The state of Indiana is scheduled to carry out its first execution in 15 years on December 18, 2024, with the scheduled execution of Joseph Corcoran (pictured). Sentenced to death for the 1997 murders of four people, including his brother, Mr. Corcoran has a long history of serious mental illness. He has been diagnosed with schizophrenia, which includes symptoms of hallucinations and delusions, and multiple experts have testified that he is incompetent to face execution. Mr. Corcoran holds the consistent belief that prison guards are torturing him with an ultrasound machine. Despite this, the Indiana Supreme Court ruled in September 2024 that “past evidence of mental illness” is not enough to block Mr. Corcoran’s execution. During his original sentencing hearing in 1999, Mr. Corcoran told the court that he wanted to waive his appeals and refused to sign a post-conviction petition. Following this waiver, the court held a competency hearing in October 2003 and determined that based on Mr. Corcoran’s testimony, he was competent to waive his appeals but acknowledged his mental illness.1 His decision to waive his appeals places Mr. Corcoran among many others on death row who have “volunteered” for execution, meaning that their convictions and death sentences have not undergone the searching, meaningful judicial review that the law and justice requires.
If executed, Mr. Corcoran will be the third volunteer in 2024 to be put to death.2 In many states, the history of the death penalty is a history of volunteers: in four states — Connecticut, New Mexico, Oregon, and Pennsylvania — the only prisoners executed have been volunteers, and volunteers were the first to be executed in 15 states and by the federal government when it resumed executions in the modern era.3 DPI defines a volunteer as a prisoner who takes affirmative steps to hasten their execution, including waiving appeals, asking for an execution date, or instructing their attorneys not to file end-stage litigation. On January 17, 1977, Gary Gilmore, sentenced to death in Utah just two months earlier, became the first person to be executed in the US following the Supreme Court’s ruling in Gregg v. Georgia (1976), which upheld the constitutionality of capital punishment. Including Mr. Gilmore, 165 individuals have volunteered for their execution since 1977.
Due to changes in the “legal landscape” of Indiana since 2003, attorneys for Mr. Corcoran believe that a new post-conviction petition is legally cognizable. They point to a 2021 ruling from the Indiana Supreme Court in Isom v. State which allowed a prisoner facing execution to file a post-conviction petition despite his refusal to verify the petition with a signature ahead of the deadline. In that case Kevin Isom failed to sign his petition. Despite this, the state Supreme Court ordered the lower court to accept Mr. Isom’s petition without his signature. Like, Mr. Isom, Mr. Corcoran has not signed the prepared materials to initiate the clemency process or other means of relief. Mr. Corcoran’s legal team filed a motion asking the state’s Supreme Court to stay his execution to allow for a lower court to hold an evidentiary hearing on his post-conviction petition, which was denied on December 5, 2024.
Volunteers have been prominent among states that restart executions after a long pause. In November 2021, Mississippi executed David Cox, marking the sixth time a state has restarted executions after a pause of at least five years by complying with the wishes of a volunteer. Executions of volunteers have ended execution pauses of five years and six years in South Dakota, seven years in Louisiana, nine years in Kentucky, and more than 20 years in Nebraska. If Indiana proceeds with Mr. Corcoran’s execution, his execution would be the seventh time a state resumed executions with a volunteer after a considerable time period.
Analysis from DPI that found that of the 165 people executed at their own request since 1977, 87% battled mental illness, substance abuse, or both. About 46% of people sentenced to death in the modern era have been white men — but they make up 84% of volunteers. The last ten volunteers, going back to 2016, have all been white men. Meanwhile, 41% of modern death sentences have been imposed on Black men, but they represent only 5% of volunteers (eight total). Statistics for women are somewhat more consistent: about 2% of people sentenced to death have been women of any race, and 2% of volunteers have been women (only three total, all white).
For more information on execution volunteers, see DPI’s Execution Volunteers list or search for volunteers in DPI’s Execution Database.
Casey Smith, Indiana death row inmate’s mental illness warrants delayed execution for case review, lawyers say, Indiana Capital Chronicle, December 4, 2024; Casey Smith, Indiana death row inmate Joseph Corcoran files to reopen appeal window in death penalty case, Indiana Capital Chronicle, October 25, 2024.
See the Indiana Supreme Court’s order denying Mr. Corcoran’s motion for a stay of execution, here.
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In February 2005, Mr. Corcoran filed a post-conviction petition with the Indiana Supreme Court with his signature, but the Court dismissed the petition because of untimeliness.↩︎
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Travis Mullis was executed in Texas in September 2024 and waived his right to appeal his death sentence. In October 2024, Alabama executed Derrick Dearman, who abandoned his appeal efforts in early 2024.↩︎
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These 15 states include Connecticut, Delaware, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, Nevada, New Mexico, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Utah, Virginia, Washington.↩︎
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