In a poten­tial­ly far reach­ing rul­ing, a tri­al judge in New Mexico has barred the state from seek­ing the death penal­ty because the leg­is­la­ture has failed to pro­vide ade­quate fund­ing for defense rep­re­sen­ta­tion. The state’s Attorney General, Gary King, agreed that the cap­i­tal pros­e­cu­tion can­not go for­ward. After find­ing that fund­ing for the defense was insuf­fi­cient and raised con­sti­tu­tion­al prob­lems, King wrote, The state now con­fess­es the motion to dis­miss filed here­in and can­not in good faith under these cir­cum­stances oppose the dis­missal of the death penal­ty in these cas­es.” State District Judge Neil Candelaria took the death penal­ty off the table for Reis Lopez and Robert Young, two inmates accused of killing a prison guard, because no mon­ey was appro­pri­at­ed for death penal­ty indi­gent defense dur­ing New Mexico’s 2008 Legislative Session, despite a unan­i­mous warn­ing from the state Supreme Court. The leg­isla­tive ses­sion end­ed in February.

Jacquelyn Robins, one of the attor­neys rep­re­sent­ing Young and Lopez, said that her clients’ case will pro­ceed as a first-degree mur­der case. She also not­ed that the Court’s deci­sion was very impor­tant,” stat­ing, The court is say­ing that if New Mexico is going to pur­sue the death penal­ty, it has to make funds avail­able to the defense just as it makes them avail­able to prosecution.”

(“Death Penalty Out in Guard Killing,” by Scott Sandlin, Albuquerque Journal, April 42008). 

See Representation and Costs. The court’s rul­ing and the agree­ment by the Attorney General may mean that no fur­ther death penal­ty pros­e­cu­tions can pro­ceed in New Mexico with­out leg­isla­tive action.

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