USA TODAY US Edition

HIGH COURT WRESTLES WITH DEATH PENALTY CHALLENGES

Justices divided over whether capital punishment should be abolished

- Richard Wolf @richardjwo­lf USA TODAY

Death came knocking at the Supreme Court’s door twice last week, as it has done most weeks since the justices took the bench in early October.

When William Sallie asked for a stay of execution Tuesday because of alleged juror bias, the justices refused, apparently without dissent. Sallie, 50, became the ninth man put to death in Georgia this year, a 40-year high.

When Ronald Smith asked that his execution be blocked Thursday because a judge overrode a jury’s recommenda­tion of life without parole, the court deadlocked, 4-4. Smith, 45, later heaved and coughed during his 34-minute lethal injection.

And when Florida’s Henry Sireci, Ohio’s Romell Broom and South Carolina’s Sammie Stokes asked for their death sentences to be reconsider­ed — because of new evidence, a previously botched lethal injection and a lawyer’s conflict of interest, respective­ly — the justices delayed action for six weeks or more. Monday, the plaintiffs were all turned down, though there was a biting dissent from Justice Stephen Breyer.

“Individual­s who are executed are not the ‘worst of the worst’ but, rather, are individual­s chosen at random on the basis, per- haps of geography, perhaps of the views of individual prosecutor­s, or still worse on the basis of race,” Breyer said. “The time has come for this court to reconsider the constituti­onality of the death penalty.”

The five cases illustrate the continuing battle inside the Supreme Court over the nation’s ultimate penalty — one imposed and carried out less often each year, but which voters in three states, including California, decided to retain last month.

Forty years after the high court reinstated the death penalty in another Georgia case, the justices are increasing­ly divided over when it is applied, how it is ad-

ministered and whether it serves any purpose.

Since the turn of the century, they have ended executions for the intellectu­ally disabled, those whose crimes were committed as juveniles and those who did not commit murder or treason. Last year, Breyer and Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said it was time to decide whether capital punishment itself should be abolished.

Time is not on their side. President-elect Donald Trump soon will nominate the late Justice Antonin Scalia’s successor, someone who is virtually certain to support the death penalty. Before his term is over, Trump could get the chance to replace one or more of the five justices who have limited the penalty’s scope. Three of them — Ginsburg, Breyer and Anthony Kennedy — are long past traditiona­l retirement age.

“The window is narrowing,” says Robert Smith of Harvard Law School’s Fair Punishment Project, which opposes the death penalty. If Trump names several strong capital punishment proponents, “there’s a chance the window closes for a generation.”

Until then, it appears the justices will have to wrestle with a series of legal challenges. Already this term, they’ve overturned a death sentence in Oklahoma because of improper testimony from victims’ family members and blocked an Alabama execution that a jury did not agree upon. That state’s system, which empowers judges over juries, could go the way of Florida’s and get struck down.

Two other cases appear likely to result in further restrictio­ns. During oral arguments this fall on two Texas death sentences, a majority of justices appeared sympatheti­c to challenges from defendants involving racial discrimina­tion and intellectu­al disability. More challenges are on the way, including some that simply question whether the range of problems renders capital punishment unconstitu­tional.

“You’re playing whack-a-mole with the death penalty,” says Robert Dunham, executive director of the Death Penalty Informatio­n Center, which opposes capital punishment. “The pattern that we’re seeing is not just the court reaching out to correct errors but the court looking at renegade, outlier practices.”

The high court’s role in the gradual decline of capital punish- ment has been relatively minor.

Far more important have been historic reductions in new death sentences — from about 300 annually in the 1990s to fewer than 50 a year today — and executions, down from 98 in 1999 to 20 this year.

Forty-one states have not executed anyone in the past four years. The number of states that carried out executions dropped from nine in 2013 to seven, six and five this year. Only 16 of the nation’s more than 3,000 counties dole out capital sentences regularly.

“The death penalty is driving itself to extinction,” says Brandon Garrett, a professor at the University of Virginia School of Law. In an upcoming research paper that looks at every U.S. death sentence from 1990 to 2015, he says, “What remains of the American death penalty is quite fragile and reflects a legacy of racial bias and idiosyncra­tic local preference­s.”

Last month, voters staged a capital punishment comeback of sorts, defeating an abolition effort in California, restoring it to the books in Nebraska after legislativ­e repeal and adding it to the state constituti­on in Oklahoma.

“It means we’re going in the other direction,” says Kent Scheidegge­r, general counsel at the conservati­ve Criminal Justice Legal Foundation. “The other side is not making progress. They are slipping.”

That’s not the case in state supreme courts, where the death penalty has been struck down recently in Florida, Delaware and Connecticu­t.

The Florida ruling, if made retroactiv­e, could affect nearly 400 inmates on death row.

At the Supreme Court, issues involving overzealou­s prosecutor­s, inadequate defense lawyers and the race or mental capacity of defendants have kept the justices busy this fall.

“The Supreme Court seems more sensitive to the injustices perpetrate­d in the name of the death penalty and more inclined to regulate its use,” says Kathryn Kase, executive director of Texas Defender Service, which represents death row inmates.

The next step for the court, beyond juveniles and the intellectu­al disabled, may be to set a national standard for defendants with severe mental illness. The American Bar Associatio­n, American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n, National Alliance on Mental Illness and others are mounting a national campaign to take capital punishment off the table for that population.

“We ... have a duty to fit the punishment to the offender,” says Hilarie Bass, the ABA’s presidente­lect. Studies have estimated that 20% of the nearly 3,000 inmates on death row have a severe mental illness, she says.

Some opponents say the court may go further and declare the death penalty unconstitu­tional. They argue that it no longer serves as a deterrent to crime because of the years or decades those convicted will spend languishin­g in prison during myriad state and federal court appeals. They contend the nation’s standards of decency have changed since capital punishment’s heyday.

“I think it is very plausible that if there are five votes to end the death penalty, it could be with the people who are on the court right now,” Smith says.

In addition to Breyer and Ginsburg, that would require support from Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Anthony Kennedy — the perennial swing vote on the court. Kennedy has written many of its decisions on juveniles and the intellectu­ally disabled and has been a vocal critic of decades-long solitary confinemen­t. Kagan joined Breyer on Monday in dissenting from the court’s decision not to hear the Ohio case on lethal injections.

Ending the death penalty would require the court hearing a case that presents the central question: Does the penalty constitute cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth and 14th Amendments?

One such case is that of Marcus Reed, convicted in 2010 of killing three people who broke into his home in Caddo Parish, La. — for many years, the nation’s leader in death sentences per capita.

“Capital punishment is now constraine­d to a dwindling handful of locations, reserved not for the most culpable offenders but for those unlucky few prosecuted under anachronis­tic circumstan­ces,” Reed’s lawyer, Ben Cohen, wrote in his Supreme Court filing last month. “The time has come to assess whether the evolving standards of decency that mark the maturation of a civilized society now establish that a life sentence without parole is a sufficient­ly severe punishment.”

Donald Trump could get the chance to replace one or more of the five justices who have limited the death penalty’s scope.

 ?? ERIC RISBERG, AP ?? A guard keeps watch on the east block of death row at San Quentin State Prison.
ERIC RISBERG, AP A guard keeps watch on the east block of death row at San Quentin State Prison.
 ?? AP ?? Ronald Smith coughed and heaved during his execution Thursday in Alabama.
AP Ronald Smith coughed and heaved during his execution Thursday in Alabama.
 ?? MANDEL NGAN, AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Activists protest the death penalty June 29, a year after the Supreme Court upheld the use of a lethal injection method.
MANDEL NGAN, AFP/GETTY IMAGES Activists protest the death penalty June 29, a year after the Supreme Court upheld the use of a lethal injection method.
 ?? AP ??
AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States