Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

Explore news, videos, and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

To get started, first

YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    US justice rejects death penalty law he wrote

    COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — As a young state senator 30 years ago, Paul Pfeifer helped write Ohio's death penalty law. Today, as the senior member of the state Supreme Court, he's trying to eliminate it.

    It's not uncommon for sitting judges to change their mind on the death penaltyU.S. Supreme Court Justice Harry Blackmun famously said in 1994 he would no longer "tinker with the machinery of death" — but Pfeifer may be the only one to argue so ardently against a capital punishment law he himself created, and yet continue to rule on death penalty cases.

    "I have concluded that the death sentence makes no sense to me at this point when you can have life without the possibility of parole," Pfeifer said in his most recent public comments, testifying in December in favor a bill to abolish Ohio's law. "I don't see what society gains from that.

    After the U.S. Supreme Court declared capital punishment unconstitutional in 1972, states spent several years rewriting their laws. Ohio's first attempt, in 1974, was found unconstitutional, but the second try, when Pfeifer was chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, was enacted in 1981 and has never been successfully challenged. Lawmakers pledged at the time to draft a law reserved for the most heinous murders.

    At least two county prosecutors say Pfeifer should stop ruling on death sentences, including Hamilton County prosecutor Joe Deters, who said that Pfeifer's actions were inappropriate. "It gives rise to a credible inference that he cannot be fair to both sides," Deters said recently.

    Pfeifer's position is unusual but on solid legal ground as long as he keeps his opinions out of his rulings, said Marianna Bettman, a University of Cincinnati law professor and former state appeals court judge.

    Ohio has 148 inmates on death row. Executions are temporarily on hold while federal courts review the state's lethal injection procedures, but that delay is not expected to last forever. The Democrat-sponsored bill to abolish the death penalty has little chance of passing.

    Pfeifer, a Republican, has always charted his own course on the court. For years he was a member of a foursome — two Democrats and two moderate Republicans — dubbed "the Gang of Four" for a series of 4-3 rulings that critics said were anti-business and favored Democrats and their causes. He's also not afraid of mud-slinging: in his spare time the lifelong farmer raises Black Angus cattle.

    Pfeifer had been on the court only two years when, in 1994, he dissented on a vote upholding the death penalty for a man sentenced to death for shooting his ex-girlfriend at the elementary school where she worked as a custodian. Already, he appeared to be having his doubts, writing that "the death penalty is special" and should be "reserved for those committing what the state views as the most heinous of murders." That defendant, John Simko, died of natural causes on death row in 1997.

    Pfeifer made similar statements in court opinions over the years. He took his position public in 2001, calling unsuccessfully for an independent panel to review the law. He began to complain that prosecutors were overusing the statute, seeking death sentences in domestic quarrels that went bad instead of for the worst of the worst killers.

    He often cites the case of Richard Nields, who murdered his girlfriend in their southwestern Ohio home in 1997, then stole her car and travelers' checks, as an example of overreaching by prosecutors.

    "This case is not about robbery," Pfeifer wrote in his dissent to the court's 2001 decision upholding Nields' death sentence. "It is about alcoholism, rage and rejection and about Nields' inability to cope with any of them." Ultimately, Gov. Ted Strickland agreed and in 2010 changed Nields' sentence to life without parole.

    In January 2011, Pfeifer made his strongest statements to date, calling on Kasich to empty death row.

    Pfeifer says he's required as a judge to take positions to make laws better, hence his current stand. He's also required to rule according to the law and the Constitution, which he says he does. Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice Maureen O'Connor says she's comfortable Pfeifer is following the law and not showing bias.

    Since 2001, Pfeifer has written the majority opinion upholding death sentences in five cases, dissented in two others, and upheld death sentences while disagreeing on aspects of the decision in four other cases.

    As recently as December, Pfeifer set an execution date, signing the order for a man who raped and killed his girlfriend's 3-year-old daughter.

    Ohio first allowed the option of life without parole instead of a death sentence in 1996, then changed the law in 2005 to make it even easier to put killers behind bars for life while skipping death penalty charges altogether. Pfeifer says those changes have made the death penalty unnecessary.

    State Rep. Ron Young, a conservative Republican, challenged Pfeifer on this point in December, arguing that removing the death penalty would create a slippery slope where eventually life without parole would be challenged as too harsh.

    Pfeifer's experience as a death penalty supporter turned opponent is not isolated.

    Gerald Kogan, a retired chief justice of the Florida Supreme Court who prosecuted death penalty cases early in his legal career, now says the death penalty should be abolished, with the possible exception of worst of the worst defendants such as Osama bin Laden or a mass serial killer.

    Rudy Gerber helped write Arizona's death penalty law in the 1970s but now opposes capital punishment and represents death row defendants trying to escape the law he created.

    In California, Don Heller authored a 1978 ballot initiative that created the state's death penalty law. Thirty years later, with more than 700 inmates on death row, Heller has changed course and is advocating the law's demise, saying it's too prone to human error.

    ___

    Andrew Welsh-Huggins can be reached at http://twitter.com/awhcolumbus.

     

    7 comments

    • jb  •  3 mths ago
      I feel that a sentence of life without parole is a much more fitting sentence. Years and years of having to live behind bars and knowing you will never be free. What do we do when we execute a person and then discover they were innocent, say oops sorry. Too may instances of people being proven innocent after the fact. Yes the guilty should be punished but not in a way that is irrevocable and final, just in case it is found they are not guilty.
    • STFU  •  3 mths ago
      This judge should recuse himself from all 1st degree murder cases.
    • Lakota  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      Last 4 words, prone to human error. That is an understatement. There has been Many, Many people found innocent later on Death Row through DNA testing and by other ways. It is easy for people to look the other way unless you are one of the Innocent ones on Death Row. If you do not believe an Innocent has never been put to death. The odds are it has happened and more than once and will happen again.
    • Attar Umar  •  Beaverton, Oregon  •  3 mths ago
      "I don't see what society gains from that" .Of course you dont' Judge , You don't see much ! But ask the victims families if they want the Death penalty!! , ask the People that pay taxes to Keep these pigs alive, ask the officers that have to deal with these monsters on a day to day basis, and weather they have remorse for the Murder Molestation and brutality they've committed to another human being for no reason, Sorry But if you've been proven beyond the reasonable doubt that you've killed someone for fun or not in a self defense situation, for the purpose of Robbing, Raping or terrorizing , I think the death penalty is very suitable! Judges now a days are too compassionate for the criminals and heartless against the Victims, A good judge will always ask the Families of the dead victim what do they WANT ! Not what the Judge feels.
      • Enigma 3 mths ago
        Beyond a reasonable doubt is a term subject to the prosecution and defense team involved in the case. They better the lawyer a person has determines how this term will be interpreted by a jury. Do I think Casey Anthony had something to do with the death of her child? #$%$ right I do! But did the jury think so? No, they let her go because the prosecution handled the case in an epic failure. What about the cases where 20 to 30 years later (and there have been thousands) where the prosecution beat the defense and DNA and other evidence have proven that the convicted person didn't do it? That the police, the jury, and the judge got it all wrong? What do you tell the mother, father, and children of the innocent person who was wrongly put to death? How do you compensate them? How do you live with that?
      • Attar Umar 3 mths ago
        Well said Enigma !
    • Gerald  •  Grand Rapids, Michigan  •  3 mths ago
      Thats the problem with society these days,a bunch of bleeding heart pansies.How much tax payer dollars are wasted every year on #$%$ bags that will never be allowed to return to society.I think the death penalty should be used on all murders,rapist,any crime involving children and habitual criminals in general.
      • Laurence 3 mths ago
        Studies have shown that it costs more for death penalty inmates as opposed to those who are in for life. Years of appeals and trials add to the cost. Also, what if a person is executed and then later is found innocent?
      • Yahoo User 3 mths ago
        There should be limits to the appeals that a person on death row can pursue. If there is no doubt whatsoever that the person did the crime, then they forfeit the right to walk among the living.
    • Your worst nightmare  •  Salt Lake City, Utah  •  3 mths ago
      That's the trouble with Ohio,It's primarily liberal.Well judge when are you dummies on the bench ever going to listen to the people and not your silly feelings.The people are tired as hell about the costs of wharehousing these animals and they don't deserve the extra time to breathe.
    • Enigma  •  3 mths ago
      Typically in most murder/violent crimes, victims and their families generally do not want the criminal to face the death penalty. It is generally the public that have no real knowledge of the case that demand this form of justice. And with the recent (last 20 years) of cases being overturned because the police got it wrong, in most of those cases they arrested and got someone convicted that had nothing to do with the crime at all. Many of these cases were overturned posthumously (where the accused was already put to death). There have been thousands of these cases nation wide.

      Now, I am not totally an opponent to the death penalty. But when applied it should be only for those cases where there is indeed no doubt that the person committed the crime and where the circumstances show the crime is extremely heinous. Why do I say this?

      There are several people involved in the case besides the victims family. There are investigators, lawyers, jurors, prison wardens, etc. These people have to live with and accept that they have ordered and executed the taking of a life. Now, how could a sane person live with the fact that they put an innocent person to death. I surely couldn't. And with our justice system that is indeed flawed and favors those that have money over those who don't, the chances of arresting and sentencing the wrong person to death is high. In my own state, I have heard of and seen people convicted of murder where no body was ever discovered and the sole evidence is testimony that is 20 years old.

      So yes, until the system can be changed where there is minimal to no chance of sentencing an innocent person to death, the death penalty should be suspended and life without parole instituted.
      • resolve well 3 mths ago
        prosecutorial misconduct must be reigned in.
    [ [ [['Connery is an experienced stuntman', 2]], 'http://yhoo.it/KeQd0p', '[Slideshow: See photos taken on the way down]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['Connery is an experienced stuntman', 7]], ' http://yhoo.it/KpUoHO', '[Slideshow: Death-defying daredevils]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['know that we have confidence in', 3]], 'http://yhoo.it/LqYjAX ', '[Related: The Secret Service guide to Cartagena]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['We picked up this other dog and', 5]], 'http://yhoo.it/JUSxvi', '[Related: 8 common dog fears, how to calm them]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['accused of running a fake hepatitis B', 5]], 'http://bit.ly/JnoJYN', '[Related: Did WH share raid details with filmmakers?]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['accused of running a fake hepatitis B', 3]], 'http://bit.ly/KoKiqJ', '[Factbox: AQAP, al-Qaeda in Yemen]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['have my contacts on or glasses', 3]], 'http://abcn.ws/KTE5AZ', '[Related: Should the murder charge be dropped?]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['have made this nation great as Sarah Palin', 5]], 'http://yhoo.it/JD7nlD', '[Related: Bristol Palin reality show debuts June 19]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['have made this nation great as Sarah Palin', 1]], 'http://bit.ly/JRPFRO', '[Related: McCain adviser who vetted Palin weighs in on VP race]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['A JetBlue flight from New York to Las Vegas', 3]], 'http://yhoo.it/GV9zpj', '[Related: View photos of the JetBlue plane in Amarillo]', ' ', '630', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['the 28-year-old neighborhood watchman who shot and killed', 15]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/white-house-stays-out-of-teen-s-killing-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/cv/ip/ap/default/120411/martinzimmermen.jpg', '630', ' ', 'AP', ], [ [['Titanic', 7]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/titanic-anniversary/', ' ', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/b/4e/b4e5ad9f00b5dfeeec2226d53e173569.jpeg', '550', ' ', ' ', ], [ [['He was in shock and still strapped to his seat', 6]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/navy-jet-crashes-in-virginia-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/cv/ip/ap/default/120406/jet_ap.jpg', '630', ' ', 'AP', ], [ [['xxxxxxxxxxxx', 11]], 'http://news.yahoo.com/photos/russian-grannies-win-bid-to-sing-at-eurovision-1331223625-slideshow/', 'Click image to see more photos', 'http://l.yimg.com/a/p/us/news/editorial/1/56/156d92f2760dcd3e75bcd649a8b85fcf.jpeg', '500', ' ', 'AP', ] ]
    [ [ [['did not go as far his colleague', 8]], '29438204', '0' ], [ [[' the 28-year-old neighborhood watchman who shot and killed', 4]], '28924649', '0' ], [ [['because I know God protects me', 14], ['Brian Snow was at a nearby credit union', 5]], '28811216', '0' ], [ [['The state news agency RIA-Novosti quoted Rosaviatsiya', 6]], '28805461', '0' ], [ [['measure all but certain to fail in the face of bipartisan', 4]], '28771014', '0' ], [ [['matter what you do in this case', 5]], '28759848', '0' ], [ [['presume laws are constitutional', 7]], '28747556', '0' ], [ [['has destroyed 15 to 25 houses', 7]], '28744868', '0' ], [ [['short answer is yes', 7]], '28746030', '0' ], [ [['opportunity to tell the real story', 7]], '28731764', '0' ], [ [['entirely respectable way to put off the searing constitutional controversy', 7]], '28723797', '0' ], [ [['point of my campaign is that big ideas matter', 9]], '28712293', '0' ], [ [['As the standoff dragged into a second day', 7]], '28687424', '0' ], [ [['French police stepped up the search', 17]], '28667224', '0' ], [ [['Seeking to elevate his candidacy back to a general', 8]], '28660934', '0' ], [ [['The tragic story of Trayvon Martin', 4]], '28647343', '0' ], [ [['Karzai will get a chance soon to express', 8]], '28630306', '0' ], [ [['powerful storms stretching', 8]], '28493546', '0' ], [ [['basic norm that death is private', 6]], '28413590', '0' ], [ [['songwriter also saw a surge in sales for her debut album', 6]], '28413590', '1', 'Watch music videos from Whitney Houston ', 'on Yahoo! Music', 'http://music.yahoo.com' ], [ [['keyword', 99999999999999999999999]], 'videoID', '1', 'overwrite-pre-description', 'overwrite-link-string', 'overwrite-link-url' ] ]
    Loading...