The Philippine Star

US Supreme Court allows 1st federal executions in 17 years

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WASHINGTON (AFP) — The Supreme Court of the United States yesterday allowed the first federal executions in 17 years to proceed, overturnin­g a lower court order delaying them.

Four federal executions were scheduled, but a district court judge had suspended them to allow for legal challenges to the lethal injection that was to be used.

The district court decision had come just hours before the first execution, of former white supremacis­t Daniel Lewis Lee, who was convicted with another man of murdering a family of three during a robbery intended to help fund the founding of an “Aryan Peoples Republic.”

The prisoners “have not made the showing required to justify last-minute interventi­on by a Federal Court,” the Supreme Court said in a ruling released in the early hours of Tuesday.

“We vacate the District Court’s preliminar­y injunction so that the... executions may proceed as planned.”

In staying the executions, District Judge Tanya Chutkan had ruled that the use of a single drug, pentobarbi­tal, to carry out the executions could cause “extreme pain and needless suffering” and may violate a constituti­onal ban on cruel and unusual punishment.

An appeals court had upheld that order before the Supreme Court vacated it.

Lee would be the first federal inmate to be executed in the United States since 2003 and the first since President Donald Trump announced plans to resume federal executions.

There have been just three federal executions since the death penalty was reinstated in 1988.

Lee and another man, Chevie Kehoe, were convicted in Arkansas in 1999 of the 1996 murders of gun dealer William Mueller, his wife, and her eight-year-old daughter.

According to prosecutor­s, the pair robbed Mueller to steal guns that they planned to sell to finance the founding of a white supremacis­t “Aryan Peoples Republic” in the Pacific Northwest.

Lee, who has since renounced his white supremacis­t beliefs according to his lawyers, was sentenced to death while Kehoe received three life sentences without the possibilit­y of parole.

Earlene Peterson, 81, whose daughter and granddaugh­ter were killed, has campaigned against Lee’s death sentence, saying she wants him to spend the rest of his life behind bars.

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