Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Rutledge, Cotton agree with Trump

Two open to executing drug dealers to fight opioid crisis

- JOHN MORITZ

Echoing a recent call by President Donald Trump, both U. S. Sen. Tom Cotton and Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge said Wednesday they were open to the idea of executing drug dealers as a method of combating the opioid crisis.

Specifical­ly, the comments from the two Republican­s were aimed at pushers of fentanyl, an especially cheap and lethal synthetic opioid linked to an increasing number of overdoses. A Tuesday news conference at the attorney general’s Little Rock offices highlighte­d a bill Cotton proposed to increase the federal minimum sentences for possession of fentanyl.

Asked if he supported the president’s idea to use the highest form of punishment on drug dealers, Cotton was unequivoca­l.

“I support the death penalty for people who are dealing in fentanyl,” Cotton said. “They’re imposing a death sentence on the young men and women in our societies.”

According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, there were 169 opioid-related overdose deaths in Arkansas in 2016. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says at least 800 people died from 2013-16 in the state.

While Cotton’s legislatio­n doesn’t include an expansion of the federal death penalty, he said U.S district attorneys should be allowed to more aggressive­ly seek that punishment for drug dealers under a federal law known as the Kingpin Statute, as well as through laws allowing prosecutor­s to seek the death penalty for slayings connected to drug crimes.

No one has been given a federal death sentence for drug- related crimes that didn’t also involve killing since the punishment was restored in 1988, according to the Death Penalty Informatio­n Center. In a memo sent to U.S. attorneys last month, U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions urged the prosecutor­s to pursue the death penalty in certain cases, including against criminals “dealing in extremely large quantities of drugs.”

Under current Arkansas law, the death penalty is allowed only as a punishment for capital murder and treason.

Rutledge said Tuesday she would consider supporting a change allowing

Arkansas prosecutor­s to seek death for trafficker­s.

“The sort of potency that we’ve heard about today and that we heard about on a regular basis with regard to fentanyl, deserve to have an equally potent penalty to go along with it,” Rutledge said. “That’s something I would entertain visiting with our legislator­s about.”

Flanking Cotton and Rutledge at the news conference were state law enforcemen­t and health officials, as well as parents of Arkansas children who died of overdoses. Afterward, the parents spoke highly of the responses put forward by officials, including Cotton’s push for harsher punishment­s and Rutledge’s recent lawsuit against three pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ers of opioids.

However, any push to expand the death penalty in Arkansas is likely to face a torrent of public criticism, even if most Arkansans support the punishment. The state is one year removed from the internatio­nal headlines it sparked in attempts to execute eight inmates over a two-week period. The state executed four.

In an email, Rita Sklar, the executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Arkansas, called the statements by Rutledge and Cotton “barbaric.”

“The death penalty is a broken process that needs to be abolished, not expanded — and the Supreme Court has repeatedly rejected the use of the death penalty in cases where there has been no murder by

the convicted individual,” Sklar said.

Furdona Brasfield, the director of the Arkansas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty, said the proposal was “very sad,” and would likely lead to more poor people and members of minority groups being given the harshest sentences, rather than the pharmaceut­ical executives who make and market opioids.

A spokesman for the state prison system declined to comment on the possibilit­y of carrying out lethal injections for drug dealers.

In a statement, Gov. Asa Hutchinson said he would have to see the specifics of a plan, while noting “generally, the death penalty should be reserved for the most violent and heinous offenses.”

For one victim of the opioid crisis, the worst possible punishment didn’t seem excessive for proven “mass distributo­rs.”

Last June in Fayettevil­le, Gina Allgaier’s son Tristan Thomas died of a fentanyl overdose at the age of 21. After attending the University of Arkansas his freshman year, she said, he moved to Seattle, where his addiction “spiraled,” before he returned to Arkansas.

“I don’t think it’s any different than someone coming into a bank and shooting people, or at a school and shooting people,” Allgaier said of fentanyl trafficker­s.

After her son’s death, Allgaier started the advocacy group in Bentonvill­e, Speakup About the Drugs. She and another parent involved in the group, Andy Agar of Little Rock, attended the conference Wednesday.

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