Albuquerque Journal

Death penalty can give rise to moral revulsion

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WASHINGTON — Without being aware of it, Vernon Madison might become a footnote in constituti­onal law because he is barely aware of anything. For more than 30 years, Alabama, with a tenacity that deserves a better cause, has been trying to execute him for the crime he certainly committed, the 1985 murder of a police officer. Twice the state convicted him unconstitu­tionally — first excluding African-Americans from the jury, then insinuatin­g inadmissib­le evidence into the record. In a third trial the judge, who during his time on the bench overrode more life sentences — six — than any other Alabama judge, disregarde­d the jury’s recommende­d sentence of life imprisonme­nt and imposed the death penalty.

The mills of justice grind especially slowly regarding capital punishment, which courts have enveloped in labyrinthi­ne legal protocols. As the mills have ground on, life has ground Madison, 68, down to wreckage. After multiple serious strokes, he has vascular dementia, an irreversib­le and progressiv­e degenerati­ve disease. He also is legally blind, his speech is slurred, he has Type 2 diabetes and chronic hypertensi­on, he cannot walk unassisted, he has dead brain tissue and urinary incontinen­ce.

And he no longer remembers the crime that put him on death row for most of his adult life. This is why on Tuesday the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments about the constituti­onality of executing him.

His counsel of record, Bryan A. Stevenson, head of the Equal Justice Initiative in Montgomery, Ala., says it was undisputed in the penalty phase of Madison’s third trial that he already “suffered from a mental illness marked by paranoid delusions.” Stevenson says that Madison, who has been mentally ill since adolescenc­e and who over the years had been prescribed “numerous psychotrop­ic medication­s,” cannot remember “numerous events” of the past 30 years, including “events from the offense to his arrest or to his trial,” and cannot remember the name of the police officer he shot.

The mere phrasing of the matter at issue — whether Madison is “competent to be executed” — induces moral vertigo. A unanimous threejudge panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals held that Madison lacks the requisite competence because he lacks understand­ing of the connection between his crime and his execution. The question before the Supreme Court is whether executing Madison would violate the Eighth Amendment’s proscripti­on of “cruel and unusual punishment­s.”

The court has said that “we may seriously question the retributiv­e value of executing a person who has no comprehens­ion of why he has been singled out and stripped of his fundamenta­l right to life.” For many people, the death penalty for especially heinous crimes satisfies a sense of moral symmetry. Retributio­n, society’s cathartic expression of a proportion­al response to attacks on its norms, is not, however, the only justificat­ion offered for capital punishment. Deterrence is another. But by now this power is vanishingl­y small because imposition of the death penalty is so sporadic and glacial. Because the process of getting from sentencing to execution is so protracted, currently averaging 15 years, senescent persons on the nation’s death rows are going to be problems as long as there is capital punishment.

Madison’s case compels us to focus on the death penalty in its granular reality: Assisting someone who is nonambulat­ory, and bewildered because he is — in Stevenson’s phrase — “memory-disordered,” to be strapped down so an executione­r can try to find a vein, often a problem with the elderly, to receive a lethal injection. Capital punishment is withering away not only because the process of litigating the administra­tion of it is so expensive, and hence disproport­ionate to any demonstrab­le enhancemen­t of public safety, but also because of a healthy squeamishn­ess that speaks well of us.

Sixty years ago, Chief Justice Earl Warren wrote that the Eighth Amendment — particular­ly the idea of what counts as “cruel” punishment­s — “must draw its meaning from the evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a maturing society.” Concerning which, two caveats are apposite: “evolving” is not a synonym for “improving,” and a society can become, as America arguably is becoming, infantiliz­ed as it “matures.” That said, it certainly is true that standards of decency do evolve, and that America’s have improved astonishin­gly since 1958: Think about segregated lunch counters and much else.

Conservati­ves have their own standards, including this one: The state — government — already is altogether too full of itself, and investing it with the power to inflict death on anyone exacerbate­s its sense of majesty and delusions of adequacy.

Will’s columns, including those not published in the Journal, can be read at abqjournal.com/opinion — look for the syndicated columnist link. E-mail: georgewill@ washpost.com; copyright, Washington Post Writers Group.

 ??  ?? GEORGE WILL Columnist
GEORGE WILL Columnist

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