Trump justices push court to medieval measures
For years, most of the U.S. has
been changing death penalty laws in the direction of phasing it out, or at
least applying it in a more humane way.
In 2002, the Supreme Court
ruled that people with intellectual disabilities cannot be executed.
In 2005, another ruling held that the U.S. cannot execute anyone for committing a crime as a minor. Twenty states have banned capital punishment.
In 2005, another ruling held that the U.S. cannot execute anyone for committing a crime as a minor. Twenty states have banned capital punishment.
The most recent to ban it are
Washington in 2018, Delaware in 2016, Maryland in 2013, Connecticut in 2012,
and Illinois in 2011.
Unfortunately, our newly right
wing-dominated Supreme Court recently made a move in the opposite direction.
The Eighth Amendment bans cruel
and unusual punishment. Capital punishment has been becoming more unusual over
the past decade or so. Now, with the court’s help, it’s becoming more cruel.
The state of Missouri is set to execute Russell Becklew, a man who suffers from a rare condition that will make death by lethal injection unbearably painful. He’s requested to be executed by a different method that will be quicker.
Established precedent was that
inmates contesting their method of execution must provide an alternative that
would cause less pain. Becklew has.
In the two previous cases that
established this precedent, the court ruled that states should try to minimize
pain when carrying out executions.
In a new decision, Trump-appointed Justice Neil Gorsuch has just accepted an interpretation of this — promoted earlier by Justice Clarence Thomas — that it only means that states should not “intentionally” make executions more painful than necessary.
In a new decision, Trump-appointed Justice Neil Gorsuch has just accepted an interpretation of this — promoted earlier by Justice Clarence Thomas — that it only means that states should not “intentionally” make executions more painful than necessary.
Why?
Honestly, why? If the prisoner
is going to be executed anyway, and we are no longer debating his or her
innocence, or the fairness in how we apply the death penalty, or whether it can
ever be just to kill another human, what interest is there for the state in
making the execution more painful?
Russell Bucklew has requested to
be executed via a less painful method, and the court has just ruled against
him. He will suffer more as a result.
How does this benefit the American people in any way?
How does this benefit the American people in any way?
Humans make mistakes, and
sometimes we execute the innocent. Even when the person executed is guilty,
courts give harsher sentences to more marginalized peoples than to more
privileged people for committing the same crime.
The wealthy can hire top notch lawyers whereas the poor receive public defenders. People of color are disproportionately sentenced to death.
The wealthy can hire top notch lawyers whereas the poor receive public defenders. People of color are disproportionately sentenced to death.
Given that the death penalty is
applied imperfectly, even when lawyers, judge, and juries all do their best to
make it as fair as possible, we should aim to move in the direction of less
cruelty, not more.
OtherWords columnist Jill
Richardson is pursuing a PhD in sociology at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison. She lives in San Diego. Distributed by OtherWords.org.