From public hangings in the town square to lethal injections witnessed by journalists, executions historically have mostly been carried out with at least some public scrutiny. Indiana was expected to again diverge from that tradition Wednesday, until state prison officials granted Joseph Corcoran 's request to include a reporter among those witnessing his early-morning execution.
The state had said no independent witnesses would be present due to Indiana laws shielding information about the death penalty. But the editor of the Indiana Capital Chronicle posted on X after the early Wednesday execution that Corcoran put one of the outlet's reporters on his own list of permitted witnesses and she was allowed to observe.
Prior to the change, some First Amendment advocates and death penalty experts call Indiana's lack of transparency during the gravest of government punishments alarming.
Media witnesses play a crucial role in executions by providing the public with independent, firsthand and factual accounts, said Robin Maher, executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center (DPIC).
''Media ensures government accountability and transparency in an otherwise closed and secretive process,'' Maher said. ''The decision to exclude media witnesses raises troubling questions about whether state officials lack the confidence or the ability to conduct the execution without botching it.''
The Associated Press aims to cover every U.S. execution because the public has a right to know about all stages of the criminal justice process — including when things do not go according to the government's plans. Witnesses from the AP and other news organizations have been able to tell the public when executions went awry, including in Idaho, Alabama, Arizona, Oklahoma and Ohio.
Formal descriptions of lethal injections by prison officials are sometimes sanitized compared with the detailed accounts offered by journalists. Federal executioners who put 13 inmates to death by lethal injection during the last months of the Trump administration likened the process to falling asleep, while reports by the AP and other outlets described how the condemned persons' stomachs shuddered as the pentobarbital took effect.
In response to a previous AP request for comment on the state's barring of independent witnesses, Indiana Department of Correction spokesperson Brandi Pahl cited state law explicitly outlining who can be at an execution. Media witnesses are not listed.