Chicago Sun-Times

Executions rise first time this decade

Death penalty foes say it won’t disrupt trend of decline

- Richard Wolf @ richardjwo­lf USA TODAY

The nation’s rapidly declining rate of executions has leveled off this year, but opponents of capital punishment say the death penalty remains on borrowed time.

The execution Thursday of Alabama cop killer Torrey McNabb was the 21st this year, marking the first time that the number of executions has risen since 2009. The 2017 total could approach 30 before the year is out, depending on lastminute legal battles.

That ends a relatively steady drop in executions since 2009, when there were 52. Only three times has the annual number increased since executions peaked at 98 in 1999.

Several factors contribute­d to this year’s departure from the broader trend. Eight states carried out executions, a spike from recent years. Among them were Arkansas, which executed four prisoners over eight days in April before its supply of lethal injection drugs expired, and Florida, which had halted executions for 18 months after the Supreme Court found its sentencing procedure unconstitu­tional.

Other executions showed the problems opponents highlight in their quest to end capital punishment. Claims of innocence and requests for more forensic testing went unheeded. Faced with complaints from pharmaceut­ical companies, some states used secretive methods to get drugs for lethal injections. Amid charges of racial disparitie­s, nearly all the murder victims were white.

Yet another issue will be on display during oral arguments at the Supreme Court next week: whether indigent defendants must prove they need more experience­d lawyers and resources before they will be provided.

Despite all those factors, death penalty opponents said they weren’t worried about the slight uptick in executions. They noted that three-, five- and 10- year trends remain down.

“We’re seeing the last grasps of trying to hold on to the death penalty in this country,” said Heather Beaudoin, national organizer for Equal Justice USA. “The fact that we may be up in numbers this year does not discourage me.”

Until this year, the number of states carrying out executions had dropped from nine in 2013 to seven, six and just five in2016.

Supreme Courts in Florida, Delaware and Connecticu­t recently struck down those states’ death penalty procedures, continuing a trend against capital punishment. Voters staged a comeback last year, defeating an abolition effort in California, restoring it to the books in Nebraska and adding it to the state constituti­on in Oklahoma.

What remains of capital punishment are largely decades- old death sentences.

“Twenty years ago was the height of the death sentencing era, and that’s the average time individual­s are on death row before execution,” said Ben Cohen, a lawyer with the Capital Appeals Project in New Orleans. “The long- term trend remains clearly aimed at replacing death sentences and executions with life without parole.”

A decline in new death sentences, from about 300 annually in the 1990s to fewer than 50 per year, will continue to result in fewer executions, says Rob Smith, executive director of the Fair Punishment Project.

“We have people on death rows across the country who were put there 10 years ago, 20 years ago, 30 years ago by juries who would never return that death sentence today and prosecutor­s who would never seek that death sentence today.”

Still, several legal challenges to lethal injection methods have failed since the Supreme Court ruled in 2015 that states could use midazolam, a sedative implicated in botched executions.

Arkansas’ supply was about to expire in April when it sought to execute eight inmates over a two- week period. Courts intervened in half those cases.

Most last- minute appeals fail at the Supreme Court. Two years ago, Justice Stephen Breyer argued that capital punishment is unreliable, arbitrary and results in decades- long delays. For those reasons and others, he said, “most places within the United States have abandoned its use.”

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