Attorney General Merrick B. Garland imposed a moratorium on federal executions pending a review of the Justice Department’s policies and procedures, reversing the Trump administration’s decision to resume executions of federal death row inmates last year after a nearly two-decade hiatus, reported the Washington Post.
“The Department of Justice must ensure that everyone in the
federal criminal justice system is not only afforded the rights guaranteed by
the Constitution and laws of the United States, but is also treated fairly and
humanely,” Mr. Garland said in a memo to Justice Department leaders. “That obligation has
special force in capital cases.”
Mr. Garland said in his memo that the deputy attorney
general, Lisa O. Monaco, would supervise a review of Justice Department
policies related to federal executions that were implemented by former Attorney
General William P. Barr. He asked that several of the department’s divisions,
including the Bureau of Prisons, the criminal division and the civil rights
division, participate, along with other federal agencies and outside advocacy
groups.
After 17 years without executions, the Justice Department
under Mr. Barr began to execute federal death row inmates last summer. He
argued that the Justice Department under both parties had sought the death
penalty and that the government owed “the victims and their families to carry
forward the sentence imposed by our justice system.”
The Trump administration ultimately executed 13 people, more
than three times the number of people put to death by the federal government in
the previous six decades.
Andrew Bates, a White House spokesman, said President Biden
approved of Mr. Garland’s decision.
“As the president has made clear, he has significant
concerns about the death penalty and how it is implemented, and he believes the
Department of Justice should return to its prior practice of not carrying out
executions,” Mr. Bates said.
As a candidate, Mr. Biden said that he would work to abolish
federal executions and incentivize states to follow suit.
The Supreme Court also said in March that it would review an appeals court’s decision to overturn the death
sentence of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, who was sentenced to death for his role in the
2013 Boston Marathon bombings.
Should the Biden administration withdraw its support for the
death penalty against Mr. Tsarnaev, the Supreme Court case would become moot.
Mr. Garland has asked the department to review policies
implemented in the last two years that paved the way to restart federal
executions.
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