The decision marked the second time this year that the
new-look court overturned one of its own decisions on the death penalty.
The court reversed a previous decision that allowed
retroactively applying a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that said Florida couldn’t
base the determination of a condemned prisoners intellectual disability
strictly on an IQ test because there is a margin of error.
The latest decision a 4-1 Florida ruling said that the state high
court previously made the mistake of making the issue retroactive, and thus
Harry Phillips can’t make the case that his death sentence should be converted
to life because he is intellectually disabled.
Phillips was sentenced to death for the 1982 murder of
parole supervisor Bjorn Thomas Svenson in Miami. A prior claim that he was
intellectually disabled was denied, but that was when Florida law set an IQ of
70 or below as the definition of intellectually disabled.
In 2002, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that executing the
intellectually disabled violates the Constitution’s ban on cruel and unusual
punishment. But until the 2014 ruling, it let states decide how to determine if
condemned prisoners were disabled.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled on a Florida case in 2014 that
because of a margin of error of five points, condemned individuals with IQ
scores up to 75 points could challenge a death sentence using other factors to
determine their disability.
In 2016, the state Supreme Court allowed a condemned
prisoner to get a new sentencing hearing based on the U.S. Supreme Court
decision. Now, the court says that was a mistake because cases decided before
the 2014 U.S. Supreme Court shouldn’t be retroactive. The decision drew a sharp
rebuke from Florida Justice Jorge Labarga.
“Yet again, this Court has removed an important safeguard in
maintaining the integrity of Florida’s death penalty jurisprudence,” Labarga
wrote in his dissenting opinion. “The result is an increased risk that certain
individuals may be executed, even if they are intellectually disabled.”
The Florida Supreme Court also reversed itself in January
with a ruling saying it was wrong when it said a jury must be unanimous in
deciding a convicted murderer should be sentenced to death. It was dramatic
legal reversal potentially affecting dozens of death row cases.
The composition of the Florida high court has gone from
leaning liberal to firmly conservative. Three liberal justices on the
seven-member court were forced to retire because of age limits on the same day
Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis took office in January 2019. That gave DeSantis
the opportunity to appoint three conservative judges. Two of those justices
have since been appointed to a federal appeals court and were not part of
Thursday’s 4-1 decision.
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