Gov. Gavin Newsoms opposition to the death penalty appears
destined for a test
By
PHIL
WILLON
MAR 12, 2019 | 8:50 AM
| SACRAMENTO
California is home to 737 condemned inmates, 24 of whom have exhausted
their appeals. Were poised to potentially oversee the execution of more
prisoners than any other state in modern history, says Gov. Gavin
Newsom. (John G. Mabanglo / EPA/Shutterstock)
In an executive order last month calling for new DNA tests in the
quadruple-murder case of death row inmate Kevin Cooper, Gov. Gavin Newsom
said he was acting to ensure that all evidence is examined when the
government seeks to impose the ultimate punishment.
Coopers fate wont be the last in Newsoms hands. California is home to
the nations largest death row with 737 condemned inmates 24 of whom
are convicted of murder and have exhausted their appeals, like
Cooper.
The state has not put a prisoner to death since 2006 because of a series
of legal challenges to its method of lethal injection. But Newsom said he
expects those court cases to be resolved while hes in office, clearing
the way for executions to resume in California.
Were poised to potentially oversee the execution of more prisoners than
any other state in modern history, Newsom said. Those 24 have gone
through their process and many others are right behind them.
The governor has been open about his opposition to the death penalty,
saying that he has the ability under the law to put his beliefs into
practice. As lieutenant governor, he was one of a few statewide officials
to endorse a failed 2016 ballot measure to abolish the death penalty,
while then-Gov. Jerry Brown and then-Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris, who is now
in the U.S. Senate and running for president, took no official
position.
Newsom directed his legal advisors to
assess
his options as Californias chief executive, which include the
constitutional power to commute death sentences and issue temporary
reprieves. But the governor must balance his opinions on capital
punishment with the will of California voters, who over the last six
years rejected two statewide ballot measures to repeal the death penalty
and favored fast-tracking the appeals process.
Newsom has not said publicly what he plans to do, but the governor
indicated he may take action in the near future.
The minute I got elected, in the transition, I prioritized this issue,
Newsom told The Times in a recent interview. I dont want to react to
something. I want to be proactive. And I have been very proactive in
trying to determine what the best path is.
Since his election, Newsom has sought counsel on the issue of capital
punishment from religious leaders, state lawmakers and former governors
from across the county, including his predecessor, Brown. Hes also
talked with former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, the last California
governor to preside over an execution in the state.
Death penalty opponents believe Newsom will not allow an execution to
take place while he is in office given his objections
to
a death penalty process he has said is "administered with
troubling racial disparities, and because of wrongful convictions in the
judicial system.
Sometimes being a leader is leading. I dont think Newsom will ever put
somebody to death, said Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez (D-San Diego), an
opponent of the death penalty. Slavery was once a law and also popular
in this country and there were people who stood up and said, No, this is
wrong.
Former M*A*S*H star Mike Farrell,
a
leading advocate for abolishing the
death
penalty,said he spoke with Newsom about the issue during the 2018
gubernatorial campaign.
I dont believe he will allow an execution to go forward during his time
in office, Farrell said. Thats me, thats my sense of the man [from]
my conversations with him.
Farrell was a major proponent of 2016s Proposition 62, which would have
abolished the death penalty for first-degree murder and reduced death
sentences to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
California
voters rejected the measure by a margin of 53% to 47%. Voters
narrowly approved Proposition 66, a measure on the same ballot to
streamline death penalty appeals.
DNA tests could reveal if Kevin Cooper was wrongly convicted of murder.
Why didn't Jerry Brown order them? »
The death chamber of the lethal injection facility at San Quentin State
Prison. California has not put a prisoner to death since 2006 because of
a series of legal challenges to its method of lethal injection. (Eric
Risberg / Associated Press)
Two days before the election in 2016, Newsom sent out a tweet calling the
death penalty
fundamentally immoral, and highlighting the case of Alabama
prisoner Anthony Ray Hinton, who was sentenced to death for a double
murder and released in 2015 after forensic experts couldn't determine
whether bullets from the crime scene came from his gun.
Farrell urged Newsom to take a stand regardless of public perception and
said he wants the governor to display the same political courage he did
as mayor of San Francisco, when he
ordered
the city to issue same-sex marriage licenses in 2004.
He certainly can stop an execution, Farrell said. Thats within his
power.
The state Constitution gives the California governor the authority to
grant a reprieve, pardon, and commutation, but those executive powers
have limits.
For condemned inmates convicted of a single felony, Newsom has authority
to commute sentences to life in prison. But the governor cannot commute
the sentences of prisoners convicted of two separate felonies a
population that includes more than half the inmates on death row
without the approval of the California Supreme Court. The
court
rejected 10 commutations handed out by Gov. Brown in his last full
month in office, all of which involved people convicted of multiple
felonies. The court did not provide an explanation for the
action.
The provision is in the Constitution to prevent an abuse of power by
the governor, said Kent Scheidegger, legal director of the pro-death
penalty Criminal Justice Legal Foundation. It was the first time in
decades that Californias top court rejected a governors commutations,
which should serve as a warning to Newsom, he said.
YouTube
@YouTube
-
- Gavin Newsom
- @GavinNewsom
- I support
#YesOn62 &
#NoOn66. The
death penalty is a failed policy that wastes money & is fundamentally
immoral. https://youtu.be/MIzlobU8Uo0
-
241
-
5:09 PM - Nov 6, 2016
102 people are talking about this
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The governor also has the constitutional authority to grant reprieves to
prisoners facing execution, in essence a temporary stay. Newsom could
impose a de facto moratorium on capital punishment in California by
granting a reprieve each time an inmate is sent to the death chamber,
Scheidegger said. But those reprieves would expire as soon as Newsom
leaves office, pushing the life-and-death decisions to his
successor.
That also would be an abuse of power. Its not why we have clemency,
Scheidegger said, arguing that those powers should be used only as a
protection against miscarriages of justice.
Shilpi Agarwal, a staff attorney with an expertise in criminal justice at
the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California, disagrees. She
said the governor has the constitutional authority to commute sentences
and prevent executions from taking place.
The governor has very important role to play, and I sincerely hope that
he chooses to exercise his discretion, Agarwal said.
Governors in Oregon, Colorado and Pennsylvania have imposed moratoriums
on executions in those states, all using executive powers similar to
those held by Newsom.
Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf halted capital punishment there in 2015 after
deciding that the state had a flawed system that has been proven to be
an endless cycle of court proceedings as well as ineffective, unjust, and
expensive.
Newsom has voiced similar concerns, particularly regarding the
racial
and regional disparities related to who is sentenced to death in
California.
Six former governors had urged Brown, who is opposed to the death
penalty,
to
commute the sentences of all of Californias death row inmates
before he left office in January, a request he rejected.
California voters approved a statewide ballot measure reinstating the
death penalty in 1978, six years after it was halted by the U.S. Supreme
Court and two years after a high court ruling allowed executions to
resume. Since 1978, California has carried out 13 executions under Govs.
Pete Wilson, Gray Davis and Schwarzenegger. During that same time, 26
inmates on death row have died by suicide, and 79 have died of natural
causes, according to the California Department of Corrections and
Rehabilitation.
Among the 24 death row inmates who have exhausted their appeals is
Cooper, who was sentenced to death in 1985 after he was convicted of
killing Doug and Peggy Ryen and their 10-year-old daughter, Jessica, as
well 11-year-old Christopher Hughes, who was unrelated to the family.
They were found stabbed to death in a Chino Hills home.
Newsoms executive order requiring additional DNA testing in that case
came after Coopers attorneys alleged that key pieces of evidence were
not properly tested and needed to be analyzed with modern
technology.
As you saw what I just did with Cooper, I take this very seriously,
Newsom said. Ive been a strong advocate in opposition to the death
penalty.
Michael Morales, who was sentenced to death in 1981 for raping and
murdering 17-year-old Lodi, Calif., high school student Terri Winchell,
has also exhausted all of his appeals. His
execution
was
stayed in February 2006 after his lawyers argued that the states
lethal injection procedure using sedatives and paralytic agents might
mask, rather than prevent, pain from the final heart-stopping
chemicals.
A federal judge halted all executions later that year, ruling that
Californias three-drug lethal injection protocol risked producing a
painful death and violated the constitutional prohibition on cruel and
unusual punishment.
California finalized new lethal injection regulations in early 2018,
which require executioners to use a single chemical, either pentobarbital
or thiopental. But the administrative process the state used to determine
those standards is being challenged in court by the ACLU.
Agarwal said she doesnt expect the legal challenges against the death
penalty to subside anytime soon. If true, Newsom may not have to decide
how to handle the cases, just like his predecessor.
I think that there is virtually no chance that California will be in any
sort of position to begin executions within the next four years, Agarwal
said. Theres just so many problems with the death penalty.
Sacramento political scientist Kim Nalder said the close votes of the two
death penalty ballot measures in 2016 showed that Californians are almost
evenly divided on the issue, and the national trend has moved toward
abolishing capital punishment.
According to the Death Penalty Information Center, eight states have
abolished capital punishment either through the legislative process or by
court ruling since 2007.
Newsom might be on solid enough footing to do what he can to stall or
stop executions if and when it comes to that, Nalder said. It could be
a close call. You can always fall back as an elected official saying the
voters voted for me because they trust my judgment.
In August, Newsom told news outlet CALmatters that he wanted to give
California voters a chance to reconsider whether to abolish the death
penalty. But doing so could come with a drawback: If Californians again
vote to keep the death penalty, Newsom might feel pressure to abide by
their decision.
Once you put it out to the voters its pretty hard to go against their
will, Nalder said.
Newsom, who is Catholic, said he has been doing a lot of soul searching
in recent months. His late father, William Newsom, was also opposed to
the death penalty, and the governor said they discussed the issue ad
nauseum. In an interview with a
University
of California oral history project a decade ago, William Newsom, a
former state appellate court justice, said he presided over three capital
cases while he was a trial judge, and set aside the juries recommended
death sentences in all of them.
Newsom said his fathers opposition was hardened later in life by the
case of Pete Pianezzi, a longtime friend who was convicted of
first-degree murder for
shooting
and
killing a gambler and busboy in Los Angeles in 1937.
Pianezzi escaped the death penalty by a single vote and served 13 years
in prison. He was later exonerated after mafia hit man Jimmy "The
Weasel" Fratiano disclosed that the murders were committed by two
gangsters with ties to a Los Angeles crime family.
Newsom led an effort to get Pianezzi a full pardon, which Brown granted
in 1981.
This is a deep issue personally for me, going back to my relationship
with my father, Newsom said. A governor has to sign off and youve
got to live with yourself.
Source link:
https://www.latimes.com/politics/la-pol-ca-governor-gavin-newsom-death-penalty-20190312-story.html