Former Ohio Supreme Court Justice Evelyn Lundberg Stratton (pictured) testified in state legislative hearings on October 14 that Ohio should ban use of the death penalty against defendants who suffer from serious mental illness when they commit a capital crime. Stratton, a Republican who was appointed to the court in 1996 and served, following reelection, until 2012, called the death penalty “inefficient, ineffective and a great burden on our society.” Stratton said that the U.S. Supreme Court has barred the execution of juveniles and people with intellectual disabilities because of their reduced culpability. She told the Ohio Senate Criminal Justice Committee that people with serious mental illnesses have similarly reduced culpability. “Do we as a society say we want to execute someone who has diminished capacity and mental Illness?” Stratton asked the committee. Last year, the Ohio Supreme Court Joint Task Force on the Death Penalty issued 56 reform recommendations, including a ban on executing those with serious mental illness. Stratton said the bill would apply to defendants diagnosed with such serious mental illnesses as schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and depressive and delusional disorders. The bill has bipartisan sponsorship and is also supported by the National Alliance on Mental Illness.

(A. Johnson, “Don’t execute mentally ill, lawmakers told,” The Columbus Dispatch, October 14, 2015.) See Mental Illness and Recent Legislation.