LAS VEGAS (AP) — As lawmakers weigh the future of capital punishment in Nevada, Clark County prosecutors plan to seek a warrant of execution for a death row inmate.
According to the Las Vegas Review-Journal, deputies from District Attorney Steve Wolfson’s appellate division could ask a judge to sign the paperwork for Zane Floyd in the coming weeks.
The 45-year-old Floyd was convicted of killing four people and wounding another inside a Las Vegas supermarket in June 1999.
The Review-Journal reports Floyd’s federal appeals were exhausted last November after the U.S. Supreme Court denied his request for a review of a 9th Circuit Court of Appeals decision that upheld his conviction and sentence.
Under state law, the Nevada Department of Corrections must carry out Floyd’s lethal injection no less than 60 days and no more than 90 days after a judge signs a death warrant.
However, a bill introduced in the state Assembly would make Nevada the 24th state to abolish the death penalty and the sentences of 70 men on Death Row would be commuted to life in prison.
If prosecutors obtain the judge’s signature around April 1, the Review-Journal said Floyd’s execution could take place as lawmakers wrap up their 2021 session barring any further legal hurdles.
Source: The Associated Press, Staff, March 28, 2021
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"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed,
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