In the midst of a sharp decline in death sen­tences in the state, the Georgia Supreme Court on June 4 heard a direct appeal in a cap­i­tal case for the first time in two years. In March 2018, Georgia reached the four-year mark since it had last imposed a death sen­tence, a dra­mat­ic change for a state that once hand­ed down 15 death sen­tences in a sin­gle year. The decline in Georgia’s death penal­ty exem­pli­fies broad­er nation­al death-penal­ty trends. In 1987, when Georgia hand­ed down those 15 death sen­tences, 288 peo­ple were sen­tenced to death across the coun­try. Thirty years lat­er, in 2017, Georgia was com­plet­ing its third con­sec­u­tive cal­en­dar year with no death sen­tences, and the nation­al total was just 39. Pete Skandalakis, exec­u­tive direc­tor of the Prosecuting Attorneys’ Council of Georgia, cred­its the pub­lic’s pref­er­ence for life with­out parole (LWOP) sen­tences, say­ing the avail­abil­i­ty of LWOP has made a huge dif­fer­ence.” “[W]hen you sit down with vic­tims’ fam­i­lies and dis­cuss the process of a death-penal­ty case with all the pre­tri­al hear­ings, then the years of appeals that fol­low, I have found that fam­i­lies like the final­i­ty of life with­out parole. It lets them get on with their lives,” he said. Other pros­e­cu­tors have found that the reluc­tance of juries to impose death sen­tences has made them less like­ly to seek death. Gwinnett County District Attorney Danny Porter called it a self-ful­fill­ing proph­esy,” not­ing, As more and more juries give few­er death sen­tences, pros­e­cu­tors begin to think it’s not worth the effort.” The Georgia cap­i­tal defend­er office’s ear­ly inter­ven­tion pro­gram has also reduced the num­ber of death sen­tences by pre­sent­ing pros­e­cu­tors with rea­sons to decap­i­tal­ize a case and reach­ing plea deals before a tri­al begins. Jerry Word, who leads that office, said, The aver­age time to resolve a case in ear­ly inter­ven­tion has been less than eight months. The aver­age time to get a case to tri­al is over three years. This results in a sav­ing in court time and dol­lar sav­ings to the state and coun­ty.” Although pros­e­cu­tors are seek­ing and juries impos­ing few­er and few­er death sen­tences, Georgia has con­tin­ued to car­ry out con­tro­ver­sial exe­cu­tions of defen­dants who like­ly would not be sen­tenced to death today. These include the December 2015 and March 2018 exe­cu­tions of Brian Keith Terrell and Carlton Gary, despite evi­dence that they may have been inno­cent; the May 2018 exe­cu­tion of Robert Earl Butts, Jr., although no Georgia jury has sen­tenced any defen­dant to death in the past decade in a case like his that involved a sin­gle vic­tim and only one aggra­vat­ing cir­cum­stance; exe­cu­tions of sev­er­al men whose equal­ly or more cul­pa­ble co-defen­dants received less­er sen­tences; and pris­on­ers who were intel­lec­tu­al­ly dis­abled. The U.S. Supreme Court also has ruled against Georgia in three cap­i­tal cas­es since 2016, Foster v. Chatman, involv­ing race dis­crim­i­na­tion in jury selec­tion; Tharpe v. Sellers, involv­ing a juror who said he doubt­ed whether black peo­ple had souls; and Wilson v. Sellers, which pre­sent­ed a pro­ce­dur­al habeas corpus issue.

(Bill Rankin, Death sen­tences becom­ing increas­ing­ly rare in Georgia, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, June 4, 2018.) See Sentencing.

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