Q&A: Biden inaction, mixed signals on death penalty
- Associated Press
- Updated
President Joe Biden campaigned on a pledge to work toward abolishing federal capital punishment. But his Justice Department continues to press for the death penalty in certain cases β even as a moratorium means no federal executions are likely to happen anytime soon. Advocates for abolishing capital punishment say mixed signals from the administration and silence from Biden drives home that the Democrat has not made good on his campaign promises that so raised their hopes. U.S. prosecutors this month opened a capital trial against Sayfullo Saipov, who killed eight people in an attack on a New York City bicycle path.
What about ongoing death penalty cases?
Updated
Under Merrick Garland , the Justice Department hasn't sought the death penalty in any new cases. It also has withdrawn bids for capital punishment sought by prior administrations against more than two dozen defendants.
But U.S. prosecutors this month opened a capital trial in New York against Sayfullo Saipov, who is accused of using a truck in 2017 to mow down pedestrians and cyclists on a bike path by the Hudson River. The decision to seek death came under Trump but Garland allowed his prosecutors to continued to seek it.
Justice Department lawyers are also fighting to maintain the death sentence imposed on Tsarnaev for the 2013 bombing that killed three people near the Boston Marathon finish line. Tsarnaev is making a renewed push to avoid execution after the U.S. Supreme Court reinstated his death sentence last year.
The White House didn't immediately respond to questions from The Associated Press.
AP fileWhat measures has Biden taken?
Updated
Despite his campaign pledge, Biden himself has not issued any formal directives or policy statements on federal capital punishment. During the campaign, he also vowed to work at ending the death penalty in all states. He has been silent on that, too.
The most notable step by his administration was Garland's 2021 announced halt on federal executions that were restarted by Biden's Republican predecessor. The Department of Justice won't issue orders to execute anyone, at least while the moratorium is in place.
But it doesn't stop the department from pursuing the death penalty. And it doesn't stop U.S. prosecutors from continuing to fight legal action by death row inmates trying to avoid execution.
The Garland moratorium is similar to one ordered in 2014 by President Barack Obama following a botched state execution in Oklahoma. Capital punishment opponents say the fact Obama didn't take more far-reaching action on the federal executions left the door open for Trump to restart them.
Trump officials argued that carrying out the executions was a matter of complying with U.S. law and bringing long delayed justice to victims' relatives.
AP fileWhat does the review during the moratorium entail?
Updated
The Justice Department hasn't offered details, including on end goals or timetables. When asked how long the moratorium may last, Department Spokesperson Joshua Stueve said in an email only that the review is ongoing.
Garland has said the review would look at protocols put in place by Trump's attorney general, William Barr. Attorneys for death row inmates criticized the protocols, saying they allowed for hurried executions and undermined due process.
What the review does not entail is an assessment of whether the federal death penalty should be scrapped entirely.
In September, the Justice Department issued a public notice seeking comment about changes to some Trump protocols, including one permitting execution methods other than lethal injection, including firing squads.
AP fileHave any Trump-era protocols been revoked?
Updated
None have not been formally rescinded, though they serve no practical function as long as the moratorium remains in place.
In a recent letter, Democratic U.S. Rep. Ayanna Pressley (pictured) and Sen. Dick Durbin urged the Justice Department to quickly annul all the Trump protocols, including one authorizing the use of state facilities and staff in federal executions, calling the orders "irreparably tainted."
Another authorizes the use of a single drug, pentobarbital, to replace a three-drug cocktail deployed in the earlier 2000s β the last time federal executions were carried out prior to Trump.
A replacement was needed after pharmaceutical companies in the 2000s began prohibiting executioners from using their drugs, saying they were meant to save lives, not take them. The Barr Justice Department chose pentobarbital despite some evidence that pentobarbital causes pulmonary edema, a painful sensation akin to drowning as fluid rushes into the lungs.
Most critics of the death penalty responded to the moratorium and review with, at best, faint praise β calling it a first step.
Dunham also noted the focus on protocols has limited impact, including because any changes can easily be undone by a future administration.
As they stand, he said, "the Biden reforms aren't worth much more than the paper they are written on."
AP fileWhat do death penalty opponents want done?
Updated
They say Biden should draw immediately on his presidential powers to commute all federal death sentences to life in prison. None of the death sentences could ever be restored.
There's also proposed legislation to strike the death penalty from U.S. statutes and resentence the over 40 inmates still on federal death row to life. Biden has given no indication he supports any such measures.
The issue is a sensitive one for Biden. In 1994, then-Sen. Biden shepherded legislation through Congress that added 60 additional crimes for which someone could be executed. Some inmates executed under Trump were sentenced under those provisions.
Eliminating federal capital punishment would mean sparing the lives of killers such as Dylann Roof, the white supremacist who in 2015 shot dead nine Black members of a South Carolina church during a Bible study. Biden could find justifying that politically uncomfortable.
Capital punishment has been a hot-button issue politically in the past but is less so now after support for capital punishment has fallen in recent decades. Backing for it currently hovers around 50%, according to most polls.
AP fileTags
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President Joe Biden campaigned on a pledge to work toward abolishing federal capital punishment but has taken no major steps to that end.
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