ABA Asks SCOTUS to Amend Florida’s Death Penalty Law

Prisoner in orange handcuffed to bars
The American Bar Association is asking the US Supreme
Court to look into how the death penalty is used in Florida.
Image:  Shutterstock
The death penalty will likely always be a source of legal, not to mention moral, contention, but this is particularly true right now in Florida, where the American Bar Association recently filed a brief asking the US Supreme Court to overturn part of the state’s death penalty law.  The ABA notes that Florida is the only state that does not require a unanimous jury vote to invoke the death penalty, which could potentially be a violation of the Sixth Amendment, granting the right to trial by jury, and the Eighth Amendment, which prohibits cruel and unusual punishment.

“We have a love-hate relationship with the death penalty,” notes Florida attorney Kendall Coffey.  “We see these despicable crimes; we want the maximum punishment applied to people who brutally kill children or to terrorists. At the same time we’re very concerned about mistakes being made, both mistakes with respect to selecting who is worthy of dying, if anyone, and mistakes with respect to the actual administration of execution. And these kind of cases, where horrible pains and horrible mistreatment occurs in the course of an execution, are very troubling to Americans and obviously of great concern to the United States Supreme Court.”

The ABA’s appeal comes in large part as a reaction to the case of Timothy Lee Hurst, sentenced to death for the 1998 murder of an assistant manager at the fast food restaurant where both worked.  His lawyer argued earlier this year that Florida’s death penalty law violates Hurst’s rights because the sentencing was given by a majority of the jury, not unanimously.

Current Florida law states that a jury can recommend the death penalty as its final sentence even without a majority.  The judge must make the ultimate decision, however.

“Unique among all capital punishment jurisdictions in the United States, Florida is the only jurisdiction that allows a jury to determine by majority vote both whether aggravating circumstances have been proved beyond a reasonable doubt and to recommend a sentence of death,” says the ABA’s argument summary.  “Further, Florida does not require that the majority agree on which aggravating factor exists….And the majority does not report which aggravator(s) it finds to the judge, but reports only its recommendation.”

Florida is the number two state, behind Texas, for using the death sentence.  Of those currently on death row, half were sent there by split jury decisions.

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