Category: Death Penalty

When Execution Drugs Are in Short Supply…

…alternative methods will be found.  Since, as the Court held in Glossip, “the death penalty is constitutional,” and since a majority of our citizens continue to support it, and since gruesome murders continue to be committed that warrant it, we will continue to administer it.  This is true despite false claims that “the death penalty is dying.”  Instead, over the last five years, we have had an average of one execution every 17 days, and, after years of decline (as the murder rate declined), support for capital punishment has held stable at 55% over that time.

The latest news is from South Carolina, which is bringing back firing squads.

Continue reading . . .

Arizona to Resume Executions

Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich is moving forward to resume executions.  Jill Ryan of the Associated Press reports that the state’s last execution was in 2014 when murderer Joseph Wood was put to death.   Like several other death penalty states, Arizona has been unable to carry out death sentences due to pressure by the European Union and other anti-death penalty groups to block drug manufactures from selling their products to states for use in executions.  Last month, US News reported that the state had obtained pentobarbital, the preferred anesthetic used to euthanize condemned murderers. 

Continue reading . . .

Why Did SCOTUS Take the Boston Marathon Bomber Case?

As Kent reported yesterday the Supreme Court granted the government’s petition for cert in the Boston Marathon bomber case.  The questions presented are whether the trial court held a sufficiently extensive voir dire, and whether it erred by excluding evidence that the bomber’s older brother was allegedly involved in different crimes two years before the Boston Marathon murders.

I spent the first few years of my career at the Justice Department answering defendants’ petitions for cert.  The thing that immediately struck me about the government’s cert petition was that the questions presented went only to the application of reasonably settled law to the facts of an individual case.  That is generally a classic formulation of a reason that the Court will not grant review.  There is no broadly applicable area of law in need of elaboration, and no circuit split.

It could be that the case is sufficiently notorious that the Court thought it worthy of review simply standing on its own.  But that seems unlikely; the Court tends to use its scarce time to address contentious legal questions regardless of a case’s public notoriety.  So what’s going on? Continue reading . . .

Brutal Murderer’s Death Sentence Upheld

Oklahoma’s highest criminal court has upheld the conviction and death sentence of a man who beheaded one woman and injured another in September of 2014.  The Associated Press reports that the court rejected murderer Alton Nolen’s not guilty by reason of insanity claim.  Abby Uhlheiser of the Washington Post reports that of Nolen, an habitual felon who converted to Islam while in prison,  had been suspended from his job at a food processing plant and sought revenge later that day.   That afternoon Nolan entered the company’s administrative office armed with a large serrated knife, and approached 54-year-old Coleen Hufford from behind.  In front of witnesses Nolen beheaded the woman and then attacked another female employee before a company security officer shot Nolen, stopping the attack.

Continue reading . . .

Ninth Circuit Upholds Death Sentence for Arizona Killer

A unanimous panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has upheld the conviction and death sentence of habitual felon Robert Walden Jr.  for the rape and murder of one woman and the rapes of two others in 1991.  Howard Fischer of Capitol Media Services reports that at the time of the murders, Walden was on probation for aggravated assault and kidnapping charges stemming from separate attacks on two woman.   On appeal Walden raised multiple claims challenging the photo lineup where his surviving victims identified him, the judge’s decision to allow a single trial for the rapes and the murder, and first time claims challenging the competence of his defense counsel.  The court rejected all of them.

Continue reading . . .

Death Penalty Debate on C-SPAN Tomorrow

The Federalist Society student chapter at the University of Virginia Law School will be hosting a one hour debate on the death penalty tomorrow, Wednesday the 17th, at 5 pm EDT.  I’m told it will be on C-SPAN.  Carol Steiker, the Henry J. Friendly Professor of Law and Special Advisor for Public Service at Harvard Law School will speak in opposition; I will speak in support.  I have debated Prof. Steiker before and have found her to be a thoughtful, amicable and candid advocate.

Cal. App. Dumps ACLU Suit in Execution Controversy

Three years ago, three California District Attorneys sought to intervene in the long-running federal litigation over California’s lethal injection method. The Attorney General, in his role as attorney for the head of the prison department, was not properly representing the people of the State as the plaintiff in the underlying criminal cases, in their view. The federal district court refused intervention, and the DAs appealed to the Ninth Circuit.

Last Friday, the ACLU filed a petition for writ of mandate in the California Court of Appeal for the First District, which covers the northern part of the San Francisco Bay Area and the north coast. They asked the state court to restrain the DAs from litigating in federal court. See this press release, with a link to the petition.

Yesterday, a mere two business days after the petition was filed, the Court of Appeal dismissed it. They did not even wait for the DAs to respond. Continue reading . . .

Death Penalty Off the Table for Child-Abusing Murderers in L.A. County

An article by Roman Chiarello of Fox News this morning highlights the demand to restore the option to seek the death penalty for the worst murderers in Los Angeles County. On June 21, 2018, a 10-year-old boy named Anthony Avalos was pronounced dead at a hospital in Los Angeles County after suffering from a horrific brain injury. Years of abuse from Anthony’s mother and boyfriend came before the untimely death of Anthony.

According to Los Angeles County Deputy District Attorney Jon Hatami, “The decision [to seek the death penalty] was made by a committee through a rigorous process. This happened over a year ago, with discussions with the family, taking into consideration the mitigation of the defendants, taking into consideration any evidence that the defense attorneys presented.” Now with Gascón’s movement in favor of offenders, and in this case murderers, there is no ability to seek the death penalty in this case. 

Continue reading . . .

Clergy in the Execution Chamber Whack-a-Mole Continues

The game of “whack-a-mole” with clergy being in the execution chamber when a murderer finally gets his just deserts has popped up again.

Yesterday, the Supreme Court refused to lift a stay of execution imposed by the Eleventh Circuit on the ground that Alabama will not allow non-employees, including clergy, in the actual execution room. Four of the Justices concurring in this order purport to instruct the States how they can easily comply with the requirements and proceed with long-overdue justice. We’ve been there, done that. That’s how we got here. Continue reading . . .