
Don Siegelman
Mike Disharoon, CC BY-SA 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons
In an August 14, 2025, op-ed in the South Florida Sun Sentinel, former Alabama Governor Don Siegelman revealed he has “lived to regret” not commuting death sentences while he was in office, and criticized Florida’s execution selection process, citing serious concerns with secrecy and racial bias. Writing about two scheduled executions in Florida — Kayle Bates on August 19 and Curtis Windom on August 28 — Gov. Siegelman argues the cases surface systemic problems in Florida’s death penalty system.
“Since Florida’s governor is the sole official making these life-or-death decisions, it is up to him to ensure the execution selection process is not infected with racial bias.”
Gov. Siegelman writes that data shows racial disparities in execution patterns, noting that “nationally, fewer than 41% of homicide victims are white, yet 76% of executions since 1976 involved white victims.” Florida’s statistics are even more pronounced, with “88% of all executions involving white victims” and “95% of the executions that Florida’s [current] governor has authorized involved white victims.” DPI data shows that since 1976, for every 8.3 executions, one person has been exonerated from death row, and Gov. Siegelman notes this “means we have been getting it wrong about 12% of the time.”
The timing of Curtis Windom’s death warrant raised concerns for Gov. Siegelman. He noted that “just two hours after claims by [Kayle] Bates were filed” exposing racial disparities in Governor Ron DeSantis’ decisions about who to execute next, “Florida’s governor signed a death warrant for Curtis Windom.” Both individuals are Black men: Mr. Bates was sentenced by a non-unanimous jury for killing a white victim and Mr. Windom for killing three Black victims. According to Gov. Siegelman, Gov. DeSantis “used Windom’s death warrant to defend his non-discrimination argument” in Mr. Bates’ case. He noted that had Gov. DeSantis not signed Mr. Windom’s execution warrant, the governor’s racial bias was “indefensible.”
Gov. Siegelman spoke as well to his own past decisions, stating, “[a]s governor of Alabama, I had a chance to commute death sentences to life in prison without parole. I didn’t and have lived to regret it.” He specifically references the case of Freddie Lee Wright, writing “had I known then what I know now about the abuse of power by prosecutors, I would have commuted his sentence and others to life without parole.” The former governor argues that regardless of one’s position on the death penalty, “a secret process to select those whom the state executes erodes the public’s faith that the law is being fairly applied.” He concludes by noting that while he no longer has “the constitutional power to set wrong to right, it is not too late for Gov. Ron DeSantis” to do so.
Don Siegelman, As a former governor, I regret not using death penalty clemency, South Florida Sun Sentinel, August 14, 2025.