St. Petersburg Times

April 282004

Editorial

Florida once exe­cut­ed a 17-year-old boy only three weeks after his one-day tri­al for rape before a jury that had tak­en only two hours to select. At least sev­en oth­er pris­on­ers, the last in 1954, went to the elec­tric chair at Raiford before they had reached their 18th birth­days. All were black. But for the racism that per­me­at­ed this state, it is unlike­ly that any of them would have been on death row. Of the 19 states that still pro­vide for juve­niles to be sen­tenced to death, all but four prac­ticed racial seg­re­ga­tion.

Segregation has been out­lawed. So has the death penal­ty for rape. No one dies now with­out ben­e­fit of appeal. The men­tal­ly retard­ed have been spared. But that one glar­ing anachro­nism, the juve­nile death penal­ty, per­sists. Under Florida law, defen­dants as young as 16 could still be con­demned.

The Florida Senate, to its immense cred­it, vot­ed Tuesday to put an end to that. The vote was 26 to 12 in favor of SB 224, by Sen. Victor Crist, R‑Tampa, who is a promi­nent advo­cate of the death penal­ty in oth­er respects. We have to draw the line some­where,” he argued, point­ing out that every oth­er Florida law says that peo­ple under 18 are chil­dren; in every oth­er respect, Florida acknowl­edges that a child’s sense of judg­ment is imma­ture. Crist had impor­tant sup­port from Sen. Rod Smith, D‑Gainesville, who as a for­mer state attor­ney is the only mem­ber of the Senate who ever had to decide whether to ask juries and judges for death sen­tences. The ques­tion is,” said Smith, are we a state that exe­cutes chil­dren?“

The answer to that ques­tion, which should be no, now rests with the House, where the last com­mit­tee to hear it vot­ed 17 – 0 in favor of the com­pan­ion bill, HB 63, by Rep. Philip Brutus, D‑North Miami. Speaker Johnnie Byrd, who does not favor it, said Monday he is lean­ing toward let­ting mem­bers vote their con­science” on it. That was tan­ta­mount to a promise, which he needs to keep. The world is watching.

There are three peo­ple on Florida’s death row for mur­ders they com­mit­ted when they were 17. Crist’s bill was amend­ed to leave their fates to the courts. Let them be the last.

Sources

St. Petersburg Times