Even as exe­cu­tions have declined in the U.S., those being car­ried out often illus­trate seri­ous prob­lems that have plagued the death penal­ty for many years. Of the six exe­cu­tions January, two (in Florida and Oklahoma) involved a lethal injec­tion pro­to­col that is now under review by the U.S. Supreme Court. Georgia exe­cut­ed Andrew Brannan, a dec­o­rat­ed Vietnam War vet­er­an with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, and Warren Hill, an inmate who was found intel­lec­tu­al­ly dis­abled by state doc­tors, but who failed to meet the state’s high­ly unusu­al stan­dard of prov­ing his dis­abil­i­ty beyond a rea­son­able doubt.” Texas exe­cut­ed Robert Ladd, an inmate with an IQ of 67. Texas courts have devised their own large­ly unsci­en­tif­ic cri­te­ria for deter­min­ing intel­lec­tu­al dis­abilty. That leaves Arnold Prieto, also exe­cut­ed in Texas. He was offered a plea bar­gain and prob­a­bly would have been spared if he had tes­ti­fied against his co-defen­dants. Of those involved in the bru­tal crime, only Prieto received the death penalty.

There were also six exe­cu­tions in January 2014. The first four involved four dif­fer­ent for­mu­las for lethal injec­tion, and one was botched, fore­telling more prob­lems in the months ahead. A 2014 study found that, among 100 recent­ly exe­cut­ed inmates, Nearly nine of every ten exe­cut­ed offend­ers pos­sessed an intel­lec­tu­al impair­ment, had not yet reached their twen­ty-first birth­day, suf­fered from a severe men­tal ill­ness, or endured marked childhood trauma.”

(DPIC, February 3, 2015). See Intellectual Disability, Mental Illness, and Lethal Injection.

Citation Guide