable to obtain the hard-to-procure drugs for the lethal injection procedure. The state did obtain them ahead of Creech’s planned execution, however. The state is not legally required to disclose where or how it obtains lethal injection drugs.

While the death penalty is controversial, lethal injection in particular has been criticized for its lack of reliability and the numerous instances in which executions have been botched, despite injection being heralded as the most humane execution method. Its notoriety has even led some individuals on death row to request death by firing squad, which is only legal in select states.

In October, Deborah Czuba, with the Federal Defender Services of Idaho, slammed the state for obtaining the drugs in a rush to deliver “retribution at all costs.”

“Given the shady pharmacies that the State has obtained the lethal drugs from for the past two Idaho executions, the State’s history of seeking mock death warrants without any means to carry them out, and the State’s misleading conduct around its readiness for an execution, we remain highly concerned about the measures the State resorted to this time to find a drug supplier,” Czuba wrote in a press release.

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