Trump and DeSantis want to make it easier to execute people, and Biden could face a rush of clemency requests from federal death row.
A few months ago, unnamed sources
told Rolling Stone that former President Donald Trump was musing about ordering group executions, firing squads — and even guillotines — if elected president again in 2024. His spokesman denied some of the claims, but Trump did oversee more executions than any president in modern history, and he’s
riffing at rallies about executing people for selling drugs, something the U.S.
has never done.
It is easy enough to dismiss these stories. Presidents appoint attorneys general, who oversee key decisions around federal capital punishment. Neither can unilaterally pick execution methods. But the news reports point to a new political dynamic: After a generation of decline, the death penalty seems poised to return to presidential campaign battles, and this could lead to more executions — and not just because of Trump.
But the death penalty has traditionally been a political symbol of punitiveness, making other sentences appear lenient by comparison. Florida outlets have looked more closely at DeSantis’ efforts to turn the state into a national epicenter of the practice, potentially taking the title of the “capital of capital punishment” from states that have carried out far more executions in recent years, like
Texas and
Oklahoma.
DeSantis has overseen only four executions since taking office in 2019, with another scheduled for May. His predecessor oversaw 28. But the governor began focusing publicly on the subject last fall, after a jury rejected the death penalty for Nikolas Cruz, who killed 17 people at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland.
Many,
though not all, of the victims’ families were outraged. Some of the jurors complained too, revealing that nine of them had wanted to send Cruz to death row. They could not because death sentences must be unanimous, and three jurors were in opposition.
The sexual battery bill is explicitly courting the U.S. Supreme Court to reverse its own precedent, set in 2008, when five justices voted to bar the death penalty for crimes that don’t involve homicide. All those justices have since left the court, which has shifted right and shown a willingness to overturn precedent.
It may take a long time for a test case, involving a death sentence for child rape, to reach the Supreme Court. But the removal of unanimous juries in Florida could lead to new death sentences in the coming months. Last year, I spoke with Florida defense lawyers
about their efforts to stop death sentences, and some told me they would race to secure as many life sentences as possible.
It is easy to imagine DeSantis and Trump’s death penalty rhetoric catching on with more presidential candidates. Another potential Republican contender, former Vice President Mike Pence, recently
called for an expedited process for executing mass shooters. Two more GOP candidates, former governors Nikki Haley of South Carolina and Asa Hutchinson of Arkansas, both oversaw executions while in office, which they could cite in their appeals to voters.
Source:
themarshallproject.org, Maurice Chammah, April 22, 2023
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"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed,
but by the punishments that the good have inflicted."
— Oscar Wilde