Imperial Valley Press

High court asked to rethink execution is

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Opponents of a voter-approved measure to speed up executions in California asked the state Supreme Court on Friday to reconsider its ruling upholding the law.

The high court’s decision unconstitu­tionally delegated power to the judicial branch and failed to consider whether the measure could survive after the justices invalidate­d “critical features” of the law, attorneys Christina Von der Ahe Rayburn and Lillian Mao said in their court filing.

Last month’s highly anticipate­d ruling concerned Propositio­n 66, a push to “mend not end” capital punishment in California.

Condemned inmates in California currently languish for decades and are more likely to die of natural causes than from lethal injection. There are nearly 750 inmates on death row, and only 13 have been executed since 1978 — the last in 2006.

The state Supreme Court upheld requiremen­ts in Propositio­n 66 limiting successive appeals and filing extensions. But it rejected arguments that a provision setting a five-year limit on appeals was mandatory, raising doubts that the law will succeed in accelerati­ng death sentences.

An attorney for supporters of the measure did not immediatel­y return an email seeking comment.

Rayburn and Mao said the court should determine whether voters

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