The use and support of the death penalty in the United
States has steeply declined to levels unheard of in decades. Reported the Los
Angeles Times.
Capital punishment is still legal in most states. But, while
activists and experts say it is far-fetched to expect it to be banned
nationwide any time soon, they say the momentum against it is strong.
“Practically speaking, the death penalty is in its last
days. But like any disease that’s rendered obsolete by modern medicine, it has
a few flareups before the end,” said Eric Freedman, a law professor at Hofstra University. “The long-term trend toward
its extinction is pretty clear and pronounced.”
The number of annual executions in the U.S. hit a high of 98
in 1999. Last year, the number was 20. The last time it was that low was in
1991, when 14 people were executed.
If all the scheduled executions this year are carried out,
25 Americans will be put to death, according to the Death Penalty Information
Center. The Washington-based nonprofit is critical of the death penalty.
Seven states have or are scheduled to carry out executions,
according to the center: Texas, Virginia, Missouri, Arkansas, Ohio, Georgia and
Alabama.
“It is a phenomenon now of a few counties in a few states,”
said Freedman. “The vast majority of the country is living in counties where
there hasn’t been an execution for decades.”
More Americans support the death penalty than those who are
against it. But surveys over the years show that opposition is increasing and
support is declining.
According to the most recent Pew Research Center poll, 49%
of Americans support the death penalty for people found guilty of murder. At
the same time, 42% of Americans are against it. The gap in part depends on
political party. Only 34% of Democrats favor the death penalty, compared with
72% of Republicans.
Experts say the decline can be attributed to a variety of
factors, including well-publicized cases of people who were sentenced to death
and then exonerated.
One recent such case was in Delaware in January, when Isaiah
McCoy, a 29-year-old on death row for murder, was released from prison after
being found not guilty in a second trial.
“When people find out real people are sentenced to death
even though they are not guilty, people start struggling to support
executions,” said Rob Smith, director of Harvard Law School’s Fair Punishment
Project, which has argued against the Arkansas executions, saying the trials of
the men on death row were full of “legal deficiencies.”
It’s not just that fewer people are being executed.
Generally speaking, fewer people are being sentenced to death.
Death sentences hit a high in 1996, when 315 Americans were
condemned to die, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. The
decline has been steady since. Last year, 30 people were sentenced to death.
“The vast majority of prosecutors these days will never even
seek the death penalty,” Smith said. One reason, he said, is that jurors are
less likely to be sold on it. Life sentences without parole, Smith said, are
seen as better options.
Some district attorneys and state attorneys general have
gone a step further, promising to not push for death sentences.
One of them is Dist. Atty. Aramis Ayala of Orlando, Fla.,
who vowed last month not to seek the death penalty in her cases. “I am
prohibited from making the severity of my sentences the index of my
effectiveness,” she said in a statement. “What has become abundantly clear
through this process is while I currently do have discretion to pursue death
sentences, I have determined that doing so is not in the best interests of this
community, or in the best interest of justice.”
Governors of several states, including Washington, Oregon
and Colorado, have also imposed moratoriums on the death penalty while they are
in office.
The Republican governor of Arkansas, Asa Hutchinson,
defended his state’s string of planned executions this month by saying it
needed to carry them out before one of its drugs used in lethal injections
expired.
“It is uncertain as to whether another drug can be
obtained,” Hutchinson said in a statement.
The drug in question is midazolam, a sedative that’s part of
a three-drug cocktail the state uses in lethal injections. The drug has been
tied to several faulty executions, including those in Oklahoma; Arkansas’
supply expires at the end of April.
Another drug the state uses in executions is vecuronium
bromide, a muscle relaxer. McKesson Corp., a medical supplier that sold the
drug to Arkansas, took the state to court over it. The company says Arkansas
purchased the drug, which McKesson says is intended only for medical use, under
false pretenses.
The controversy over execution drugs goes beyond Arkansas
and extends to the federal government.
In one example, the Texas prison system filed suit this
month against the Food and Drug Administration, which seized 1,000 vials of an
execution drug whose importation was banned in 2015. The state purchased the
drug, sodium thiopental, from India, and the FDA wants it shipped back or
destroyed. The Texas Department of Criminal Justice argues that law enforcement
agencies are exempt from the ban.
Outside of Arkansas and Texas, several other court cases
over the death penalty are looming.
In Cincinnati, the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals is
scheduled in June to have the full court consider whether Ohio’s use of a
three-drug cocktail in lethal injections is unconstitutionally cruel and
unusual punishment. Earlier, a three-judge panel in the appeals court had
upheld a stay that kept the state from using the procedure in executions.
In California, the Supreme Court is expected to decide this summer on challenges to a
voter-approved proposition that reduces the time allowed for appeals of death
sentences. The new rule was intended to speed up executions in the state, where
there are nearly 750 people on death row. The state is considered a
"symbolic" death penalty state because capital punishment is legal
but has not been used since 2006.
States are also reconsidering their use of the death
penalty.
In Oklahoma, a state commission said this week that a
moratorium on the death penalty should be extended until the system for
carrying out sentences is changed so that innocent people do not die.
“Ultimately we found that there are many serious systemic
flaws in Oklahoma's death penalty process that obviously can and have led to
innocent people being convicted and put on death row,” former Oklahoma Gov. Brad Henry, who is on the Oklahoma Death Penalty Review
Commission, said in a statement. Henry, a Democrat, was governor for two terms
when dozens of executions were carried out between 2003 and 2011.
The state had been under scrutiny since a series of botched
executions, and it imposed a moratorium in 2015 after the wrong drug was used
in one. In a high-profile 2014 execution, inmate Clayton Lockett was struggling
for 43 minutes on the gurney after a lethal injection before he finally
succumbed.
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