Lakeland Ledger

April 222004

Editorial

The Florida Legislature has always been strong on cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment and has recoiled against any lim­i­ta­tions imposed by the courts. At the same time, it has failed to clar­i­fy a key ques­tion relat­ing to the death penal­ty:

How young is too young when sen­tenc­ing a killer to death?

Oddly, the Legislature has avoid­ed that ques­tion. The result has been that the courts have been forced to step in. As it stands now, a per­son can­not be sen­tenced to death if he/​she was younger than 17 when the crime was com­mit­ted. It’s pos­si­ble that fur­ther lit­i­ga­tion may set the age high­er.

Finally, the Legislature seems ready to make that deci­sion as a mat­ter of law rather than judi­cial inter­pre­ta­tion. A bill is mak­ing its way through both the House and Senate to set the min­i­mum age at 18. It passed the Senate Criminal Justice Committee by an 8 – 0 vote last week and the House Public Safety and Crime Prevention Committee by a 17 – 1 mar­gin.

18 makes more sense than any­thing else. It’s the age of adult­hood. An 18-year-old has the right to do any­thing any oth­er adult can do oth­er than buy or con­sume an alco­holic bev­er­age. It’s also the tra­di­tion­al age when a per­son fin­ish­es pub­lic school­ing, and gets a job or enrolls in high­er edu­ca­tion.

Juries have been reluc­tant to sen­tence younger defen­dants to death, but it has hap­pened infre­quent­ly. Even in the most aggra­vat­ed cas­es — the Washington sniper case comes to mind ‑juries tend to show some mer­cy to defen­dants who were younger than 18 when their crimes were com­mit­ted.

The bill prob­a­bly will pass before the ses­sion ends next week, assum­ing House Speaker Johnnie Byrd, R‑Plant City, allows it to come to the floor. Byrd is run­ning for the U.S. Senate as a hard-line con­ser­v­a­tive, and he might be reluc­tant to let the bill pass for fear of appear­ing to be soft on crime. Plenty of oth­er law-and-order con­ser­v­a­tives sup­port the bill, though, so Byrd need­n’t fear any reper­cus­sions if he joins them.

Sources

Lakeland Ledger