The Columbus Dispatch

Year’s execution total is half of decade ago

- By Michael Graczyk

HUNTSVILLE, Texas — A court reprieve that halted the scheduled December lethal injection of a Texas prisoner means 2017 will end with 23 inmates executed in the U.S., a figure that, although up slightly from the previous year, is half of what it was a decade ago.

The year-end numbers also show that Texas will regain its standing as the nation’s most active state in carrying out capital punishment.

Texas inmate Juan Castillo, who had an August death date postponed because of Hurricane Harvey, was set for lethal injection Dec. 14 for a December 2003 robbery and fatal shooting in San Antonio. However, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, the state’s highest criminal court, sent the 36-year-old’s appeal back to his trial court last week to review arguments from defense attorneys that a witness presented false testimony at Castillo’s 2005 trial.

Castillo’s was the last execution scheduled for 2017 in the 31 states that impose the death penalty, according to statistics kept by the Death Penalty Informatio­n Center, a Washington-based group that opposes capital punishment.

Texas put to death seven prisoners this year, matching the state total from 2016. They were among the 23 inmates — up from 20 last year — put to death in eight states in 2017. Arkansas carried out four executions, followed by Alabama and Florida with three each, and Virginia and Ohio (Ronald R. Phillips in July and Gary Otte in September) with two each. Georgia, which topped the nation in 2016 with nine, executed one prisoner this year, as did Missouri.

Oklahoma, which typically has one of the busiest execution chambers in the country, went another year without putting an inmate to death as the state struggles with implementi­ng a new execution protocol. Oklahoma put all executions on hold two years ago after several problems, including a botched lethal injection in 2014 and drug mix-ups in 2015, and the state’s attorney general’s office has said it won’t request any execution dates until at least 150 days after new protocols are released.

Among the more than three dozen condemned prisoners in the U.S. who won court reprieves from scheduled executions this year was Texas death row inmate Clinton Young, whose friend Robert Pruett was executed in October.

“We understand the reality of what we’re facing,” Young said in an interview before his October scheduled execution, which was stopped by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. “Nobody sits here and cries over it. You’ve got a limited time. You try to make the best of it.

“But it’s like, you don’t want to see your friends go.”

Governors also halted executions. In one dramatic case, Ohio Gov. John Kasich stopped the November execution of Alva Campbell Jr. when state correction­s officials failed after multiple attempts to find a vein on Campbell suitable for the needle carrying the lethal drug.

Executions in the U.S. peaked in 1999, when 98 inmates were put to death. The following year, Texas alone carried out a record 40 executions. As recently as 2010, the national total was 46, but it has been declining steadily.

“Partly it’s because of impediment­s to execution, like the embargo of the optimum drugs,” said Kent Scheidegge­r, legal director of the California-based Criminal Justice Legal Foundation, which advocates for capital punishment. “Although Texas seems to have found ways to get them, many states have not.”

Scheidegge­r also attributed the decline to a “dramatical­ly lower” homicide rate compared with the 1990s and “greater selectivit­y in which defendants are sentenced to death, by both prosecutor­s and juries.”

A significan­t impact in Texas was approval of life without parole as a sentencing option in capital murder cases starting in September 2005. Before that, juries could choose between a death sentence and a prison sentence that offered the possibilit­y of parole.

At least eight inmates — five from Texas and one each from Missouri, Alabama and Ohio (Raymond Tibbetts in February) — are set to die in the first quarter of 2018. The first, scheduled for Jan. 18 in Texas, is Anthony Allen Shore, who confessed to killing multiple people and is known in the Houston area as the “Tourniquet Killer.”

 ?? [THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] ?? Larry Greene of the Southern Ohio Correction­al Facility, demonstrat­es in 2005 how a curtain is pulled between the death chamber and witness room for an execution.
[THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] Larry Greene of the Southern Ohio Correction­al Facility, demonstrat­es in 2005 how a curtain is pulled between the death chamber and witness room for an execution.

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