
In June 2025, Kentucky Attorney General Russell Coleman requested that Governor Andy Beshear set an execution date for death row prisoner Ralph Baze. In a late June 2025 reply, Gov. Beshear declined to do so because of an April 2025 Franklin County Circuit Court ruling that found part of Kentucky’s execution protocol unconstitutional. Gov. Beshear indicated that several steps must be taken by the Department of Corrections (DOC) to address the issues raised by the court before the state is prepared to carry out an execution. Gov. Beshear also pointed to the fact that DOC does not currently have, nor can it obtain, the drugs necessary to carry out lethal injection executions, citing concerns with their short shelf-life, the general unwillingness of pharmaceutical companies to provide drugs for use in executions, and a court injunction barring executions generally.
“My understanding is that there are several steps that must occur through the Department of Corrections (DOC) before the execution of any death warrant.”
Gov. Beshear’s decision was the result of many years of litigation that drew attention to serious problems with the execution protocol and the process followed when it was developed. In 2006, death-sentenced prisoners filed a lawsuit alleging the execution protocol had not followed the proper administrative rulemaking process. The Kentucky Supreme Court in 2009 ruled that the DOC must create formal administrative regulations. In 2010, DOC created regulations, and the same prisoners challenged them on three grounds: failure to provide a single-drug lethal injection option, inadequate protections against executing people with intellectual disability, and inadequate protections against executing those considered insane. At the time, a Franklin County Circuit judge ordered a temporary injunction prohibiting executions in Kentucky. In 2014, following botched executions in other states that used a two-drug protocol similar to that authorized by Kentucky, the DOC agreed to cease its use of midazolam and hydromorphine. The DOC ultimately eliminated multi-drug execution protocols altogether and the new regulations went into effect in July 2018.
In 2018, the Kentucky Supreme Court issued its opinion in Woodall v. Commonwealth, which addressed intellectual disability protections in death penalty cases. The Court’s decision impacted how the state determines intellectual disability, moving away from bright-line IQ testing to more comprehensive, holistic evaluations. Despite the 2018 change in DOC regulations, prisoners argue that the regulations, in light of Woodall, still fail to protect prisoners with intellectual disability and others with concerns over mental competency. In 2019, a Franklin Circuit Court judge again found the state’s execution protocol “unconstitutional and invalid” because of issues related to determining whether a prisoner has an intellectual disability and extended the previous injunction against executions. In March 2024, AG Coleman petitioned the Franklin County Court to remove the injunction preventing executions, but the court denied the request. In October 2024, the Kentucky Supreme Court affirmed the lower court’s denial of this request. The Franklin County Circuit Court has entered a schedule that will take discovery into 2027.
In his June 27, 2025, letter to AG Coleman, Gov. Beshear also drew attention to the problem of obtaining drugs for lethal injection executions. He said, “DOC does not currently possess the drugs necessary to perform a lethal injection,” and continued that “[t]he shelf life of those drugs is limited and precludes DOC from seeking them until the [Franklin Count Court] injunction is lifted.” Several pharmaceutical organizations, including Meitheal and Alvogen, have written letters to government and corrections officials in Kentucky indicating they will not sell their products to the DOC. According to a letter from Meitheal’s general counsel, “the use of Meitheal’s products to conduct executions is fundamentally inconsistent with its mission.” A letter from Alvogen’s vice president of legal affairs says that “while Alvogen takes no position on the death penalty itself, our products were developed to save and improve patients’ lives and their use in executions is fundamentally contrary to this purpose.”
There are currently 25 individuals on Kentucky’s death row. The last execution carried out in Kentucky was in 2008, when Marco Allen Chapman was executed by lethal injection.