Tennessee Judge Orders Expanded Media Access to State Executions
A Davidson County Chancery Court judge has temporarily ordered Tennessee prison officials to let media witnesses observe nearly the entire lethal-injection process, siding with a coalition of news outlets that argued existing protocols violated First Amendment rights. Chancellor I'Ashea L. Myles granted a preliminary injunction requiring curtains to the witness room be opened at 10 a.m.—when the condemned is strapped to the gurney and IV lines are inserted—and remain open until the official pronouncement of death, instead of the current 10‑ to 15‑minute viewing window after drugs are administered. The order also allows execution‑team members to wear full protective suits and optional masks to conceal their identities, addressing the state’s claimed security concerns. The lawsuit, brought by organizations including The Associated Press, contends the public has a constitutional right to know how Tennessee carries out death sentences “from the time the condemned enters the execution chamber until after the condemned is declared dead.” Tennessee’s Department of Correction, which has defended its limits as necessary for safety and argued the press has no special access rights, did not immediately comment on whether it will appeal. The case could influence similar battles over execution transparency in other death‑penalty states as courts confront secrecy around lethal‑injection procedures and drug protocols.
📌 Key Facts
- Judge: Chancellor I'Ashea L. Myles of Davidson County Chancery Court issued the temporary injunction on January 16, 2026.
- Scope: Curtains to the witness room must open at 10 a.m. when the inmate is restrained and IV insertion begins and stay open through the pronouncement of death.
- Security measures: Execution‑team members may wear disposable protective suits covering uniforms and badges and may use masks to conceal their identities.
- Defendants: The suit names Riverbend warden Kenneth Nelsen and Tennessee Department of Correction Commissioner Frank Strada.
- Previous practice: Reporters previously saw only a brief portion of the execution, after the inmate was already strapped down and IVs placed and before blinds were closed for the doctor to check for death.
📊 Relevant Data
In Tennessee, Black individuals constitute approximately 50% of the death row population (21 out of 42 inmates), while making up about 17% of the state's total population.
Death Row Facts — TN.gov
In Tennessee, 74% of death sentences imposed since 1972 have involved White victims, while White individuals comprise about 40% of homicide victims in the state.
Doomed to Repeat: The Legacy of Race in Tennessee's Contemporary Death Penalty — Death Penalty Information Center
Tennessee has carried out 13 executions since 2000, indicating that executions are relatively rare in the state.
All Tennessee executions since 2000 — WKRN
Four executions are scheduled in Tennessee for 2026, including the state's only woman on death row.
4 Tennessee death row inmates scheduled for execution in 2026 — WJHL
đź“° Source Timeline (1)
Follow how coverage of this story developed over time