On October 1, the U.S. Supreme Court denied Louisiana’s request for a rehear­ing of the Court’s rul­ing strik­ing down the death penal­ty for non-homi­ci­dal offens­es against indi­vid­u­als. Louisiana con­tend­ed that a recent adjust­ment to mil­i­tary law that con­tin­ued to allow the death penal­ty for child rape should have been tak­en into account by the Court, result­ing in a dif­fer­ent opin­ion. The Court slight­ly mod­i­fied both the major­i­ty and dis­sent­ing opin­ions to include ref­er­ence to the mil­i­tary code. The Court issued a state­ment, leav­ing intact its deci­sion not only revers­ing Patrick Kennedy’s death sen­tence for child rape, but also hold­ing that the death penal­ty would be dis­pro­por­tion­ate for any crime against an indi­vid­ual in which the vic­tim is not killed. The state­ment said, in part:

[A]uthorization of the death penal­ty in the mil­i­tary sphere does not indi­cate that the penal­ty is con­sti­tu­tion­al in the civil­ian con­text. The mil­i­tary death penal­ty for rape was in effect before the deci­sions in Furman v. Georgia, 408 U. S. 238 (1972) (per curi­am), and Coker v. Georgia, 433 U. S. 584 (1977); and when the Court sur­veyed state and fed­er­al law in Coker, it made no men­tion of the military penalty.

That the Manual for Courts-Martial retains the death penal­ty for rape of a child or an adult when com­mit­ted by a mem­ber of the mil­i­tary does not draw into ques­tion our con­clu­sions that there is a con­sen­sus against the death penal­ty for the crime in the civil­ian con­text and that the penal­ty here is unconstitutional.


On June 25, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down as uncon­sti­tu­tion­al the Louisiana statute that allowed the death penal­ty for the rape of a child where the vic­tim did not die. The Court held that all such laws, where the crime against an indi­vid­ual involved no mur­der or intent to mur­der, were not in keep­ing with the nation­al con­sen­sus restrict­ing the death penal­ty to the worst offens­es. As a result, the only two peo­ple sen­tenced to death for this crime in the mod­ern cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment era no longer face exe­cu­tion. Both were sen­tenced under the Louisiana statute that was found uncon­sti­tu­tion­al. Today, no one is on death row for any offense not involv­ing mur­der.

The Court not­ed that the defen­dant, Patrick Kennedy, had been sen­tenced to death under a law that was not embraced by 44 out of the 50 states. The Court point­ed to the dan­ger in laws such as Louisiana’s, which allowed the death penal­ty where no mur­der was com­mit­ted: When the law pun­ish­es by death, it risks its own sud­den descent into bru­tal­i­ty, trans­gress­ing the con­sti­tu­tion­al com­mit­ment to decen­cy and restraint.“

Victims’ groups and child advo­cates had con­clud­ed that the death penal­ty for child rape could actu­al­ly harm chil­dren, rather than pro­tect them. Some of the rea­sons they cit­ed includ­ed a pos­si­ble decrease in report­ing, re-vic­tim­iza­tion through the lengthy appeals or re-tri­als, and that equat­ing rape to mud­er sends the wrong mes­sage to child vic­tims.

(Kennedy v. Lousiana, 07 – 343 U.S. (2008); Order mod­i­fy­ing the opin­ion and dis­sent, Oct. 1, 2008). See Supreme Court and DPIC’s Kennedy v. Lousiana page.

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