Miami Herald

July 212004

Editorial

OUR OPINION: ABOLISH THE DEATH PENALTY FOR JUVENILE OFFENDERS

The United States should fol­low the major­i­ty in this coun­try and the rest of the world and abol­ish the death penal­ty for offend­ers who com­mit­ted their crimes as juve­niles. That’s what a cho­rus of advo­cates — among them the American Bar Association, Nobel Prize win­ners, for­mer U.S. diplo­mats and 48 coun­tries — told the U.S. Supreme Court this week in friend of the court briefs. Executing juve­nile offend­ers vio­lates wide­ly accept­ed human-rights stan­dards. The United States should dis­con­tin­ue this prac­tice.

The court will be hear­ing a case from Missouri on this issue this fall. The case involves Christopher Simmons, who at 17 broke into Shirley Crook’s home, bound and dumped her into a riv­er to drown. Simmons and oth­er juve­niles who com­mit heinous crimes mer­it harsh pun­ish­ment, includ­ing life in prison — but not the death sen­tence.

Teens on Death Row

In fact, Missouri’s Supreme Court over­turned Simmons’ death penal­ty. It did so rely­ing on a 2002 U.S. Supreme Court rul­ing that out­lawed the exe­cu­tion of men­tal­ly retard­ed offend­ers based on a nation­al con­sen­sus” that such pun­ish­ment was cru­el and unusu­al. The state of Missouri, how­ev­er, appealed the Simmons deci­sion, argu­ing that there is no such American con­sen­sus for juve­nile offend­ers. The Supreme Court’s 1989 rul­ing that upholds the death penal­ty for 16- and 17-year-old offend­ers could be affect­ed by this case. Also at stake are Florida’s death-penal­ty stan­dard, which allows 17-year-old offend­ers to be exe­cut­ed, and the fate of four such con­victs cur­rent­ly on Florida’s Death Row.

The friend-of-the-court briefs filed this week with the Supreme Court sug­gest how much atti­tudes have evolved. The fed­er­al gov­ern­ment, 31 states and the U.S. mil­i­tary have banned exe­cu­tion of juve­nile offend­ers, and only sev­en states have exe­cut­ed such offend­ers in 30 years. So it’s not a com­mon prac­tice.

Unable to rea­son

Stuart E. Eizenstat, Thomas R. Pickering and oth­er retired diplo­mats not­ed that only four coun­tries oth­er than the United States have exe­cut­ed juve­nile offend­ers in the last four years: China, Congo, Iran and Pakistan — all coun­tries with ques­tion­able human-rights records. The U.S. prac­tice has iso­lat­ed us diplo­mat­i­cal­ly and has been con­demned by the inter­na­tion­al com­mu­ni­ty — so says the brief by 48 coun­tries includ­ing the European Union, Canada and Mexico. A slew of med­ical and psy­chi­atric groups presents sci­en­tif­ic evi­dence that 17-year-olds are, as the court found with men­tal­ly retard­ed indi­vid­u­als, less cul­pa­ble” because of their inabil­i­ty to rea­son and con­trol their con­duct.

A moral soci­ety should dis­pense jus­tice laced with mer­cy. We hope that the Supreme Court finds exe­cut­ing juve­nile offend­ers no longer acceptable.

Sources

Miami Herald