DeSantis steps up pace of executions in Florida, chasing Trump

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TALLAHASSEE – After overseeing only two executions during his first four years in office, Gov. Ron DeSantis is poised to carry out his fifth in six months, with Brevard County murderer James Barnes set to die Aug. 3.

Some death penalty experts say DeSantis’ sudden drive is powered by politics, part of a grim chase of Republican presidential frontrunner Donald Trump.

While president, Trump set a remarkable record of executing 13 federal inmates during his last six months in office. Trump executed more civilian prisoners during his term than any president since President Grover Cleveland in 1896.

“This is bluster for DeSantis,” said Abe Bonowitz, executive director and co-founder of Death Penalty Action, who has fought against capital punishment for more than 30 years in Florida and nationwide.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is poised to execute his fifth Florida inmate this year, stepping up his pace in what critics call a grim contest to compete with former President Donald Trump, who executed more federal inmates than any president in more than a century.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is poised to execute his fifth Florida inmate this year, stepping up his pace in what critics call a grim contest to compete with former President Donald Trump, who executed more federal inmates than any president in more than a century.

“He needs a way to equate himself with Trump on this issue. It’s all about looking for help with certain parts of the base.”

Although DeSantis is the former president’s closest rival for the GOP nomination, polls show the Florida governor trailing by huge margins across the nation, even losing ground to Trump from surveys earlier this year across key primary states.

DeSantis has been campaigning almost full-time since declaring his candidacy in May. But he badly needs a spark, and has tried to attack Trump as soft of crime.

Death penalty part of DeSantis' conservative pitch

DeSantis hasn’t spoken about the reasons behind his accelerated pace of executions. But he has clearly leaned into a conservative agenda on criminal justice and a host of cultural issues during the legislative session preceding his official presidential announcement.

DeSantis signed into law a measure making it easier for juries to apply the death penalty – allowing for only an 8-4 vote. The move followed the less-than-unanimous vote that resulted in Parkland school shooter Nikolas Cruz being sentenced to life in prison.

Florida’s Republican-controlled Legislature endorsed DeSantis’ push to enhance capital punishment laws.

Whenever Florida executes an inmate, death penalty opponents hold prayer vigils at the Great Seal of the State of Florida at the Capitol's front door. This vigil took place on Feb. 24 after Donald Dillbeck was executed by the state.
Whenever Florida executes an inmate, death penalty opponents hold prayer vigils at the Great Seal of the State of Florida at the Capitol's front door. This vigil took place on Feb. 24 after Donald Dillbeck was executed by the state.

“I do not celebrate when we have an execution,” said Sen. Dennis Baxley, R-Ocala, during debate about changing the jury vote requirement. “It’s a very sad day to me...But at the same time, if we’re going to have accountability, you have to have something that happens where you ultimately pay with your life if you ignore all the bounds.”

DeSantis also approved legislation that makes child rapists eligible for the death penalty, which conflicts with a 2008 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that found such punishment unconstitutional in cases where the victim did not die.

A legal challenge to that new Florida law could eventually make its way to the high court, where the conservative majority may be ready to reconsider that 15-year-old ruling.

Florida has 293 inmates on Death Row, some since the 1970s.

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Timing tied to host of issues, governor's office says

DeSantis spokesman Jeremy Redfern said a range of issues contribute to the timing of executions.

“Factors deciding death warrants include the complete exhaustion of remaining appeals and the egregiousness of the crime(s) committed,” Redfern said in an email.

“The procedure is far more complicated – and involves many more people and resources – than is commonly understood,” he added.

Redfern cited the availability of the lethal injection drug protocol, which has been a problem for states, and coordinating with Corrections Department officials, witnesses and family members of victims.

The COVID-19 pandemic and other periods of state emergencies, such as hurricanes, also affect scheduling, he added.

All four of the men DeSantis executed this year had been on death row for more than 30 years: Donald Dillbeck, Louis Gaskin, Darryl Barwick and last month, Duane Owen. Barnes, scheduled to die next month, pleaded guilty in 2006 to the 1988 murder and rape of a nurse during a random break-in at a Melbourne condominium.

The average time of Florida’s death row is almost 23 years, according to Florida Corrections Department records.

A gurney in an execution chamber at Florida State Prison in Starke where inmates receive lethal injection.
A gurney in an execution chamber at Florida State Prison in Starke where inmates receive lethal injection.

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Florida's record of wrongful convictions worse than many states'

The Death Penalty Information Center also cites that 30 inmates in Florida were among the 191 people in the U.S. exonerated of their crimes and taken off death row since 1972, a rate of wrongful conviction much higher than the national average.

Daniel Medwed, a professor of law and criminal justice at Northeastern University School of Law, said Florida has put itself on the “extreme edge” of U.S. states with the new capital sentencing laws signed by the governor.

But, he added, DeSantis appears to be playing to Republican voters who remain overwhelmingly supportive of the death penalty. That endures despite research casting doubt on whether capital punishment plays any role in deterring crime.

It also carries extraordinary legal costs for governments to carry out, Medwed said.

Governor Ron DeSantis listens to speakers during an interfaith vigil at Pine Trails Park in Parkland, Florida, on Thursday, February 14, 2019.
Governor Ron DeSantis listens to speakers during an interfaith vigil at Pine Trails Park in Parkland, Florida, on Thursday, February 14, 2019.

“DeSantis’ moves on the death penalty are a microcosm of a larger political debate going on and the trend toward deep partisanship,” Medwed said. “The people on the right are trying to show they’re tough on crime and those on the left are showing their openness to criminal justice reform.”

“The death penalty is really the tip of the spear in this fight,” he added.

Executions get thumbs up from GOP voting base

The Pew Research Center found that most respondents who identify with the Republican Party favor the death penalty – with 42% strongly supporting it, according to a 2020 survey. Most who identify with the Democratic Party oppose the death penalty, with 29% saying the strongly oppose it.

Given such balances, DeSantis’ aggressive use of capital punishment may help him court GOP support. But, like many of his policies on free speech, LGBTQ rights, gun access and abortion, DeSantis’ approach could alienate huge swaths of voters if he can somehow win the Republican nomination and square off against President Joe Biden.

“It seems like there’s disconnect between the short game of earning the Republican nomination and then winning the general,” Medwed said.

Still, a Gallup poll from last October showed overall, Americans were in favor of the death penalty for murderers, 55%-42%.

Even with that, though, there are signs of rising opposition to capital punishment. Only 27 states authorize the death penalty and five of them currently have a moratorium on executions, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

The most recent halt was in Republican-led Ohio, where Gov. Mike DeWine paused executions because of the state’s inability to obtain drugs from pharmaceutical companies to carry out lethal injections. Three more executions scheduled there for this year have been postponed.

Biden has moratorium on federal executions − after Trump surge

More than 70% of countries around the world have effectively abolished the death penalty, including all but one European nation. The Biden administration has enacted a moratorium on carrying out federal death sentences since July 2021 after the surge at the end of Trump’s term.

Robin Maher, executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center, said it’s not surprising that capital punishment has emerged early in the presidential contest, noting that it “always been a political tool,” used by Democratic and Republican administrations.

“It is the ultimate expression of governmental power and authority,” she added.

DeSantis, Trump and former Vice President Mike Pence are among the Republican presidential candidates now campaigning on increased use of the death penalty.

“But there is a growing awareness that the death penalty is remarkably inefficient and terribly expensive,” Maher said. “What will you get when candidates say they’ll use the death penalty more often? Will communities be safer? I don’t think that will be true,” she added.

John Kennedy is a reporter in the USA TODAY Network’s Florida Capital Bureau. He can be reached at jkennedy2@gannett.com, or on Twitter at @JKennedyReport

This article originally appeared on Tallahassee Democrat: Florida executions: DeSantis' pace up in 2023, compared to first term