The Columbus Dispatch

Fla. ramps up executions ahead of ’24

Is Desantis speeding up process for GOP support?

- Kayla Jimenez

Florida Gov. Ron Desantis is poised to execute a fifth man on death row within six months, ramping up the state’s speed on capital punishment ahead of the 2024 election.

In recent months, Desantis signed two pieces of legislatio­n related to the death penalty, including one allowing the state to seek capital punishment in non-murder cases of sexual battery involving children younger than 12 that will become law on Oct. 1. The other bill allows for the death penalty without a unanimous jury decision.

Taken together, political commentato­rs and opponents of capital punishment have said the moves could be part of Desantis’s latest attempt to compete with his rival Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump, who used the death penalty to execute 13 federal inmates during his last six months in office.

The governor had signed on to two executions in his four years in office – a stark contrast to recent months.

In late June, Desantis signed a death warrant for 61-year-old Brevard County death row inmate James Barnes on Aug. 3. Barnes was sentenced to death after he confessed to a prosecutor about his role in the murder and rape of a nurse in 1988. He pleaded guilty in 2006, and a judge sentenced him to death a year later.

What’s average execution rate?

The national average for time a prisoner spends on death row before being executed is about 18 years, said Robin Maher, an executive director of the Death Penalty Informatio­n Center. In Florida, the average rate is almost 23 years, according to Florida Correction­s Department records, the Tallahasse­e Democrat reported.

The men executed in Florida this year were on death row for decades.

Though some governors – including

those in Arizona, California, Ohio, Oregon and Pennsylvan­ia – have put a hold on capital punishment in recent years, Florida is speeding ahead with it under Desantis’ watch, Maher said. Her group has been tracking cases in Florida and elsewhere.

The state is one of the highest users of capital punishment in the country and stands alongside 23 other states where the death penalty is active.

“It’s true generally that crime is often an issue in an election year, and from what we’ve seen, it will definitely be a part of this upcoming election,” Maher said. “The question really is whether the use of the death penalty is going to keep anyone safer in our communitie­s.”

Why speedup executions?

In an email, Jeremy Redfern, a spokespers­on for Desantis’s office, said the governor is speeding up executions because “COVID-19 and state emergencie­s (like hurricanes) can delay the death warrant process, but that process has resumed.”

Many states halted their use of capital punishment during COVID-19, with the exception of the federal government

under the Trump administra­tion, Maher said.

“Last year, in part because of the coronaviru­s outbreak, fewer people were executed than in any year in nearly three decades,” according to a report in 2021 from The Pew Research Center.

Maria Deliberato, executive director for the group Floridians for Alternativ­es to the Death Penalty, challenged the office’s claim about the connection to COVID-19, adding that the timing of resumption­s at “an alarming rate” aligns with the 2024 election and soon after a jury recommende­d life in prison for Nikolas Cruz, the shooter in the 2018 school massacre in Parkland, Florida.

“The restarting of these executions seems to indicate – in large part because of his bid for president to appear tough on crime – he wants Florida to fall in line and be a law and order state,” she said. “The problem and what we’ve urged is that it really will create chaos and instabilit­y in the system. These executions have further solidified that.”

Who has been executed this year?

Donald Dillibeck, 59, was executed Feb. 23. He was on death row for 32 years after he was convicted of the 1990 murder of a woman in a Tallahasse­e mall parking lot, the Tallahasse­e Democrat reported.

It was the first execution by the state in three years. Before he died while strapped on a gurney, Dillbeck, 59, addressed the governor.

Louis Gaskin, 56, was executed April12. He was known as the “ninja killer” and was on death row for decades

Gaskin was convicted of two counts of first-degree murder in the killings of two people in Palm Coast, Florida. A jury decided in 1990 in an 8-4 vote to sentence him to death. He was the 100th execution in the state.

Darryl Barwick, 56, was executed May 4. He was also on death row for several decades. He was convicted of the stabbing murder of 24-year-old Rebecca Wendt in 1986 when he was 19.

Duane Owen, 62, was executed June 15. He was on death row for nearly four decades for the killing of 38-yearold Georgianna Worden and the stabbing death of 14-year-old Karen Slattery.

Where do Americans stand?

A survey of more than 5,000 U.S. adults in April 2021 by The Pew Research Center shows that more than three-quarters of Republican­s and independen­ts who lean Republican said they “favor the death penalty for persons convicted of murder, including 40% who strongly favor it.”

On the other side of the political aisle, “Democrats and Democratic leaners are more divided on this issue.”

The center’s research shows that 46% of people who are Democrat or Democrat-leaning favor the death penalty, while 53% oppose capital punishment.

“About a quarter of Democrats (23%) strongly oppose the death penalty, compared with 17% who strongly favor it,” a report on the survey reads.

Contributi­ng: John Kennedy and Kathryn Varn, The Tallahasse­e Democrat’ J.D. Gallop, Florida Today‘ Claire Thornton and Thao Nguyen, USA TODAY’ Mollye Barrows, Pensacola News Journal’ Laura Lordi, Lianna Norman and Holly Baltz, Palm Beach Post

 ?? REBA SALDANHA/AP FILE ?? Republican presidenti­al candidate and Florida Gov. Ron Desantis signed two pieces of legislatio­n related to the death penalty this year.
REBA SALDANHA/AP FILE Republican presidenti­al candidate and Florida Gov. Ron Desantis signed two pieces of legislatio­n related to the death penalty this year.

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