News

U.S. Government Sets Two More Execution Dates, Seeking to Put to Death the First Woman and the Youngest Offender in More Than Six Decades

By Death Penalty Information Center

Posted on Oct 19, 2020 | Updated on Sep 25, 2024

The fed­er­al gov­ern­ment intends to con­tin­ue its unprece­dent­ed exe­cu­tion spree into December, sched­ul­ing the exe­cu­tions of the first woman and the youngest offend­er put to death by fed­er­al author­i­ties in near­ly sev­en decades. In a Friday evening announce­ment, the U.S. Department of Justice announced on October 16, 2020 that it had set the exe­cu­tion of Lisa Montgomery (pic­tured) for December 8 and Brandon Bernard for December 10

Montgomery, a vic­tim of sex traf­fick­ing who suf­fers from psy­chosis and com­plex Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, is the only woman on fed­er­al death row. Bernard (pic­tured below), the youngest offend­er on fed­er­al death row, was 18-years-old when he and four oth­er teens killed a young cou­ple on fed­er­al grounds in Texas.

The fed­er­al gov­ern­ment has car­ried out sev­en exe­cu­tions since July 14, 2020, more than in any of the 93 pri­or years for which the Federal Bureau of Prisons has his­tor­i­cal infor­ma­tion. The num­ber equals the cumu­la­tive total of pris­on­ers exe­cut­ed by the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment over the last 66 years. At the same time, states are on pace to car­ry out the fewest num­ber of exe­cu­tions in 37 years and will impose few­er new death sen­tences in 2020 than in any oth­er year since cap­i­tal sen­tenc­ing resumed in the United States after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down all exist­ing death-penal­ty statutes in the U.S. in Furman v. Georgia in 1972. The Department of Justice also has sched­uled the exe­cu­tion of Orlando Hall for November 19, giv­ing it three of the four exe­cu­tions still sched­uled in the remain­der of 2020.

The last time the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment exe­cut­ed a woman was in 1953, and the last time it exe­cut­ed a per­son as young as eigh­teen at the time of the crime was in 1952. Prior to the cur­rent exe­cu­tion spree, the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment had not exe­cut­ed any­one in sev­en­teen years. The admin­is­tra­tion ini­ti­at­ed its string of exe­cu­tions at a time in which near­ly every oth­er juris­dic­tion in the nation had post­poned putting pris­on­ers to death out of pub­lic health con­cerns aris­ing from the glob­al COVID-19 pandemic. 

Two states — Missouri and Texas — each exe­cut­ed one pris­on­er ear­ly in the pan­dem­ic, and with­in weeks each expe­ri­enced increas­es in COVID-19 infec­tions in the facil­i­ties in which the exe­cu­tions occurred. The fed­er­al gov­ern­ment nonethe­less brought hun­dreds of peo­ple from across the coun­try into the fed­er­al prison com­plex in Terre Haute, Indiana to car­ry out exe­cu­tions dur­ing the pan­dem­ic, even after a mem­ber of the exe­cu­tion plan­ning team who had been exposed in close quar­ters to oth­ers involved in the exe­cu­tions test­ed pos­i­tive for COVID-19. Documents released in an ACLU law­suit reveal that the gov­ern­ment con­duct­ed inad­e­quate con­tact-trac­ing after the COVID-19 expo­sure and imple­ment­ed hap­haz­ard pub­lic health pro­tec­tive mea­sures. Bureau of Prisons data doc­u­ment­ed a spike in COVID-19 infec­tions at the fed­er­al prison com­plex after the July executions. 

Montgomery was sen­tenced to death by the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Missouri for fed­er­al kid­nap­ping result­ing in death after she mur­dered a preg­nant woman and cut her baby out of her womb, treat­ing the baby as hers. Montgomery’s lawyers argue that she suf­fered from a life­time of hor­rif­ic abuse includ­ing sex traf­fick­ing and repeat­ed gang rapes. As a result of this trau­ma and a fam­i­ly his­to­ry of men­tal ill­ness, Montgomery has com­plex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and expe­ri­ences psy­chot­ic episodes. She imme­di­ate­ly expressed remorse for her actions. One of her lawyers, assis­tant fed­er­al pub­lic defend­er Kelley Henry, explained that Montgomery’s jury nev­er learned of her his­to­ry of severe trau­ma and men­tal ill­ness because she was rep­re­sent­ed at tri­al by an incom­pe­tent lawyer who has the dubi­ous dis­tinc­tion of hav­ing more clients on fed­er­al death row than any oth­er attor­ney.” Henry said that Montgomery’s severe men­tal ill­ness and the dev­as­tat­ing impacts of her child­hood trau­ma make exe­cut­ing her a profound injustice.”

Bernard, whose code­fen­dant Christopher Vialva was exe­cut­ed last month, is the third Black pris­on­er the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment has sched­uled for exe­cu­tion this year. He was sen­tenced to death by a Texas dis­trict court for the mur­der of a cou­ple in a remote area that is part of Fort Hood dur­ing a car­jack­ing and rob­bery. Bernard was 18 at the time of the crime, and Vialva was 19. The three oth­er code­fen­dants could not be cap­i­tal­ly tried because they were aged 15 and 16. Vialva’s exe­cu­tion raised ques­tions about whether the death penal­ty is appro­pri­ate for teenage offend­ers, with a neu­ro­science expert explain­ing that to make a final judg­ment about a person’s life based on a crime he com­mit­ted as a teenag­er is to ignore what the last 20-plus years of research has taught us about the devel­op­ing brains of teenagers and adolescents.”

Bernard’s cur­rent attor­ney, Robert Owen, has argued that the gov­ern­ment ignored evi­dence that Bernard was not the most cul­pa­ble of his code­fen­dants, with the tri­al attor­neys mis­lead­ing the jury by hid­ing the fact that the state’s own expert con­sid­ered Bernard to occu­py the low­est rung in the group’s hier­ar­chy. Owen also char­ac­ter­ized as junk sci­ence” the tes­ti­mo­ny the gov­ern­ment used to argue that Bernard would pose a future dan­ger, even in prison. Bernard’s lawyers, how­ev­er, pro­vid­ed no expert evi­dence to counter this asser­tion. Owen points to Bernard’s dis­ci­pli­nary his­to­ry to show just how wrong that evi­dence was: Now 40, Mr. Bernard has spent more than half his life in prison, where his con­duct has been exem­plary. He has not com­mit­ted a sin­gle dis­ci­pli­nary infrac­tion.” Because of evi­dence that was not pre­sent­ed at tri­al and because of Bernard’s behav­ior in prison, a major­i­ty of the sur­viv­ing jurors who sen­tenced Bernard to death now oppose his execution.

Citation Guide
Sources

Marie Fazio, U.S. Schedules First Execution of a Woman in Nearly 70 Years, New York Times, October 17, 2020; Brendan O’Brien, Mohammad Zargham, and Rich McKay, U.S. to car­ry out first fed­er­al exe­cu­tion of a woman in sev­en decades, Reuters, October 16, 2020 (updat­ed October 19, 2020); George Hale, Only Woman On Federal Death Row Among 2 Inmates Set For Execution, Indiana Public Media, October 16, 2020; Feds To Execute Man Who Killed 2 Youth Ministers In Texas, CBS Dallas Forth Worth/​Associated Press, October 16, 2020; Statement of Robert C. Owen, Attorney for Brandon Bernard, October 162020.