California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who three years ago placed a moratorium on executions, now is moving to dismantle the United States’ largest death row by moving all condemned inmates to other prisons within two years, reported The Associated Press.
The goal is to turn the section at San Quentin State
Prison into a “positive, healing environment.” Newsom said Monday it’s an
outgrowth of his opposition to what he believes is a deeply flawed system, one
that “gets my blood boiling.”
“The prospect of your ending up on death row has
more to do with your wealth and race than it does your guilt or innocence,” he
said. “We talk about justice, we preach justice, but as a nation, we don’t
practice it on death row.”
California, which last carried out an execution in
2006, is one of 28 states that maintain death rows, along with the U.S.
government, according to the Death
Penalty Information Center. While other states like Illinois have
abolished executions, California is merging its condemned inmates into the
general prison population with no expectation that any will face execution anytime
in the near future.
“We are starting the process of closing death row to
repurpose and transform the current housing units into something innovative and
anchored in rehabilitation,” California Department of Corrections and
Rehabilitation spokeswoman Vicky Waters told The Associated Press.
Oregon similarly transferred its much smaller
condemned population to other inmate housing two years ago.
Newsom, a Democrat, imposed a moratorium on
executions in 2019 and shut down the state’s execution chamber at San Quentin,
north of San Francisco. Now his administration is turning on its head a 2016
voter-approved initiative intended to expedite executions by capitalizing on
one provision that allowed inmates to be moved off death row.
“The underlying motive of the administration is to
mainstream as many of these condemned murderers as possible,” said Michael
Rushford, president of the Criminal Justice Legal Foundation, which backed the
initiative. “Our objective was to speed up the process.”
He added he doesn’t think victims are happy with the
administration’s decision.
“They’re moving condemned murderers into facilities
that are going to make their lives better and offer them more amenities, while
the victims still mourn the death of their family member,” Rushford said.
Newsom said voters approved the move, though he
doubts many understood the provision.
“When they affirmed the death penalty, they also
affirmed a responsibility ... to actually move that population on death row out
and to get them working,” Newsom said.
Newsom is “pouring more salt on the wounds of the
victims,” countered Crime Victims United of California president Nina Salarno.
“He’s usurping the law.’”
Actor Mike Farrell, president of the group Death
Penalty Focus, which opposes the death penalty, said he is thrilled with the
idea but concerned by transfers he said could turn condemned inmates into “very
ripe targets” for other prisoners.
“We’re talking about people who have been in a
specific kind of isolation for decades,” living with the prospect of execution,
Farrell said. “To simply move them without very serious consideration of their
needs, their personal issues, their psychological state and their safety would
be a hideous mistake.”
Corrections officials began a voluntary two-year pilot program in January 2020 that as of
Friday had moved 116 of the state’s 673 condemned male inmates to one of seven
other prisons that have maximum security facilities and are surrounded by
lethal electrified fences.
They intend to submit permanent proposed regulations
within weeks that would make the transfers mandatory and “allow for the
repurposing of all death row housing units,” Waters said.
The ballot measure approved six years ago also required
condemned inmates to participate in prison jobs, with 70% of the money going
for restitution to their victims, and corrections officials said that’s their
goal with the transfers. By the end of last year, more than $49,000 in
restitution had been collected under the pilot program.
Newsom’s proposed budget for the fiscal year
starting July 1 seeks $1.5 million to find new uses for the vacant
condemned housing.
It notes that death row and its supporting
activities are in the same area as facilities used for rehabilitation programs
for medium-security San Quentin inmates. The money would be used to hire a consultant
to “develop options for (the) space focused on creating a positive, healing
environment to provide increased rehabilitative, educational and health care
opportunities.”
San Quentin’s never-used $853,000 execution chamber
is in a separate area of the prison, and there are no plans to “repurpose” that
area, Waters said.
California voters supported the death penalty in
2012 and 2016. An advisory panel to Newsom and lawmakers, the Committee on
Revision of the Penal Code, in November became the latest to recommend
repealing the death penalty, calling it “beyond
repair.”
Under the state’s transfer program, condemned
inmates moved to other prisons can be housed in solitary or disciplinary confinement if officials
decide they cannot be safely housed with others, although they are supposed to
be interspersed with other inmates. Inmates on death row are housed one to a
cell, but the transferred inmates can be housed with others if it’s deemed
safe.
“There have been no safety concerns, and no major
disciplinary issues have occurred,” Waters said.
When it comes to jobs and other rehabilitation
activities, condemned inmates outside death row are treated similarly to
inmates serving sentences of life without parole. That includes a variety of
jobs such as maintenance and administrative duties, according to prison
officials.
The condemned inmates are counted more often and are
constantly supervised during activities, officials said.
Before they are moved, they are “carefully screened
to determine whether they can safely participate in the program,” according to
the department. That includes things like each inmate’s security level,
medical, psychiatric and other needs, their behavior, safety concerns and
notoriety.
Female condemned inmates are housed at the Central
California Women’s Facility in Chowchilla. They can transfer to less
restrictive housing within the same prison, and eight of the 21 have done so.
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