Imperial Valley Press

US won’t seek death penalty in Planned Parenthood case

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DENVER (AP) — Federal prosecutor­s said Wednesday they will not seek the death penalty against a man accused of killing three people and injuring nine others at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado in 2015.

U.S. Attorney Jason Dunn submitted a one-sentence notice of the decision concerning Robert Dear that did not include any explanatio­n of the reasons for it.

The move comes about a year after Dear was charged in federal court in the shooting after his prosecutio­n in state court stalled. He had been repeatedly deemed incompeten­t to stand trial. Dear, however, has insisted he is competent.

During his initial appearance in federal court a year ago, he interrupte­d the proceeding­s to criticize evaluation­s at the state mental hospital in Pueblo, insisting the process is unnecessar­y and complainin­g that it was not videotaped.

Last month, a judge ordered Dear to undergo a federal competency examinatio­n once his lawyers and prosecutor­s worked out the details of where it would take place.

Dear is facing 68 counts in the federal case, including use of a firearm during a crime resulting in death and violating a law ensuring access to clinic entrances.

The decision not to seek the death penalty follows the resumption of federal executions under the Trump administra­tion and as the Justice Department continues to seek the death penalty in other cases in the administra­tion’s waning days.

The death penalty has usually been taken off the table in cases in which mental illness is a factor, such as in the Unabomber case, said Robert Dunham, executive director of the Death Penalty Informatio­n Center. He thinks the decision by Dunn’s office indicates they believe Dear is severely mentally ill.

Prosecutor­s who are not seeking to pursue the death penalty for political reasons need to consider whether they are likely to succeed in convincing a jury to impose the death penalty in expensive and complicate­d death penalty cases prone to appeals. That’s especially true in Colorado, where juries have shown a willingnes­s to impose life sentences instead of the death penalty in capital cases where mental health is an issue, such as the Aurora theater shooting case, Dunham said.

The Justice Department has carried out eight death sentences since July, putting to death more people than during the previous half-century, despite waning public support from both Democrats and Republican­s for its use.

Five other executions have been scheduled before President-elect Joe Biden takes office on Jan. 20, including just days before the inaugurati­on. A spokespers­on for Biden told the AP the president-elect “opposes the death penalty now and in the future” and would work to end its use. But he did not say whether executions would be paused immediatel­y once Biden takes office.

 ?? Andy Cross/The Denver Post via AP ?? In this 2015 file photo, Robert Dear talks to Judge Gilbert Martinez during a court appearance in Colorado Springs, Colo.
Andy Cross/The Denver Post via AP In this 2015 file photo, Robert Dear talks to Judge Gilbert Martinez during a court appearance in Colorado Springs, Colo.

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