Marysville Appeal-Democrat

State moves slowly toward resuming executions

- Associated Press

SACRAMENTO – California has long been what one expert calls a “symbolic death penalty state,” one of 12 that has capital punishment on the books but has not executed anyone in more than a decade.

Prodded by voters and lawsuits, the nation’s most populous state may now be easing back toward allowing executions, though observers are split on how quickly they will resume, if at all.

Correction­s officials expect to meet a Wednesday deadline to submit revised lethal injection rules to state regulators, trying again with technical changes after the first attempt was rejected in December.

The California Supreme Court, meanwhile, is expected to rule by August on challenges to a ballot initiative narrowly approved by voters in November that would speed up execu- tions by reducing the time allowed for appeals.

Still, it is a far cry from the situation in Arkansas, which carried out its first execution since 2005 last week after trying to put eight inmates to death this month in an unpreceden­ted series of double executions. Courts have blocked three of them. Legal rulings have put at least one other in doubt.

California could come close to resuming executions in the next year, said law professor Robert Weisberg, co-director of the Stanford Criminal Justice Center, though others say too many variables and challenges remain to make a prediction.

California has by far the nation’s largest death row with nearly 750 inmates, about double that of No. 2 Florida.

The state’s proposed lethal injection regulation­s are patterned after a single-drug process that already passed muster with the U.S. Supreme Court, Weisberg said.

Correction­s officials submitted the regulation­s only after they were forced to act by a judge’s ruling on behalf of crime victims angered at the state’s three-year delay.

But the regulation­s replacing California’s old three-drug method are likely to be approved at some point, Weisberg said.

Deborah Denno, a professor at Fordham University School of Law and an expert on lethal injections, was among those who said recent revisions to the state’s proposed regulation­s still don’t cure underlying problems that can lead to botched executions.

For instance, the proposed rules now give executione­rs 10 minutes to administer each round of lethal drugs. The first batch is supposed to kill, but if that initial dose doesn’t work, executione­rs would administer four more similar doses, each with a 10-minute countdown clock to make sure the process doesn’t drag on for hours as critics said was a possibilit­y under the original rules.

If the inmate is still alive after five massive doses, “the San Quentin Warden shall stop the execution and summon medical assistance for the inmate.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? The interior of the lethal injection facility at San Quentin State Prison is shown in 2010.
Associated Press The interior of the lethal injection facility at San Quentin State Prison is shown in 2010.

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