South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Biden opposed to executions as government adds 3 more

- By Michael Balsamo

WASHINGTON— President-elect Joe Biden is against the death penalty and willwork to end its use, his spokesman said Saturday, as the Justice Department scheduled three more federal executions before the Jan. 20 inaugurati­on, including two shortly before he takes office.

After a 17-year hiatus, the Bureau of Prisons on Thursday carried out the eighth federal execution this year, and it is likely to increase pressure on Biden to decide whether his administra­tion would continue to schedule executions once he is sworn in. Advocacy groups have called on the Trump administra­tion to pause all executions until Biden takes office.

Biden “opposes the death penalty now and in the future,” press secretary TJ Ducklo said. He did not say whether executions would be paused immediatel­y once Biden takes office.

Federal executions resumed this year despite the coronaviru­s pandemic that has killed more than 255,000 Americans according to Johns Hopkins University data, and is raging inside the nation’s prison systems. This year, the Justice Department has put to death more people than during the previous 50 years, despite waning public support from both Democrats and Republican­s for its use.

In a court filing Friday night, the department said it was scheduling the executions of Alfred Bourgeois for Dec. 11 and Cory Johnson and Dustin Higgs for Jan. 14 and 15. Two other executions had been scheduled for this year, including the first woman set to be executed by the federal government in about six decades. But on Thursday, a federal judge ruled that execution could not proceed before the end of the year.

Prosecutor­s say Bourgeois tortured, sexually molested, and then beat his 21⁄ 2- year-old daughter to death.

Johnson was one of three crack cocaine dealers convicted in a string of murders. Prosecutor­s said he killed seven people in in an attempt to expand the territory of a Richmond, Virginia, gang and silence informants. His co-defendants, members of same drug gang, are also on death row.

Johnson’s lawyers argue their client is intellectu­ally disabled, and thus it would be unconstitu­tional to put him to death. The Supreme

Court has held that it is unlawful to execute a person who is of such a low intelligen­ce that they can’t function in society.

Higgs was convicted of ordering the 1996 murders of threewomen at a federal wildlife center near Beltsville, Maryland. Prosecutor­s say Higgs and two others abducted the women after Higgs became enraged because one of the women rebuffed his advances at party.

Higgs’ attorney, Sean Nolan, said his client didn’t kill anyone, had ineffectiv­e attorneys and didn’t deserve the death penalty. Higgs’ co-defendant, who prosecutor­s said carried out the killings, was not sentenced to death and Nolan said it is “arbitrary and inequitabl­e to punish Mr. Higgs more severely than the person who committed themurders.”

All three men are Black, as were those who were recently executed.

A September report by theWashing­ton, D.C.-based Death Penalty Informatio­n Center said Black people remain overrepres­ented on death rows, including federal death row. The organizati­on’s database shows that 25 of 55 federal death row inmates (46%) are Black, while Black people make up only about 13% of theU.S. population.

 ?? MICHAEL CONROY/AP ?? The Federal Bureau of Prisons has carried out eight federal executions this year after a 17-year hiatus. Above, a sign for the federal correction­al complex in Terre Haute, Indiana.
MICHAEL CONROY/AP The Federal Bureau of Prisons has carried out eight federal executions this year after a 17-year hiatus. Above, a sign for the federal correction­al complex in Terre Haute, Indiana.

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