But more recent signals from the court suggest that such a broad
ruling is not likely any time soon, even though there are three
death-penalty cases already on the docket for the new term, which
begins Oct 5.
In the June case, which upheld Oklahoma's procedures by a 5-to-4
margin, liberal justices Stephen Breyer and Ruth Bader Ginsburg
joined in a dissenting opinion that called for a full reexamination
of capital punishment. As currently applied, Breyer wrote, the death
penalty "likely constitutes a legally prohibited 'cruel and unusual
punishment.'"
Within two weeks of that June 29 decision, however, Breyer and
Ginsburg indicated that they don't intend to raise their concerns in
every death penalty case that comes before them.
On July 14, the court rejected last-minute stay applications filed
by Missouri inmate David Zink. In one of his court filings, Zink had
asked the court to rule that the death penalty was unconstitutional.
The court often rejects stay-of-execution applications without
comment or a record of how justices voted, but it does note if
justices publicly dissent, and neither Breyer nor Ginsburg did.
This month, the court rejected a similar stay application from
another Missouri inmate, Roderick Nunley. Again, neither Breyer nor
Ginsburg publicly dissented and the inmate was executed.
Their silence indicated that Breyer and Ginsburg were "not quite in
the category of adamant opposition in all cases," said Kent
Scheiddeger, legal director of the pro-death penalty Criminal
Justice Legal Foundation.
In any event, since four votes are needed to accept a case for
consideration by the court, Breyer and Ginsburg would need two more
justices to join them in support of hearing a case directly
challenging the death penalty.
Fellow liberal justices Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan also
dissented in the Oklahoma case, but neither joined Breyer's opinion.
The court's conservatives would be expected to uphold the death
penalty, with Justice Anthony Kennedy, a conservative appointed by
President Ronald Reagan, likely to be the swing vote. He joined
liberals in the majority in 2002, when the court banned death
sentences for the mentally disabled, and in a 2005 case in which the
court said that people sentenced to death for offenses committed as
juveniles could not be executed. But he voted with his fellow
conservatives in June's lethal injection case.
Some death penalty experts have suggested that Breyer's dissent in
the Oklahoma case may have been carefully aimed. He was "writing not
just for the public, but for Justice Kennedy," said Robert Dunham,
executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center, a
nonprofit that tracks the issue and does not take a stand on whether
capital punishment should be abolished.
[to top of second column] |
NIBBLING AROUND THE EDGES
Although death penalty opponents are now on alert that Breyer and
Ginsburg are interested in a case that squarely attacks the death
penalty, it could take time for the right case to come to the court.
In the meantime, if the court-watchers' interpretations of Breyer
and Ginsburg's moves this summer are accurate, the justices will
likely continue to consider more discrete legal issues that nibble
around the edges of the bigger constitutional question.
The case this fall most likely to attract public attention to
capital punishment involves allegations of prosecutorial misconduct
in Georgia. In that case, a black man, Timothy Foster, was sentenced
to death by an all-white jury, and the question before the Supreme
Court will be whether prosecutors unlawfully struck potential black
members of the jury. [ID: nL1N0YH22B]
Two other cases scheduled for the session will focus on narrower,
state-specific issues concerning the death penalty process in Kansas
and Florida.
The high court has not seriously debated the constitutionality of
the death penalty since the 1970s. In 1972, the justices effectively
suspended it in the landmark Furman v. Georgia decision, ruling that
the punishment was being imposed unconstitutionally. But the
decision allowed states to re-write their laws to address the
problem. Within four years, the court had approved new standards for
death penalty cases, saying that, if states conformed to them, the
punishment was constitutional.
The death penalty is on the books in 31 states, and the federal
government also authorizes the punishment in cases it prosecutes.
There are signs that the U.S. public is turning away from the death
penalty. The number of death sentences imposed fell to a 20-year low
in 2014, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.
The high-profile ruling in June, Glossip v. Gross, came at a time of
increased focus on the death penalty following several botched
executions. The lead plaintiff in that case, convicted murderer
Richard Glossip, received a last minute stay from the Oklahoma Court
of Criminal Appeals on Sept. 16, after filing new court papers
claiming his innocence. His execution has since been rescheduled for
Sept. 30 absent further court intervention.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley; Editing by Amy Stevens and Sue
Horton)
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