Following the trends across most of the Midwest, the death penal­ty is wan­ing in Indiana. Capital pros­e­cu­tions are down, no jury has vot­ed for death since 2013, and the state is clos­ing in on its tenth con­sec­u­tive year with­out an exe­cu­tion. An August 4, 2019 Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette review of the death penal­ty in the state reports that even high-pro­file mur­ders that start­ed out as death-penal­ty cas­es have recent­ly been resolved with non-capital pleas.

Several fac­tors have con­tributed to the decline, accord­ing to the Journal-Gazette report. Huntington County Prosecutor Amy Richison (pic­tured), who chairs the Indiana Prosecuting Attorneys Council’s cap­i­tal lit­i­ga­tion com­mit­tee, told the news­pa­per that part of the move away from the death penal­ty stems from 1993 leg­is­la­tion that made a sen­tence of life with­out parole avail­able as an alter­na­tive to the death penal­ty. Richison said cost and the length of the tri­al and appeal process has also played a role. Indianapolis defense lawyer Eric Koselke told the Journal-Gazette that vic­tims’ fam­i­lies are also a big fac­tor in why death penal­ty fil­ings have dropped.” People are aware of how long this process takes and they want clo­sure and don’t want to go through it,” he said.

Indiana cur­rent­ly has eight pris­on­ers under sen­tence of death, and a ninth whose death sen­tence was over­turned in the courts is await­ing a resen­tenc­ing tri­al. Since 2016, three death-row pris­on­ers have exhaust­ed their appeals. However, Attorney General Curtis Hill says, the Indiana Department of Correction can’t exe­cute them because it hasn’t been able to obtain the drugs required under the state’s three-drug exe­cu­tion pro­to­col. Inadequate sup­ply chain has been a prob­lem for two years,” Hill said. According to the Journal-Gazette, the Department of Correction con­firmed … that the state does­n’t have the nec­es­sary drugs to con­duct an execution.”

A DPIC analy­sis of Indiana sen­tenc­ing data shows that the state has sen­tenced 99 defen­dants to death since enact­ing its death-penal­ty statute in 1973. In that time, it has exe­cut­ed 20 pris­on­ers; two wrong­ly con­vict­ed death-row pris­on­ers — Larry Hicks and Charles Smith— have been exon­er­at­ed; and gov­er­nors have com­mut­ed the death sen­tences of three oth­ers to life with­out parole. The oth­er 65 once death-sen­tenced pris­on­ers have either been resen­tenced to life or less fol­low­ing the rever­sal of their con­vic­tions or death sen­tences or died in custody. 

Indiana’s death-sen­tenc­ing decline began in 1989, after nine years in which the state aver­aged more than six death sen­tences per year. Death sen­tences fell to 2.6 per year in the 1990s and to 0.9 in the first decade of the 2000s, and Indiana juries have not imposed any death sen­tences in 7 of the last nine years. The state’s expe­ri­ence is typ­i­cal of death-penal­ty devel­op­ments across the Midwest. 

Six Midwestern states — Illinois, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota, and Wisconsin — do not have the death penal­ty. Of the six that do — Indiana, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio, and South Dakota — only Ohio has aver­aged more than one death sen­tence per year since 2014. The oth­er five death-penal­ty states have imposed a com­bined total of 9 death sen­tences dur­ing that peri­od, only three of which were the prod­uct of unan­i­mous jury votes for death. The three death sen­tences in Nebraska were imposed by three-judge pan­els; the two death sen­tences in Missouri were imposed under the state’s con­tro­ver­sial hung-jury pro­vi­sion that requires the tri­al judge to deter­mine the sen­tence if the jury does not unan­i­mous­ly agree on life or death; and William Clyde Gibson was sen­tenced to death by his tri­al judge in Indiana in August 2014 after he waived his right to a jury. Earlier this year, Fort Wayne pros­e­cu­tors agreed to a plea deal in which Marcus Dansby was spared the death penal­ty for a quadru­ple killing and Anthony Baumgardt reached a plea deal with Boone County pros­e­cu­tors in which he would be sen­tenced to life with­out parole for killing a sheriff’s deputy.

Executions in the Midwest also reflect a region­al death-penal­ty decline. There have been 24 exe­cu­tions in the Midwest since the start of 2014, an aver­age of 4.4 per year. However, all but six of those exe­cu­tions took place in Missouri, and exe­cu­tions in Nebraska and South Dakota both involved pris­on­ers who had waived their appeals. In the pre­ced­ing ten years, there were 65 exe­cu­tions in the Midwest, includ­ing 44 in Ohio and nine each in Missouri and Indiana. Indiana’s last exe­cu­tion was in 2009.

Citation Guide
Sources

Niki Kelley, Executions wan­ing; 9 men on death row, Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette, August 42019.