Lethal injection is no longer an option for Ohio executions, and lawmakers must choose a different method of capital punishment before any inmates can be put to death in the future, Republican Gov. Mike DeWine said according to The Associated Press.
It’s “pretty clear” there won’t be any executions
next year, DeWine told The Associated Press during a year-end interview, adding
he doesn’t see support in the Legislature for making a switch in execution
method a priority. Ohio has an “unofficial moratorium” on capital punishment,
he said.
“Lethal injection appears to us to be impossible
from a practical point of view today,” the governor said.
DeWine said he still supports capital punishment as
Ohio law. But he has come to question its value since the days he helped write
the state’s current law — enacted in 1981 — because of the long delays between
crime and punishment.
DeWine called himself “much more skeptical about
whether it meets the criteria that was certainly in my mind when I voted for
the death penalty and that was that it in fact did deter crime, which to me is
the moral justification.”
Messages were left for leaders in the GOP-controlled
House and Senate seeking comment.
Former Republican House Speaker Larry Householder,
now under federal indictment for his alleged role in a $60 million bribery
scheme, questioned
last year whether the state should reconsider capital punishment
because of the cost and Ohio’s inability to find lethal drugs.
The state’s last execution was July 18, 2018, when
Ohio put
to death Robert Van Hook for killing David Self in Cincinnati in 1985.
Shortly after taking office in 2019, DeWine ordered
the Ohio prison system to look at alternative lethal injection drugs.
That announcement followed a federal judge’s ruling that said Ohio’s current
execution protocol could cause the inmate “severe pain and needless suffering.”
Opponents of Ohio’s death penalty called
on lawmakers last month to enact a capital punishment ban during the
current lame duck legislative session. They repeated that demand Tuesday.
“It’s time for the General Assembly to just end the
death penalty in Ohio and repurpose the funds wasted trying to execute people
into programs to better serve the needs of murder victim families,” said
Abraham Bonowitz, Death Penalty Action director.
Also Tuesday, DeWine said he remains optimistic
about his ability to govern Ohio despite attempts by fellow
GOP lawmakers to limit his powers and even impeach him over his
handling of the pandemic.
“While the few legislators that want to impeach me
have gotten headlines, what has not gotten a lot of headlines is the real
work,” DeWine said.
The career politician, who has drawn strident
criticism from both right and left, is hopeful about 2021 despite the pandemic
surging in many parts of the state, calling next year the “year of recovery.”
When asked whether he had any regrets about
decisions he made in the past nine months, DeWine said does not have the luxury
to reflect when there is so much work left to do.
“There will be time to reflect on that, there will
be books written, there will PhDs and dissertations on the whole pandemic and
that’s fine but we’re in the battle now,” he said.
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