           Case: 17-11396   Date Filed: 09/19/2018   Page: 1 of 27


                                                      [DO NOT PUBLISH]



            IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

                     FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
                       ________________________

                             No. 17-11396
                       ________________________

                  D.C. Docket No. 1:14-cv-00472-KD-C



CHRISTOPHER LEE PRICE,

                                              Plaintiff - Appellant,

versus

COMMISSIONER, ALABAMA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS,
HOLMAN CF WARDEN,
ATTORNEY GENERAL, STATE OF ALABAMA,

                                              Defendants - Appellees.

                       ________________________

                Appeal from the United States District Court
                   for the Southern District of Alabama
                       ________________________

                            (September 19, 2018)

Before TJOFLAT, WILSON, and ROSENBAUM, Circuit Judges.

PER CURIAM:
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       Appellant Christopher Lee Price appeals a judgment entered by the Southern

District of Alabama in favor of the Alabama Department of Corrections

(“ADOC”)1 following a bench trial on Price’s Eighth Amendment method-of-

execution claim. Price is an inmate who was sentenced to death as a result of

being found guilty of killing a man during the commission of a robbery. 2

Following his direct criminal appeals, Price brought a civil lawsuit under 42 U.S.C.

§ 1983 alleging that the ADOC’s use of midazolam in its three-drug lethal-

injection protocol violates the Eighth Amendment’s ban on cruel and unusual

punishment because it is not effective in rendering an inmate insensate during

execution. According to Price, midazolam is ineffective, so the remaining two

drugs administered during his execution will paralyze him and then cause him to

experience extreme pain.

       The district court held a bench trial on Price’s § 1983 claim. But the district

court bifurcated the trial, addressing only whether Price could meet his burden to

show that his chosen alternative drug—pentobarbital—was available to the ADOC.

Following trial, the district court found in favor of the ADOC and against Price. It

concluded that Price had failed to meet his burden to show that pentobarbital was a

feasible and available drug for use by the ADOC. In this appeal, Price argues he

       1
          Although Price sued various defendants below, he challenges the ADOC’s three-drug
lethal-injection protocol. Therefore, for ease of reference, we refer to only the ADOC in this
opinion.
       2
           Price currently resides at Alabama’s Holman Correctional Facility.
                                                 2
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presented evidence sufficient to meet his burden as to the availability of

pentobarbital. Based on this contention, he urges this Court to reverse the district

court’s decision and remand the case for further proceedings.

         After thorough review, we conclude Price has shown no clear error in the

district court’s factual findings, and our binding precedent in the form of Arthur v.

Commissioner, Alabama Department of Corrections, 840 F.3d 1268 (11th Cir.

2016), has already determined that a materially indistinguishable factual record

fails to establish a viable Eighth Amendment method-of-execution claim.

Therefore, we affirm the district court’s decision in favor of the ADOC and against

Price.

                                         I.

                                         A.

         Price was indicted for intentionally causing Bill Lynn’s death during a

robbery in the first degree. See Price v. State, 725 So. 2d 1003, 1062 (Ala. Crim.

App. 1997), aff’d sub nom. Ex parte Price, 725 So. 2d 1063 (Ala. 1998).

Following a jury trial, Price was convicted and sentenced to death for Lynn’s

murder. Id. at 1011. Though Price filed a direct appeal of his conviction and death

sentence, both were affirmed. See id. at 1062, aff’d, 725 So. 2d 1063 (Ala. 1998).

Price’s conviction and sentence became final in May 1999 after the Supreme Court




                                         3
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denied his petition for writ of certiorari to the Supreme Court of Alabama. See

Price v. Alabama, 526 U.S. 1133 (1999).

      Price then filed a state post-conviction Rule 32 petition, but the petition was

denied, and the Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama affirmed the dismissal. See

Price v. State, 880 So. 2d 502 (Ala. Crim. App. 2003). The Alabama Supreme

Court denied certiorari review. Ex parte Price, 976 So. 2d 1057 (Ala. 2006).

      Later, Price filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in the Northern District

of Alabama.     The district court issued an opinion denying the petition with

prejudice and entering judgment against Price. This Court affirmed that judgment.

See Price v. Allen, 679 F.3d 1315, 1319–20, 1327 (11th Cir. 2012) (per curiam).

The Supreme Court also denied Price’s petition for writ of certiorari. Price v.

Thomas, 568 U.S. 1212 (2013).

                                         B.

      Under § 1983, Price subsequently filed this Eighth Amendment challenge to

his method of execution. More specifically, Price takes issue with Alabama’s use

of midazolam in its lethal-injection protocol. He seeks for the ADOC to return to

using pentobarbital instead of midazolam as the first drug in the three-drug lethal-

injection protocol.

      Since July 1, 2002, Alabama has used lethal injection as its preferred method

of execution. See Arthur v. Comm’r, Alabama Dep’t of Corr., 840 F.3d 1268,

                                          4
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1273–74 (11th Cir. 2016), cert. denied sub nom. Arthur v. Dunn, 137 S. Ct. 725

(2017), reh’g denied, 137 S. Ct. 1838 (2017) (citation omitted). The ADOC has

used a three-drug protocol since it began executing inmates by lethal injection.3

See Brooks v. Warden, 810 F.3d 812, 823 (11th Cir.), cert. denied sub nom. Brooks

v. Dunn, 136 S. Ct. 979 (2016). Each of the three drugs has an intended purpose.

The first drug is meant to render the prisoner unconscious and insensate. Baze v.

Rees, 553 U.S. 35, 44 (2008) (plurality opinion). The second drug is a paralytic

agent that “inhibits all muscular-skeletal movements and, by paralyzing the

diaphragm, stops respiration.” Id. (citation omitted). The third drug “interferes

with the electrical signals that stimulate the contractions of the heart, inducing

cardiac arrest.” Id. (citation omitted).

       From the time Price was sentenced until September 10, 2014, the ADOC

followed a protocol during which sodium thiopental or pentobarbital was used as




       3
          The State of Alabama provided death-row inmates thirty days to “opt out” of lethal
injection and to elect electrocution as the method of execution. See Ala. Code § 15-18-82.1(b).
Price did not opt for electrocution, so he became subject to lethal injection on August 1, 2002.
However, effective June 1, 2018, a person sentenced to death in Alabama had the opportunity to
elect that his death sentence be executed by electrocution or nitrogen hypoxia. The statute
provides that election of death by nitrogen hypoxia is waived unless it is personally made by the
inmate in writing and delivered to the warden within 30 days after the certificate of judgment
pursuant to a decision by the Alabama Supreme Court affirming the sentence of death. If a
judgment was issued before June 1, 2018, the election must have been made and delivered to the
warden within 30 days of June 1, 2018. See Ala. Code § 15-18-82.1(b)(2). We have not been
advised by either party that Price opted for death by nitrogen hypoxia, so his § 1983 claim is not
moot.
                                                5
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the first drug in the protocol.4          See Arthur, 840 F.3d at 1274.              After the

administration of the sedative, the protocol called for the administration of either

rocuronium bromide or pancuronium bromide to inhibit movement and stop

respiration. Finally, under the protocol, potassium chloride—a drug that causes the

inmate’s heart to stop beating—was to be administered.

       On September 11, 2014, the ADOC changed its lethal-injection protocol and

replaced pentobarbital with midazolam as the first drug, citing the growing

unavailability of pentobarbital.5         See Arthur, 840 F.3d at 1274.              After the

modification to midazolam, the State of Alabama alerted inmates on death row by

filing motions to set execution dates with the Alabama Supreme Court.                        On

September 11, 2014, the State of Alabama asked the Alabama Supreme Court to

set an execution date for Price.

       On October 8, 2014, Price filed a civil complaint against the Commissioner

of the ADOC and others, setting forth a § 1983 claim in which he claimed that the




       4
          From 2002 until April 6, 2011, the ADOC used sodium thiopental as the first drug in
the protocol. See Brooks, 810 F.3d at 823. Due to a national shortage of sodium thiopental, the
ADOC replaced the drug with pentobarbital. From April 2011 until September 10, 2014, the
ADOC used pentobarbital as the first drug in the protocol. Id.
        5
          Alabama’s current lethal injection protocol calls for the administration of (1) a 500mg
dose of midazolam hydrochloride, (2) followed by a 600mg dose of rocuronium bromide, and (3)
finally, 240 milliequivalents of potassium chloride. See Arthur, 840 F.3d at 1274. This lethal
injection protocol involves the same drugs, administered in the same sequence, as the protocol at
issue in Glossip v. Gross, 135 S. Ct. 2726, 2734–35 (2015) and Arthur, 840 F.3d at 1274.

                                               6
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new lethal-injection protocol using midazolam violated the Eighth and Fourteenth

Amendments’ ban on cruel and unusual punishment.6

       The Supreme Court’s decision in Glossip v. Gross, 135 S. Ct. 2726 (2015),

sets forth the relevant two-pronged standard a plaintiff must meet to succeed on a

method-of-execution claim.

       First, to prevail on an Eighth Amendment challenge to a particular lethal-

injection protocol, the inmate must show a “‘substantial risk of serious harm,’ an

‘objectively intolerable risk of harm’ that prevents prison officials from pleading

that they were ‘subjectively blameless for purposes of the Eighth Amendment.’”

Id. at 2737 (quoting Baze, 553 U.S. at 50) (quoting Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S.

825, 846, and n.9 (1994)). The Supreme Court has explained that prisoners cannot

succeed on a method-of-execution claim unless they can establish that the method

challenged presents a risk that is “‘sure or very likely to cause serious illness and

needless suffering,’ and [that] give[s] rise to ‘sufficiently imminent dangers.’”

Id. (quoting Baze, 553 U.S. at 50 (quoting Helling v. McKinney, 509 U.S. 25, 33,

34-35 (1993)).

       Second, the prisoner must “identify an alternative that is ‘feasible, readily

implemented, and in fact significantly reduce[s] a substantial risk of severe pain.’”

       6
          In July 2015, Price filed an Amended Complaint, which is the operative complaint in
the case. In the Amended Complaint, Price again alleges that the use of midazolam in the three-
drug protocol violates the Eighth Amendment’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment. For ease
of reference, we refer to the Amended Complaint simply as the Complaint.
                                              7
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Id. (quoting Baze, 553 U.S. at 52) (alteration in Baze). Where a prisoner claims a

safer alternative to the State’s lethal-injection protocol, he cannot make a

successful challenge by showing a “‘slightly or marginally safer alternative.’”

Id. (quoting Baze, 553 U.S. at 51).

       In his § 1983 action, Price asserts that a substantial likelihood exists that

midazolam will fail to render him unconscious and insensate during his execution

and that he will likely experience “prolonged, excruciating, and needless pain

while the [second drug in the protocol] forcibly suffocates him and [the final drug

in the protocol] burns his veins and internal organs and stops his heart.” Thus, he

claims that the ADOC’s current lethal-injection protocol presents a substantial risk

of serious harm that meets Glossip’s (and Baze’s) first standard. To satisfy the

second prong of Glossip, Price proposes that the ADOC return to its use of

pentobarbital as the first drug in the three-drug protocol.                  Price contends

compounded pentobarbital is more effective than midazolam and is available.7

According to Price, the ADOC’s use of midazolam will violate his constitutional

rights since the ADOC could obtain pentobarbital to complete his execution in a

humane manner.

       Before us for review is the district court’s Order of March 15, 2017, finding

that the ADOC was entitled to judgment on Price’s Eighth Amendment claim. See

       7
         Price originally alleged that sodium thiopental was also a viable alternative but later
indicated that he was no longer pursuing that claim.
                                               8
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Price v. Dunn, No. CV 14-0472-KD-C, 2017 WL 1013302 (S.D. Ala. Mar. 15,

2017). The district court entered its Order following a bench trial that focused on

only the availability of pentobarbital to the ADOC as an alternative to midazolam. 8

During the trial, the parties offered affidavits, deposition testimony, and other

exhibits into evidence. The district court also heard live testimony from Anne

Adams Hill, who has acted as General Counsel to the ADOC since March 2011.

Hill is the ADOC employee responsible for procuring drugs for use in lethal

injections.

       In its March 15, 2017, Order, the district court concluded that Price failed to

meet his burden of proof at trial to show that the proposed alternative drug—

pentobarbital—was available to the ADOC. Price, 2017 WL 1013302 at *6.                           In

its findings of fact, the district court found that in September 2014, when the


       8
         When it entered its order on summary judgment earlier in the litigation, the district court
announced the bifurcated-bench-trial process. The district court explained if Price could meet
his burden with respect to the availability of an alternative method of execution, then it would
schedule a second trial on the remaining issues including, but not limited to, the following:

               (1) whether the use of midazolam presents a risk that is sure or
               very likely to cause serious illness and needless suffering, and
               give[s] rise to sufficiently imminent dangers; (2) if so, whether the
               alternative method of execution designated by Plaintiff is feasible,
               readily implemented, and in fact significantly reduces a substantial
               risk of severe pain; and (3) whether the switch from pentobarbital
               to midazolam in September of 2014 was a substantial change in the
               execution protocol so as to reset the statute of limitations clock.

The last issue listed was based on the ADOC’s assertion that Price’s Eighth Amendment claim
was time-barred under the applicable statute of limitations. We do not address this claim
because we affirm the district court’s decision on other grounds.
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ADOC amended its three-drug lethal-injection protocol, it was unable to obtain

manufactured pentobarbital.          Id. at *2.     Although manufactured pentobarbital

became unavailable to the ADOC for use in lethal injections, the district court

recognized that Georgia, Texas, Missouri, and Virginia have used compounded9

pentobarbital for lethal injections since 2014.10 Id.

       In its Order, the district court recounted Hill’s trial testimony concerning her

efforts to obtain either compounded pentobarbital itself or a source for the drug for

use in lethal injections by the ADOC. Id. at *2–3. According to Hill, in the fall of

2015, Hill contacted the departments of corrections for the states of Georgia,

Texas, Virginia, and Missouri in an attempt to obtain compounded pentobarbital or

a source for the drug. Id. at *2. Hill’s efforts, however, were unproductive.11 Id.

So around December of 2015, Hill contacted eighteen compounding pharmacies

within Alabama in order to obtain compounded pentobarbital, but none were




       9
           Compounding is “the process of combining, mixing, or altering ingredients to create [a
drug] . . .” that is not manufactured. See
https://www.fda.gov/drugs/guidancecomplianceregulatoryinformation/pharmacycompounding/uc
m339764.htm (last visited Sept. 18, 2018).
        10
            The district court acknowledged that Virginia has used the drug in only one execution
when it obtained pentobarbital from Texas. The district court noted, and the parties agreed, that
Virginia does not currently have a source for compounded pentobarbital. Price, 2017 WL
1013302 at *2 n.6.
        11
            Hill testified that she called officials in Missouri, Texas, Virginia, and Georgia and
asked them if they would provide her with the name of their source for compounded
pentobarbital. All declined to provide the names of their sources. Hill also explained that she
asked officials from these states whether they would give her some of their stock of
pentobarbital, but all stated they would not.
                                               10
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willing and able to provide the drug. Id.12 But Hill did not attempt to contact

compounding pharmacies in any other state and did not try to reach the previously

contacted Alabama compounding pharmacies after December 2015. Id.

       Next, the district court found that Hill continued to seek out a supplier for

compounded pentobarbital between the fall of 2015 and immediately prior to trial.

Id. at *3. More specifically, she reached out to the departments of corrections for

Missouri, Texas, Virginia, and Georgia in the “few weeks” prior to trial (i.e., in

late 2016) to inquire as to whether they would provide the drug to the ADOC or

give her information concerning their suppliers.           Id. These efforts were also

unsuccessful. Id. The district court noted, however, that Hill did not ask the

officials of those states to “pass along” her information to their suppliers to

determine whether the suppliers were interested in providing compounded

pentobarbital to the ADOC. Id.

       Then the district court turned to the testimony of Price’s expert witness,

Gaylen M. Zentner, Ph.D., an expert in pharmaceutical chemistry, manufacturing,

and compounding. Id. at *1 n.2. The district court limited its reliance on Dr.

Zentner’s testimony as follows: “the only thing it would take away from” the

testimony was that compounded pentobarbital is “not hard to make if you have the

supplies.” Id. at *1 n.2.

       12
          Hill testified that she contacted at least twenty-five compounding pharmacies. She
contacted eighteen “around December of 2015.” All of the pharmacies were located in Alabama.
                                            11
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      After making those findings of fact, the district court analyzed whether Price

had met his burden to show that an alternative method of execution—one using

pentobarbital—was available to the ADOC. The district court determined that

Price had not met his burden.

      In finding in favor of the ADOC, the district court emphasized that we had

recently rejected a similar claim in Arthur, where the plaintiff-prisoner presented

substantially the same evidence as was presented in this case by Price. Id. at *5–6.

Indeed, in denying relief to Price, the district court quoted directly from our

decision in Arthur:

             [T]he fact that other states in the past have procured a
             compounded drug and pharmacies in Alabama have the
             skills to compound the drug does not make it available to
             the ADOC for use in lethal injections in executions. The
             evidentiary burden on [the Plaintiff] is to show that
             “there is now a source for pentobarbital that would sell it
             to the ADOC for use in executions.” Brooks, 810 F.3d at
             820.

Id. at *5 (citing Arthur, 840 F.3d at 1302) (alteration and emphases in Arthur).

Further relying on Arthur, the district court concluded that although other states

had recently used compounded pentobarbital to carry out executions, no indication

exists that those states would sell it to the ADOC or name their sources. Id. In

short, the district court determined that Price had not met his burden to show “there

is now a source for pentobarbital that would sell it to the ADOC for use in



                                         12
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executions.”       Id. (citing Brooks, 810 F.3d at 820) (emphases in Arthur).13

Consequently, the district court entered judgment in favor of the ADOC.

          Price timely filed his appeal. On appeal, he asserts he has met his burden to

show that pentobarbital is available to the ADOC. In particular, Price contends

that the district court erred because it effectively construed Supreme Court and

Eleventh Circuit precedent as requiring him to identify a specific compounding

pharmacy that is presently willing to sell pentobarbital to the ADOC.

          After carefully considering the record and the parties’ briefs, and with the

benefit of oral argument, we hold that the district court did not err when it granted

judgment in favor of the ADOC. We do so because our precedent requires this

result.

                                                II.

          In method-of-execution challenges, this Court reviews the district court’s

factual findings for clear error, and the petitioner bears the burden of persuasion.

Arthur, 840 F.3d at 1301 (citing Glossip, 135 S. Ct. at 2739). We conduct de novo

review of the district court’s legal conclusions. Id. at 1314 n.29.

                                                III.


          13
           Although the district court found in favor of the ADOC, it recognized the problems
Price faced in meeting his burden. Price, 2017 WL 1013302 at *5 n.10. The district court
stated, “First, it would not seem feasible that a compounding pharmacy would be willing to
disclose to a non-purchaser its willingness to do business with the ADOC. Second, the ethics of
counsel assisting the state in its endeavor to lethally inject his client would be questionable.” Id.
But in the end, the district court found the “law regarding Price’s burden is clear.” Id.
                                                13
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       Glossip and Baze form the cornerstone of Price’s Eighth Amendment

method-of-execution claim. As we acknowledged in Arthur, the Supreme Court

has required death-row inmates seeking to challenge a state’s method of execution

to meet a “heavy burden.” Arthur, 840 F.3d at 1299 (quoting Baze, 553 U.S. at

53). Here, the district court did not err in finding Price failed to meet that heavy

burden, and we conclude that our decision in Arthur—which presented nearly

identical facts regarding the availability of compounded pentobarbital—prevents

Price from prevailing in this appeal.

                                               A.

       Because the precedential impact of Arthur drives the outcome here, we

discuss at length the facts and holdings of that case. As in Price’s case, Arthur

involved a death-row inmate’s § 1983 claims14 that Alabama’s three-drug lethal-

injection protocol—which used midazolam as the first drug in the protocol—

violated the Eighth Amendment because midazolam failed to render the inmate

insensate during execution.15 Arthur, 840 F.3d at 1276–77. As proposed feasible

alternative methods of execution, the petitioner raised single-drug protocols of

compounded pentobarbital or sodium thiopental. Id. at 1277.




       14
          Arthur brought facial and as-applied challenges to Alabama’s lethal-injection protocol.
Only Arthur’s facial challenge is relevant here.
       15
          The lethal-injection protocol in Arthur, as here, involved the same drugs in the same
sequence as the protocol at issue in Glossip. See Arthur, 840 F.3d at 1274.
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      We began our review in Arthur by setting forth the two-part test that an

inmate must meet in order to prevail on a method-of-execution claim as provided

for by the Supreme Court in Baze and Glossip. Id. As we have noted, that test

requires a petitioner to plead and prove both prongs of the test: (1) “that the

challenged method of execution presents a risk that is sure or very likely to cause

serious illness and needless suffering, and give[s] rise to sufficiently imminent

dangers,” id. at 1299 (citations, internal quotation marks, and emphases omitted);

and (2) that a “feasible, readily implemented” alternative is available, and it “in

fact significantly reduces a substantial risk of severe pain.” id. (alteration, citations,

and quotation marks omitted).

      Next, we closely reviewed the Supreme Court’s decision in Glossip and our

own decision in Brooks with respect to the second prong of the test. Viewing the

precedents together, we concluded that Glossip requires a petitioner to prove three

things to meet the “known and available alternative” test

             (1)    the State actually has access to the alternative;

             (2)    the State is able to carry out the alternative method
                    of execution relatively easily and reasonably
                    quickly; and

             (3)    the requested alternative would in fact significantly
                    reduce [] a substantial risk of severe pain relative
                    to the State’s intended method of execution.




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Id. at 1300 (citing Glossip, 135 S. Ct. at 2737; Brooks, 810 F.3d at 819–23)

(internal quotation marks omitted).16 We then applied this standard to analyze

whether a single dose of pentobarbital was an alternative available to the ADOC’s

current three-drug protocol, noting once again that the relevant standard of review

and burden of persuasion were “critical” to the resolution of the case. Id. at 1301.

       In reviewing the evidence presented at trial, we considered testimony of the

same expert relied upon by Price here, Dr. Zentner. In Arthur, he stated that, in his

opinion, “the talent, expertise, and facilities to perform sterile compounding”

existed in Alabama and that “all ingredients required to formulate a compounded

preparation of pentobarbital sodium” were “readily available.” Id. at 1278. Dr.

Zentner explained that the process of compounding was relatively simple and

straightforward and that the ingredients for compounding pentobarbital were

available for sale in the United States.           Id. at 1278–79.      He further reported

conducting an Internet search and finding nineteen compounding pharmacies in

Alabama. Id. at 1279. When Dr. Zentner contacted two of these pharmacies, they

both indicated they performed sterile compounding. Id. But significantly, Dr.

Zentner admitted that he did not inquire as to whether the pharmacies would be

willing to compound pentobarbital for use in an execution by the ADOC. Id. He

also conceded that he had no knowledge of whether the pharmacies would be able

       16
          As we discuss later, only the first two elements of this test are directly at issue in
Price’s appeal.
                                              16
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to procure pentobarbital, nor did he ever attempt to purchase the drug from a

manufacturer. Id.

            For its part, the ADOC relied on the testimony of its general counsel, Anne

Hill—the same individual who testified during Price’s trial. Hill’s testimony in

Arthur is strikingly similar to hers in Price’s trial. In Arthur, Hill stated that her

job required her to constantly seek ways to procure new drugs and new sources for

drugs. Id. at 1280. She was aware that in 2015, Georgia, Missouri, Texas, and

Virginia executed inmates using a single-drug protocol of compounded

pentobarbital. Id. Hill further testified that she contacted representatives from

these four states’ departments of corrections. Id. All four were unwilling to

provide any of their pentobarbital to the ADOC, and they also refused to identify to

the ADOC their source for obtaining the drug. Id. Hill continued, stating that

between September 2014 and November 2015, she contacted eleven potential

sources of pentobarbital, including the four states using the drug, along with seven

pharmacies in Alabama. Id. All were unwilling to compound pentobarbital for the

ADOC. Id. Similarly, Hill testified in Arthur that in late 2015, she contacted all of

the eighteen pharmacies on Dr. Zentner’s list,17 but none agreed to provide

pentobarbital to the ADOC—most saying that they were not able to compound


       17
            The Court in Arthur noted that although Dr. Zentner’s list contained nineteen
pharmacies, two of the pharmacies were simply two locations of the same entity. Accordingly,
the list actually contained eighteen pharmacies. See Arthur, 840 F.3d at 1280 n.8.
                                            17
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pentobarbital. Id. In total, Hill stated that she reached out to “at least 29” potential

sources in an attempt to procure compounded pentobarbital for the ADOC. Id.

           After reviewing the evidence, we concluded that the district court’s factual

finding that pentobarbital was not available to the ADOC for use in executions was

not clearly erroneous.18 Id. at 1301. We found substantial record evidence—

including Dr. Zentner’s inability to point to any source willing to compound

pentobarbital for the ADOC, and Hill’s testimony that, despite contacting 29

potential sources, she was unable to procure any compounded pentobarbital for the

ADOC’s use in executions—supported the finding that pentobarbital was not

available to the ADOC. Id.        And we specifically rejected Arthur’s invitation to

hold that “if a drug is capable of being made and/or in use by other entities, then it

is ‘available’ to the ADOC.” Id. at 1301–02. To the contrary, we expressly held

that “the evidentiary burden on [the § 1983 plaintiff] is to show that ‘there is now a

source for pentobarbital that would sell it to the ADOC for use in executions.” Id.

at 1302 (emphases in Arthur) (quotation omitted). And we concluded that “[a]n

alternative drug that its manufacturer or compounding pharmacies refuse to supply

for lethal injection ‘is no drug at all for Baze purposes.’” Id. (quoting Chavez v.

Florida SP Warden, 742 F.3d 1267, 1275 (11th Cir. 2014) (Carnes, C.J.,

concurring)).

      18
           One judge on the panel dissented.    See Arthur, 840 F.3d at 1321 (Wilson, J.,
dissenting).
                                           18
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       We likewise rejected Arthur’s argument that the ADOC was required to

make a good-faith effort to obtain the alternative drug. Id. at 1302–03. Yet despite

this, we found that even if Glossip somehow imposed a good-faith effort on the

part of the State, “the ADOC made such an effort here by contacting 29 potential

sources for the drug, including four other departments of correction and multiple

compounding pharmacies.” Id. at 1303. Under those facts, we affirmed the district

court’s conclusion that Arthur had failed to prove the availability of an alternative

method of execution.19 Id.

                                                  B.

       Price acknowledges that in Arthur, we held that in order to satisfy the

“known and available alternative” requirement, he must prove that “(1) the State

actually has access to the alternative; [and] (2) the State is able to carry out the

alternative method of execution relatively easily and reasonably quickly.” But he

asserts that the Supreme Court has not weighed in on the definition of “known and

available.”      And in Price’s view, currently, the law places an “unfair and

impractical burden” on a § 1983 plaintiff since it requires evidence that “will

rarely, if ever, be available.”

         19
             Although this finding would have been enough to affirm, we went further and
concluded that Arthur also had not met the first prong of Glossip—that the challenged method
presented a substantial risk of severe pain. The majority stated, “[I]t is difficult to regard a
practice as objectively intolerable when it is in fact widely tolerated . . . . Both this Court and the
Supreme Court have upheld the midazolam-based execution protocol that Arthur challenges
here.” Arthur, 840 F.3d at 1303 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).

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       Price complains that, to satisfy his burden to show a “known and available”

alternative, the district court imposed on him an “impossible burden” of showing

that any steps the ADOC might take to procure pentobarbital would “result in

success.” He claims, as a practical matter, this meant he was required to identify

the name of a compounding pharmacy willing to sell pentobarbital to the ADOC.

But according to Price, he would never be able to satisfy this requirement because

he could not provide a potential supplier with assurances of confidentiality and

could not negotiate a contract for the purchase of pentobarbital on behalf of the

ADOC.       Price further argues that his own attempts to identify the names of

pentobarbital suppliers illustrate the implausibility of requiring a plaintiff to

identify a specific supplier.20

       Therefore, Price proposes that we refine our “available alternative”

jurisprudence by crafting a new burden-shifting framework in Eighth Amendment

method-of-execution cases. Under Price’s proposed new test, when a § 1983

plaintiff makes out a prima facie case—providing evidence to allow a “just and

reasonable inference” that compounded pentobarbital is presently available—the

burden would shift to the defendant to negate the reasonableness of this inference.


       20
           Price contends Missouri’s Department of Corrections refused to disclose the name of
its pentobarbital supplier. Additionally, he claims the Georgia Department of Corrections
litigated to prevent disclosure of any information about its efforts to obtain lethal-injection drugs.
Finally, Price points out that the Texas Department of Criminal Justice would produce only
heavily redacted information pertaining to its lethal-injection drugs, redacting any identifying
information of its suppliers.
                                                 20
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      And Price contends the evidence he presented at trial—that pentobarbital is

simple to compound, that other states’ departments of corrections are presently

able to obtain pentobarbital from compounding pharmacies, and that the ADOC

has failed to take “simple, and obvious steps” that could enable it to obtain the

drug—meets this burden.      Price contrasts his situation with that set forth in

Glossip, asserting that he has identified compounded pentobarbital as an adequate

alternative to midazolam and that three states are currently using the drug in

executions. He also points out that pentobarbital is relatively easy to compound.

Based on this reasoning, Price argues compounded pentobarbital is a drug that

could be used in place of midazolam as required by Glossip.

      Additionally, Price disagrees with any reading of Arthur that absolves the

ADOC of any obligation to make an effort to procure pentobarbital. According to

Price, the ADOC cannot prevent Price from meeting his burden of showing an

“available alternative” by refusing to take what he deems to be “simple, obvious

steps” to procure pentobarbital. Those simple steps would be to ask other states’

departments of corrections to alert their supplier that the ADOC was willing to

purchase pentobarbital on the same terms.

      After careful consideration of Price’s arguments, we must reject them.

While we understand Price’s desire to alter the burden imposed on him in this

method-of-execution case, that burden is already cemented by binding precedent.

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Our decision in Arthur governs here, and it dictates an affirmance of the district

court’s decision. In Arthur, we explained that the “available alternative” test set

forth in Glossip requires a petitioner to prove, among other things, that “the State

actually has access to the alternative; and []the State is able to carry out the

alternative method of execution relatively easily and reasonably quickly. . . .”

Arthur, 840 F.3d at 1300 (emphasis added) (citing Glossip, 135 S. Ct. at 2737;

Brooks, 810 F.3d at 819–23). And our precedent already clearly places on Price

the burden to show that “there is now a source for pentobarbital that would sell it to

the ADOC for use in executions.” Id. at 1302 (emphases in Arthur) (quoting

Brooks, 810 F.3d at 819–20). We are bound by those decisions.

       But to clarify, contrary to Price’s contention, our decision in Arthur does

not require Price to “identify a specific supplier that has already committed to

selling pentobarbital to the ADOC.”       Nor does it require Price to engage in

contractual negotiations on behalf of the ADOC. Rather, Price must identify a

source for compounded pentobarbital and prove that the ADOC “actually has

access” to compounded pentobarbital. See id. at 1300.

      Here, though, the evidence Price offered on this point did not differ in any

material way from that offered by the petitioner in Arthur. Indeed, Price even

relied on the same expert witness—Dr. Zentner—who said essentially the same

things as he did in Arthur: that compounding pharmacies exist in the state of

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Alabama and that they should be able to compound pentobarbital. But that fact

does nothing to establish what we said in Arthur is a petitioner’s burden to show:

“that there is now a source for pentobarbital that would sell it to the ADOC for use

in executions.” Id. at 1302 (emphases in original) (citation and internal quotation

marks omitted). Nor does the fact that three or four other states seem to have

access to and use pentobarbital in their executions satisfy the standard that we

articulated in Arthur. See id. (“We expressly hold that the fact that other states in

the past have procured a compounded drug . . . does not make it available to the

ADOC for use in lethal injections in executions.”).

      As for Price’s contention that “simple and obvious steps” were available to

the ADOC to obtain pentobarbital—such as asking other state departments of

corrections to “pass along” information to their suppliers—our binding precedent

does not place the onus on the State to locate pentobarbital. Instead, Arthur

squarely placed the burden on Price to identify likely sources and determine

whether any pharmacy would be willing to make pentobarbital available to the

ADOC for use in executions. See id. at 1302–03. Here, Price presented no such

evidence other than what was already presented in Arthur and found to be

inadequate.

      We likewise cannot adopt Price’s proposed burden-shifting scheme. Our

case law precludes the conclusion that, with respect to the second prong of Glossip,

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the State (i.e., the ADOC) must prove that it cannot acquire the desired drug.

See id. at 1303 (citing Brooks, 810 F.3d at 820). And even if we were to adopt

Price’s proposed burden-shifting scheme, his claim would still fail. Again, on a

materially factually indistinguishable record in Arthur, we found that even if

Glossip somehow imposed a good-faith effort on the State, the ADOC made such

an effort by contacting various potential sources for the compounded pentobarbital,

including “four other departments of correction and multiple compounding

pharmacies.” Id. Hill testified to the same efforts in this case.

      The Supreme Court has made clear that “in method-of-execution challenges,

(1) the district court’s factual findings are reviewed under a deferential clear error

standard, and (2) the petitioner-inmate bears the burden of persuasion.” Id. at

1301 (citation omitted). We previously acknowledged that the determination of

whether an alternative drug is available to a department of corrections is often

based on testimony and the determination of whether that testimony is credible and

supports a finding of availability is a “matter for [the] trier of fact.” Grayson v.

Warden, Comm’r, Alabama Dep’t of Corr., 869 F.3d 1204, 1226 (11th Cir. 2017);

see also Boyd v. Warden, Holman Corr. Facility, 856 F.3d 853, 868 (11th Cir.

2017) (noting the factual nature of whether an alternative is sufficiently feasible

and readily implementable to satisfy Glossip’s second prong—particularly when a




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plaintiff challenges a state’s lethal injection protocol and proposes a modification

to that protocol).

      Here, in assessing the evidence presented by both parties, the district-court

judge determined that Price had not met his burden of showing that compounded

pentobarbital was readily available to the ADOC as an alternative to midazolam.

We are unable to conclude that the district court erred, in light of our prior holding

in Arthur. And, we agree with the district court that, as a matter of law, Price

failed to meet his burden of coming forward with evidence sufficient to establish a

prima facie Eighth Amendment violation because he was unable to show that

compounded pentobarbital is readily available to the ADOC.

      Based on virtually identical evidence presented in Arthur, this Court

previously held that the district court did not err in determining that Arthur failed

to carry his burden to show compounded pentobarbital is a known and available

alternative to the ADOC. Arthur, 840 F.3d at 1302. Price brought nothing new in

this case that was not already present in Arthur, except for an FDA list of

compounding pharmacies in various states outside of Alabama. As with the list of

pharmacies presented in Arthur, Price did not prove that any of these pharmacies

were willing and able to compound pentobarbital for the ADOC. Significantly,

Price presented no evidence during trial that either he or his lawyer ever contacted

(or attempted to contact) any of the pharmacies to determine whether they would

                                         25
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be willing to even consider making pentobarbital for execution purposes. The only

live testimony provided at trial was Hill’s, which, as we concluded in Arthur,

demonstrated the unavailability of compounded pentobarbital.

      In Arthur, as here, Hill testified about the four departments of corrections

and twenty-five compounding pharmacies that she contacted in an effort to obtain

pentobarbital. Her efforts were unsuccessful. In contrast, Price’s expert (Dr.

Zentner) did not name a single source willing and able to sell compound

pentobarbital to the ADOC for use in lethal injection. Id. at 1301. Like Price,

Arthur pointed to the fact that other states had been able to obtain pentobarbital as

proof that it was readily accessible. Id. at 1301–02. Also similar to Price, Arthur

relied on the fact that pharmacies have the skills to compound a drug to assert that

an alternate drug was “available” to the ADOC for use in lethal injections. In

Arthur, we concluded that the evidence was insufficient to meet the prisoner’s

burden to show that “there is now a source for pentobarbital that would sell it to the

ADOC for use in executions.” Id. at 1302 (emphases in Arthur) (quoting Brooks,

810 F.3d at 820). We must do the same here.

      Ultimately, Arthur restrains us to hold that the district court did not commit

error when it concluded that Price failed to meet his burden to show that

compounded pentobarbital was readily available to the ADOC. Particularly where

this Court has already considered and decided this issue under virtually identical

                                         26
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facts, we do not find any error. See Glossip, 135 S. Ct. at 2740. Therefore, we

must affirm.

                                        IV.

      The district court did not err in entering final judgment in favor of the

ADOC and against Price on his Eighth Amendment method-of-execution claim.

Accordingly, we affirm.

      AFFIRMED.




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