State & Federal
Louisiana
Timeline
1901 — The antebellum plantation property Angola which was later used by former Confederate Major Samuel Lawrence Jones to run a convict leasing system, is converted into Louisiana State Penitentiary. The Louisiana State Penitentiary is now used to house male death row prisoners.
1946 — At 17, Wille Francis survives a botched execution by electric chair. After his appeal failed in the U.S. Supreme Court, Mr. Francis was returned to the electric chair in 1947 and executed.
1990 — Dalton Prejean is executed in Louisiana by the electric chair for a crime he committed at age 17. Mr. Prejean was convicted by an all-white jury and had brain damage, with an IQ of 71.
2001 — Michael Ray Graham Jr. and Albert Ronnie Burrell are exonerated from death row after serious prosecutorial misconduct and the testimony of a jailhouse snitch led to their wrongful convictions.
2008 — In Kennedy v. Louisiana, the U.S. Supreme Court strikes down an unconstitutional state-statute that allowed death sentencing for the rape of a child, where the victim did not die.
2010 — The Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections sues every inmate on Louisiana’s death row in an effort to block them from challenging the state’s lethal injection procedures.
2012 — Damon Thibodeaux is freed from Louisiana’s death row after 15 years at Angola once new DNA evidence was tested.
2013 — A federal magistrate rules that the Louisiana Department of Safety and Corrections must reveal the details of the state’s lethal injection protocol.
2014 — One week in advance of a scheduled execution, Louisiana obtains hydrocodone from a pharmacy at Lake Charles Memorial Hospital after falsely claiming the medication was needed for a “medical patient.” Hydrocodone is one of the drugs used in Louisiana’s lethal-injection protocol.
2015 — A Louisiana federal judge delays five executions until 2016, following state officials’ struggle to determine how to conduct executions using lethal injection. The Department of Safety and Corrections’ supply of lethal injection drugs has now expired.
2016 — Louisiana delays executions until 2018 after a new court order issued with the consent of the parties in federal proceedings challenges the constitutionality of Louisiana’s lethal injection process. Louisiana’s protocol allows for either a one-drug execution using pentobarbital, or a two-drug execution procedure using midazolam and hydromorphone, but the state does not have the drugs necessary for either option.
2017 — Rodricus Crawford is exonerated from Louisiana’s death row amid evidence of racial discrimination, prosecutorial overcharging, and his innocence.
2018 — A Louisiana federal court judge orders another years of stayed executions to allow the proceedings to continue in the death row prisoners’ challenge to the state’s lethal injection protocol.
2023 — The Louisiana Board of Pardons and Parole sets aside all 56 clemency applications filed by nearly every death-sentenced prisoner in Louisiana without reviewing the merits of any of them. The petitions raise claims of severe mental illness, racial injustice, intellectual disability, prosecutorial misconduct, among many others.
Famous Cases
Connick v. Thompson, 563 U.S. 51 (2011)
John Thompson was convicted of robbery and murder, and spent 18 years in prison, 14 of which were spent on death row, before being exonerated. Shortly before Thompson’s scheduled execution, an investigator discovered that prosecutors had hidden blood evidence that exonerated Thompson.
Mr. Thompson sued the Orleans Parish District Attorney’s Office, the District Attorney, Harry Connick, in his official and individual capacities, and several assistant district attorneys in their official capacities under 42 U.S.C § 1983 in a Louisiana federal district court. The jury awarded Mr. Thompson $14 million against Mr. Connick in his official capacity.
In a 5 – 4 decision, the US Supreme Court held that a prosecutor’s office could not be held liable for the illegal conduct of one of its prosecutors when there has been only one violation resulting from that deficient training. In dissent Justices Ginsburg, Breyer, Sotomayor and Kagan argued that the evidence “established persistent, deliberately indifferent conduct for which the District Attorney’s Office bears responsibility under §1983.”
Kennedy v. Louisiana, 554 US 407 (2008)
Kennedy v. Louisiana barred the death penalty from being used in non-homicide offenses. In a 5 – 4 decision the Court held that the Eighth Amendment bars states from imposing the death penalty for the rape of a child where the crime did not result in the child’s death. The majority opinion found that applying the death penalty in such a case would be an exercise of “cruel and unusual punishment” in violation of a national consensus on the issue.
Roberts v. Louisiana, 428 U.S. 325 (1976)
Stanislaus Roberts v. Louisiana was one of the five death penalty cases the Supreme Court decided on July 2, 1976 when it ruled in Gregg v. Georgia that the death penalty did not invariably constitute cruel and unusual punishment. However, in a 5 – 4 vote, the Court declared that Louisiana’s capital punishment statute, which made the death penalty mandatory for certain murders was unconstitutional because it did not allow for consideration of mitigating factors or the exercise of mercy to spare a defendant’s life. The Supreme Court took up another Louisiana case in 1977 to determine whether a mandatory death sentence could be imposed in the limited circumstance of the murder of a law enforcement officer during the performance of his or her official duties. In a 5 – 4 decision in Harry Roberts v. Louisiana, 431 U.S. 633 (1977), the Court held that the prohibition against mandatory death sentences encompassed murders of police officers.
Notable Exonerations
Curtis Kyles was convicted and sentenced to death in 1984 after his first trial ended in a hung jury. The U.S. Supreme Court reversed his conviction in the case Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419 (1995). The Court cited prosecutorial misconduct: the state had withheld crucial information about a paid informant who may have been the actual murderer. He was retried three times, but each jury deadlocked. After Kyles’ fifth trial, prosecutors dropped the charges against him. He was released from prison in 1998.
Other Interesting Facts
Intellectual disability (formerly known as mental retardation) is determined by the jury in the penalty phase of a capital trial following conviction for first-degree murder: http://www.legis.state.la.us/lss/lss.asp?doc=191015
Sister Helen Prejean began her work against the death penalty in Louisiana when she visited Patrick Sonnier on Death Row at Angola and accompanied him to his execution. Her account is documented in the book and movie Dead Man Walking.
Resources
- Louisiana Coalition for Alternatives to the Death Penalty
- Capital Post Conviction Project of Louisiana – Provides indigent capital defendants with representation in state post-conviction and federal habeas corpus
- Capital Appeals Project – Provides indigent capital defendants with representation on direct appeal
- Louisiana Capital Assistance Center – A resource center for indigent capital defense at the trial level
- Department of Corrections
- Prosecutors
- Victims’ services
Louisiana Execution Totals Since 1976
News & Developments
News
Aug 12, 2024
New York Times Video Op-eds Highlight Systemic Flaws in the Capital Punishment System, Including Mistakes from Junk Science and Lack of Closure for Victims’ Families
In the second and third videos of The New York Times’ three-part series, “The Fallibility of Justice,” Brett Malone, whose mother’s killer remains on Louisiana death row, and Texas death-sentenced prisoner Charles Don Flores provide their perspectives on capital punishment. The New York Times has consistently called for abolition of the death penalty, describing it as “full of bias and error, morally abhorrent, [and] futile in deterring crime.”…
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Apr 22, 2024
Louisiana Senate Committee Approves Legislation Supported by Jewish Community to Remove Nitrogen Hypoxia as Possible Method of Execution
On April 16, 2024, the Louisiana Senate Judiciary B Committee unanimously voted to advance a bill that would remove nitrogen hypoxia from the state’s available methods of execution. Introduced by state Senator Katrina Jackson-Andrews, Senate Bill 430 is supported by the Jews Against Gassing Coalition, an organization consisting of Jewish Louisiana residents who oppose state-sanctioned gas executions. “We recognize, of course, that the gassing of innocent victims in the Holocaust is quite…
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Apr 15, 2024
Wilbert Rideau, former Louisiana Death-Sentenced Prisoner, is Honored for Extraordinary Journalism During 44 Years at Angola Prison
On April 12, 2024, Long Island University celebrated the 2023 George Polk Awards in Journalism, honoring investigative journalists and recognizing sixteen former winners, including formerly death-sentenced prisoner Wilbert Rideau. Mr. Rideau spent forty-four years incarcerated in Louisiana’s Angola State Penitentiary where he created The Lifer, one of the first Black prison periodicals. Sentenced to death in 1961 at age nineteen, Mr. Rideau spent twelve years on death row before the…
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Mar 11, 2024
OP-ED: Journalist Recalls Witnessing an Execution and Describes the Importance of Media Witnesses
In May 1990, Jonathan Eig, then a reporter for The New Orleans Times-Picayune, witnessed the electric-chair-execution of Dalton Prejean at Angola State Penitentiary for the 1977 murder of a Louisiana state trooper. Mr. Eig watched Mr. Prejean’s execution through an observation window, and reported seeing “his chest heave, his fists clench and his right wrist twist outward. A spark and a puff of smoke shot from the electrode attached to his left leg.” In the years following the execution, Mr.
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Jan 30, 2024
Louisiana Supreme Court Grants New Trial Based on Prosecutorial Misconduct while New Governor Landry Moves to Expand Methods of Execution and Restart Executions
On January 26, 2024, the Louisiana Supreme Court granted a new trial to death-sentenced prisoner Darrell Robinson based on egregious prosecutorial misconduct. The Court held that Mr. Robinson “did not receive a fair trial, or a verdict worthy of confidence.” Mr. Robinson’s quest to prove his innocence advances at the same time that Governor Jeff Landry seeks to expand the state’s methods of execution and restart executions. During a tumultuous 2023 in which outgoing Governor John Bel Edwards…
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