New York Daily News

By THOMAS M. DeFRANK
Daily News Washington Bureau Chief 

It’s called the spe­cial hous­ing unit at a place known as The Castle. But for the six sol­diers on the mil­i­tary’s Death Row at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., life is no fairy tale.

Despite intense pub­lic and media inter­est in Timothy McVeigh’s exe­cu­tion, lit­tle atten­tion has been paid to the six con­demned sol­diers incar­cer­at­ed with­in the pale yel­low-and-white walls of the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks.

One of those con­vict­ed mur­der­ers is in the last stages of a 12-year appeals process that may end with the first exe­cu­tion by the armed forces in more than 40 years.

Before Army Pvt. Dwight Loving of Rochester can be put to death, how­ev­er, President Bush and the Supreme Court must affirm his sen­tence — a process that could take anoth­er three years.

The case has lan­guished at Army head­quar­ters since December 1998, when the Supreme Court declined to hear Loving’s appeal of his con­vic­tion for mur­der­ing two cab dri­vers near Fort Hood, Tex. 

Experts Predict More Delays

A senior Army legal offi­cial con­firmed that the case now awaits a deci­sion by Army Secretary Thomas White. Because of var­i­ous pro­ce­dur­al issues, that deci­sion isn’t immi­nent, he added, and out­side legal experts pre­dict­ed it will be sev­er­al months before the case goes to Bush.

Under the Uniform Code of Military Justice, the com­man­der-in-chief must per­son­al­ly approve all death sen­tences. There’s lit­tle doubt that will hap­pen — as gov­er­nor of Texas, he signed 151 death war­rants, com­mut­ing only a single sentence.

The six cur­rent inmates on Fort Leavenworth’s Death Row are enlist­ed men in their mid-30s — three sol­diers and three Marines. Four are black, one Asian-American and one white.

Ronald Gray has been there more than 13 years. The newest mem­ber is Jesse Quintanilla, a Marine from Guam who arrived in January 1998.

Critics charge that mil­i­tary death ver­dicts are seri­ous­ly flawed, espe­cial­ly because sol­diers can be sen­tenced to death by a jury of as few as five oth­er sol­diers — not the 12 jurors required by the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment and all 38 states with a death penalty.

On a day-to-day basis, the mil­i­tary jus­tice sys­tem is very fair, but it has its pecu­liar­i­ties,” says Dwight Sullivan of the American Civil Liberties Union of Maryland and a for­mer Marine Corps lawyer. And those pecu­liar­i­ties real­ly come to the fore­front in death-penalty cases.”

Since the last mil­i­tary exe­cu­tion, the method of death has changed twice. Army Private John Bennett, con­vict­ed of the 1955 rape and attempt­ed mur­der of an 11-year-old Austrian girl, was hanged at Fort Leavenworth in 1961.

The elec­tric chair that replaced the gal­lows was nev­er used and was recent­ly donat­ed to the Army’s mil­i­tary police muse­um in Missouri. Lethal injec­tion is now the pre­scribed method. Leavenworth’s base­ment spe­cial pro­cess­ing unit” is vir­tu­al­ly iden­ti­cal to the death cham­ber where McVeigh met his fate in Terre Haute, Ind.

Even if Bush signs his death war­rant, Loving can appeal to fed­er­al courts and, ulti­mate­ly, to the Supreme Court again. That could eas­i­ly take three years. President Dwight Eisenhower signed Bennett’s death war­rant in 1958, for exam­ple, but he was­n’t exe­cut­ed until John F. Kennedy was President.

The last pres­i­den­tial death-penal­ty action was in 1963, when Kennedy com­mut­ed to life impris­on­ment the sen­tence of a Navy enlist­ed man con­vict­ed of mur­der­ing an offi­cer. In 1997, President Bill Clinton added life with­out parole as an alter­na­tive to the death penal­ty — a sen­tence cur­rent­ly being served by four soldiers. 

Sentences Commuted to Life

Though mil­i­tary exe­cu­tions have become increas­ing­ly rare, an esti­mat­ed 465 sol­diers have been exe­cut­ed since the Civil War, most for deser­tion in wartime and mutiny.

In 1983, a mil­i­tary appeals court ruled the mil­i­tary death penal­ty uncon­sti­tu­tion­al because sen­tenc­ing guide­lines did­n’t require a find­ing of aggra­vat­ing circumstances.”

As a result, the sev­en inmates then on Leavenworth’s Death Row had their sen­tences com­mut­ed to life impris­on­ment. One has been denied parole every year since and is still at The Castle. The oth­er six were scat­tered to federal prisons.

A year lat­er, President Ronald Reagan rein­stat­ed the death penal­ty with an exec­u­tive order set­ting out clear sen­tenc­ing guide­lines. By 1988, Leavenworth’s Death Row began receiv­ing new occupants.

Critics charge that the mil­i­tary’s cap­i­tal-pun­ish­ment sys­tem is even more flawed than its civil­ian coun­ter­part. African-American sol­diers are sen­tenced to death in far greater num­bers than whites. Moreover, the same senior offi­cer who has already decid­ed that a crime will be tried as a cap­i­tal case also picks the jurors. And crit­ics say inex­pe­ri­enced mil­i­tary death-penal­ty defense attor­neys often pro­vide inadequate counsel.

The sys­tem’s defend­ers reply that mil­i­tary per­son­nel have more appel­late options than oth­er death-sen­tence felons — includ­ing both mil­i­tary and civil­ian courts and two sep­a­rate appeals to the U.S. Supreme Court.