Capital punishment in Nebraska

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Capital punishment is a legal penalty in the U.S. state of Nebraska.

Though the state unicameral legislature passed its repeal on May 2015 over governor Pete Ricketts' veto, it isn't into force because a referendum campaign gathered enough signatures to suspend it.

This means that the death penalty remain legal in the state, until the electorate will decide to retain or not the repeal bill on November 8, 2016.[1]

Nebraska has currently 11 inmates on death row, all are convicted of either multiple murders or child murder.[2]

History

File:Starkweather.jpg
Starkweather's electrocution in 1959 was last execution in the state until 1994.

Historically, hanging was the method Nebraska used up until the execution of Albert Prince in 1913. After Prince's execution, a new law was passed requiring the electric chair as the method of execution. Allen Grammer was the first person executed by electrocution in Nebraska (his partner in crime, Alson Cole would be executed 13 minutes later).[3]

The most famous execution ever carried out in the state of Nebraska is that of mass murderer Charles Starkweather, who killed 11 people in a two-month murder spree along with his teenage girlfriend Caril Ann Fugate.

On February 8, 2008, the Nebraska Supreme Court declared in State v. Mata that electrocution constitutes a "cruel and unusual punishment" under the Nebraska Constitution.[4] The state legislature subsequently approved a bill to change its method of execution to lethal injection, which was signed by governor Dave Heineman on May 28, 2009. Nebraska was the last state to adopt lethal injection as execution method,[5] but no execution by injection has still been carried out.[6]

A total of 37 individuals have been executed in Nebraska, including three after 1976, when the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of capital punishment in Gregg v. Georgia.

The last execution in the state was in 1997, when Robert Williams was electrocuted for the murder of Patricia McGarry and the subsequent rape and murder of Catherine Brooks. He also murdered a third woman in Minnesota.

Sodium thiopental controversy

A controversy happened in 2011 and 2012 when state officials two times imported sodium thiopental from foreign furnishers based in India and Switzerland. The furnishers said they discovered only after delivering the drugs that it would be used in judicial executions, prompting them to demand the return of the chemicals.[7][8] The state refused, and engaged in a legal battle with the FDA and the furnishers to keep them.[9][10][11] Since the drugs all expired in 2013 and become unusable, the state is unable to carry out any execution until it find another way to get the chemicals.[12][13]

2015 repeal attempt

Legislative vote

On May 20, 2015, the Nebraska State Legislature voted 32–15 on LB268 to abolish the death penalty in the state. The bill was introduced by senator Ernie Chambers, who had introduced similar pieces of legislation over prior decades.

Governor Pete Ricketts, serving his first year in office, vetoed the legislation on May 26, 2015, but the legislature voted 30-19 to override the governor's veto on May 27, 2015.[14]

Referendum petition

In the summer of 2015, an organization called "Nebraskans for the Death Penalty", gathered signatures on a ballot measure petition seeking to reinstate the death penalty in the state. Pete Ricketts and his father contributed one-third of the $913,000 raised by the group.

The group needed to submit 56,942 valid signatures (5% of all registered voters) in order to put a statewide referendum on the 2016 ballot, and 113,883 to suspend the statute until the vote (10% of registered voters). In September 2015, Nebraska Secretary of State John Gale reported that 120,479 signatures have been both certified and verified to his office, causing the bill to no longer be in force.[1]

Lawsuit against referendum

After the necessary signatures have been certified, death penalty foes filed a lawsuit to cancel the popular vote.

They argued that governor Ricketts should have been registered has a petition "sponsor" because he was "in actuality the primary initiating force".

In February 2016, Lancaster County District Judge Lori Maret dismissed the lawsuit, ruling that the sponsor requirement apply only to those who assume statutory responsibility for the referendum. She also criticized the petitioner proposed definition because it would "hinder, rather than facilitate, the people’s referendum rights".[15]

After this legal defeat, death penalty foes began campaign for retaining the repeal bill, and changed their name to "Retain a Just Nebraska" instead of the earlier "Nebraskans for Public Safety".[16]

Current legislation

Legal process

Nebraska is the only state where the sentence of death is decided by a three-judge panel instead than by a jury or a single judge. But the jury is the trier of facts for both the murder and the aggravating factor making the defendant eligible for the death penalty.

The panel includes the presiding judge of the trial and two others judges appointed for that purpose by the state's chief justice.[17] Death sentence must be unanimous, otherwise life imprisonment is imposed.

Clemency is decided by a three-member board comprising the governor, the attorney general and the secretary of state.[18]

Death row inmates are housed at Tecumseh State Correctional Institution (for males) and Nebraska Correctional Center for Women (for females). Executions are carried out at Nebraska State Penitentiary (Lincoln) since 1903.

Capital offenses

Aggravating factors making murder punishable by death are the following:[19]

  1. The offender was previously convicted of another murder or a crime involving the use or threat of violence to the person, or has a substantial prior history of serious assaultive or terrorizing criminal activity;
  2. The murder was committed in an effort to conceal the commission of a crime, or to conceal the identity of the perpetrator of such crime;
  3. The murder was committed for hire, or for pecuniary gain, or the defendant hired another to commit the murder for the defendant;
  4. The murder was especially heinous, atrocious, cruel, or manifested exceptional depravity by ordinary standards of morality and intelligence;
  5. At the time the murder was committed, the offender also committed another murder;
  6. The offender knowingly created a great risk of death to at least several persons;
  7. The victim was a public servant having lawful custody of the offender or another in the lawful performance of his or her official duties and the offender knew or should have known that the victim was a public servant performing his or her official duties;
  8. The murder was committed knowingly to disrupt or hinder the lawful exercise of any governmental function or the enforcement of the laws; or
  9. The victim was a law enforcement officer engaged in the lawful performance of his or her official duties as a law enforcement officer and the offender knew or reasonably should have known that the victim was a law enforcement officer.

Executions after 1976

Three individuals convicted of murder have been executed by Nebraska since 1976. All were executed by the electric chair.

Executed person Date of execution Victims Under Governor
1 Harold Lamont "Wili" Otey September 2, 1994 Jane McManus Ben Nelson
2 John Joubert A July 17, 1996 Danny Eberle and Christopher Walden Ben Nelson
3 Robert E. Williams B [20][21] December 2, 1997 Catherine Brooks and Patricia McGarry Ben Nelson
A John Joubert was also tried and convicted of murdering Ricky Stetson in Portland, Maine. He received a life sentence in Maine.
B Robert E. Williams also murdered Virginia Rowe of Sioux Rapids, Minnesota.[21]

See also

References

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  3. http://www.corrections.state.ne.us/policies/files/DeathRowHistory2-3-07.pdf
  4. http://www.supremecourt.ne.gov/opinions/2008/february/feb8/s05-1268.pdf
  5. http://www.fremonttribune.com/articles/2009/05/29/ap-state-ne/d98fk5do1.txt
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  20. Inmate Details: 31861 -- Robert Williams. Nebraska Department of Correctional Services. Retrieved on 2007-08-17.
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Further reading

  • Baldus, D.C. et al. (2001). The disposition of Nebraska capital and non-capital homicide cases (1973-1999): a legal and empirical analysis. Lincoln, Neb.: Nebraska Commission on Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice.

External links