South Dakota has scheduled the execution of Elijah Page for August 28. If this execution goes forward, it will mark the fifth inmate in the past six weeks who waived his appeals and was then executed. This will also be the first execution in South Dakota in 59 years. About 12% of those who have been executed since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976 have voluntarily waived appeals that would likely have delayed their execution.
Such executions raise questions about the stated purposes of the death penalty: deterrence and retribution. For many of these inmates, the prospect of remaining in prison for life is worse than the death penalty. The choice to forgo appeals may be related to the lengthy time on death row or to mental illness. (See DPIC’s Execution Database (allowing a search for those who waived appeals; see also Angus Leader (S.D.), August 14, 2006).
Mental Illness
Dec 06, 2024
Indiana Plans to Resume Executions after 15-Year Pause with a Severely Mentally Ill “Volunteer”
Mental Illness
Oct 24, 2024
New Analysis: Death-Sentenced Prisoners “Volunteer” for Execution at Ten Times Civilian Suicide Rate
Mental Illness
Jul 09, 2024