Within two weeks of California Governor Gavin Newsom’s announce­ment that he was halt­ing exe­cu­tions in the state, the deci­sion to issue the mora­to­ri­um has been bol­stered from two unre­lat­ed and inde­pen­dent sources. A statewide poll under­way at the time of Newson’s mora­to­ri­um announce­ment and released by the Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC) on March 27, 2019 found that by a record 2:1 mar­gin, Californians pre­ferred life with­out pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole over the death penal­ty as the pun­ish­ment for first-degree mur­der. Then on March 28, in the first post-mora­to­ri­um death-penal­ty deci­sion issued by the California Supreme Court, two jus­tices sharply crit­i­cized the state’s death-penal­ty sys­tem as dys­func­tion­al,” expen­sive,” and unworkable. 

PPIC had just start­ed its annu­al mul­ti-top­ic poll on Californians and their gov­ern­ment when Governor Newsom announced the mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions, and the Policy Institute added a ques­tion about the death penal­ty to the poll. PPIC found that, among all adults, 62% said life in prison with no pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole (LWOP) should be the pun­ish­ment for those who com­mit first-degree mur­der, while 31% pre­ferred the death penal­ty. Among like­ly vot­ers, 58% pre­ferred LWOP ver­sus 38% who favored the death penal­ty. Over the last 19 years, the per­cent­age of Californians who pre­fer LWOP has risen from 47% to this year’s record high, while sup­port for the death penal­ty has fall­en from 49% to this year’s record low. Democrats (76%-21%) and Independents (56%-36%) over­whelm­ing­ly pre­ferred LWOP, while Republicans pre­ferred the death penal­ty by 64%-32%. In the 2016 elec­tion, California vot­ers defeat­ed a ref­er­en­dum to abol­ish cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment and nar­row­ly passed Proposition 66, a ref­er­en­dum that claimed it would speed up exe­cu­tions. This is a case where pub­lic opin­ion con­tin­ues to shift, and shift sup­port away from the death penal­ty,” said Mark Baldassare, pres­i­dent of the Public Policy Institute of California. The cam­paigns in 2012 and 2016 were very effec­tive in bring­ing up exam­ples of hor­ri­ble crimes that were com­mit­ted, and it raised ques­tions in people’s minds about whether they were pre­pared to make that deci­sion. Voters are always more will­ing to vote no’ than yes,’” he said.

In People v. Potts, the first death-penal­ty opin­ion released since Gov. Newsom’s announce­ment, two jus­tices on the California Supreme Court issued a scathing rebuke to California’s death-penal­ty sys­tem. Justice Goodwin Liu, joined by Justice Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar, agreed with the court that, under the law, Thomas Potts’ death sen­tence should be upheld, but crit­i­cized the state’s death penal­ty as an expen­sive and dys­func­tion­al sys­tem that does not deliv­er jus­tice or clo­sure in a time­ly man­ner, if at all.” Liu wrote: A death sen­tence in California has only a remote pos­si­bil­i­ty of ever being car­ried out. As lead­ers of the judi­cia­ry have long observed, the death penal­ty presents seri­ous chal­lenges for the fair and effi­cient admin­is­tra­tion of jus­tice. For decades, those chal­lenges have not been mean­ing­ful­ly addressed.” The Potts case, the jus­tices said, demon­strates the futil­i­ty of California’s death penal­ty. Potts was con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death in 1998. Now, 21 years lat­er, we affirm the judg­ment on direct appeal, but there is more lit­i­ga­tion to come in the form of habeas cor­pus peti­tions in state and fed­er­al courts. This time­line is typ­i­cal of our cap­i­tal cas­es.” The jus­tices called Proposition 66 an unwork­able pro­pos­al that promised more than the sys­tem can deliver.” 

(Californians and Their Government, Public Policy Institute of California, March 2019; Phil Willon, Californians con­tin­ue to sour on death penal­ty, poll finds, feed­ing momen­tum to end it, Los Angeles Times, March 27, 2019; Maneeza Iqbal, Poll: Majority of Californians favor life impris­on­ment over death penal­ty, KCRA, March 28, 2019; Sophia Bollag, Opposition to death penal­ty grows in California as Gavin Newsom halts exe­cu­tions, Sacramento Bee, March 27, 2019; Bob Egelko, California Supreme Court jus­tices ques­tion state’s death penal­ty, San Francisco Chronicle, March 28, 2019; Sudhin Thanawala, California jus­tice calls death penal­ty dys­func­tion­al, Associated Press, March 28, 2019; Maura Dolan, 2 California Supreme Court jus­tices say the state’s death penal­ty sys­tem doesn’t work, Los Angeles Times, March 28, 2019.) See Public Opinion.

Citation Guide