The Columbus Dispatch

Supreme court denies review of death penalty

- By Adam Liptak

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday turned down a request that it take a fresh look at whether the death penalty is constituti­onal anywhere in the nation.

The court also refused to consider a narrower question in the same case: Whether Arizona’s capital sentencing system, which appears to make virtually all murderers eligible for the death penalty, violates the Constituti­on.

In a 2015 dissent, Justice Stephen Breyer had urged his colleagues to revisit the death penalty, saying that “it is highly likely” that it violates the Eighth Amendment, which bars cruel and unusual punishment­s. He said that there was evidence that innocent people have been executed, that death row exoneratio­ns were frequent, that death sentences were imposed arbitraril­y and that the capital justice system was warped by racial discrimina­tion and politics.

Only Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg joined the 2015 dissent, and the issue does not seem to have gained traction in the intervenin­g years.

Breyer on Monday also issued a statement on the narrower challenge, saying that Arizona’s capital sentencing system may well be unconstitu­tional and inviting a further challenge with more evidence. Justices Ginsburg, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan joined Breyer’s statement.

The case concerned Abel Daniel Hidalgo, who agreed to kill Michael Cordova, whom he did not know, for $1,000 payment from a gang member. He committed the murder at an auto body shop in 2001, and he also killed Jose Rojas, a bystander who happened to be present.

When the Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976 after a four-year moratorium, it upheld capital sentencing systems that sought to reserve the penalty for the worst offenders by insisting that juries find “aggravatin­g factors” before a death sentence may be imposed.

Arizona’s system includes so many possible factors, its critics say, that it does almost nothing to cull the worst offenders from others. Around 98 percent of convicted murderers, they say, are eligible for the death penalty there.

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