AMERICAN PEOPLE OUTRAGED AT SUPREME COURT DECISION ON CHILD RAPE
Five states have laws that explicitly permit such executions. At issue before the high court was a Louisiana case involving Patrick Kennedy, who was sentenced to die for raping his 8-year-old stepdaughter in her bed in 1998, an assault so severe she required surgery.
In a 5-4 decision, the court ruled the death penalty a disproportionate punishment for raping children under the age of 12, despite the horrendous nature of such acts.
Justices made a similar ruling in 1977, when they said the death penalty was unconstitutional punishment for a Georgia man convicted of raping a teenager who was an adult under the law.
Louisiana’s law, passed in 1995, is the broadest in the United States. It also makes first-time offenders eligible for the death penalty, unlike Texas, South Carolina, Oklahoma and Montana — which required at least one previous conviction for child rape. Following Wednesday’s ruling, all become unconstitutional.
Nationwide, only two men have been sentenced to death for sexually abusing children — both in Louisiana. The second case involves a man convicted of repeatedly raping a 5-year-old girl.
Several states, including Missouri, Alabama and Colorado had been considering similar laws. Supporters there were incensed by Wednesday’s ruling.
“Anybody in the country who cares about children should be outraged that we have a Supreme Court that would issue a decision like this,” said Alabama Attorney General Troy King, who represented one of nine states that filed a friend-of-the-court brief supporting Louisiana in the Kennedy case on the grounds that child rape represented “manifest evil.”
Justices are “creating a situation where the country is a less safe place to grow up,” King said.
Republican Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal said he, too, was outraged. “The opinion reflects a clear abuse of judicial authority, trampling the constitutional authority of states to act through the legislative process,” Jindal said.
In South Carolina, Attorney General Henry McMaster, who pushed hard in 2006 to get lawmakers to approve such punishment, said states could ultimately fight Wednesday’s ruling by waiting for a change in the makeup of the Supreme Court, or by getting legislatures to redo death penalty laws.
Legal experts were divided on the potential success of such tactics.
According to Douglas Berman, a professor at Ohio State University’s Moritz College of Law, the justices’ ruling appears ironclad. “In the absence of death, the death penalty is off the table,” he said. “Instead of a highly contextual and nuanced discussion … the court asserted that states can only use the death penalty against rapists in the case of death.
“It could have left open the possibility of revamping child rape laws, by age for example, but it did not.”
Law professor Deborah Denno of Fordham University was not so sure.
I THINK THAT IT IS TIME FOR TERM LIMITS ON THE SUPREME COURT.
BOSTON TEA PARTY