New 'Timely Justice Act' not so timely


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  • | 12:00 p.m. October 7, 2013
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It hasn't been used in 30 years to commute a death sentence, but executive clemency will still keep more than 100 Death Row inmates from being quickly executed under a law signed in June by Gov. Rick Scott.

Scott received a list of 132 convicts certified by Florida Supreme Court Clerk Thomas Hall as being at least partially "warrant ready" under the requirements of the "Timely Justice Act," which was passed by the Republican-dominated Legislature this spring. Some of the state's most notorious killers are on the list, including Juan Chavez, convicted of killing 9-year-old Jimmy Ryce in Redland 18 years ago.

But only after clemency is complete does the 30-day trigger for Scott to sign a death warrant begin under the new law, and just a fraction of those on the list –between 10 and 20 – are in any stage of the clemency process. And nobody on the list has yet reached the threshold for an execution order because, according to Scott's lawyers, executive clemency isn't finalized until the governor actually signs a death warrant.

That means that the new law will not spark a flurry of executions, perhaps dashing some lawmakers' expectations.

"Most of the cases received from the Supreme Court clerk, pursuant to state law, have not yet begun clemency review. Therefore, only a small fraction of these cases will be eligible for the issuance of a death warrant any time soon," Scott's general counsel Pete Antonacci said.

Because executive clemency is confidential, there is no way to determine who on the list will be among the first death warrants issued.

Under the new law, the Supreme Court clerk must certify to the governor a list of Death Row inmates whose initial state and federal appeals have been exhausted. According to Supreme Court Clerk Hall, 132 meet those requirements.

The law orders the governor to sign death warrants for the condemned on the list within 30 days and direct the warden to schedule their executions within 180 days – but only once the executive clemency process has been completed.

Since Scott's lawyers say that does not happen until the governor deems clemency is finalized, it is unclear exactly what impact the portions of the new law dealing with the timing of executions will have.

"With that broad of an interpretation, one would wonder why the governor signed the bill in the first place. It would seem to be nothing more than kowtowing to his constituency without any substance," said Stephen Harper, a Florida International University law professor who teaches a course on the death penalty, runs the school's death penalty clinic and has represented numerous clients charged with capital crimes. 

It has been three decades since a Death Row inmate has been granted clemency. In 1983, then-Gov. Bob Graham and the clemency board commuted the death sentence of Jesse Ray Rutledge, convicted of killing a woman and child in Hawthorne.

Harper also said the Legislature may interpret the law differently than Scott's lawyers.

"This could create an unnecessary constitutional mess between the governor, the Legislature and the Florida Supreme Court as it's being litigated right now. And I have concern that the governor's counsel's interpretation of this law may not be accurate," he said.

More than 150 lawyers representing Death Row inmates are challenging the constitutionality of the new law with a case before the Florida Supreme Court.

The lawyers believe the "Timely Justice Act" violates the separation of powers as well as convicts' constitutional rights to due process and equal protection.

After the law was passed, Scott's office launched a public relations crusade insisting that the Timely Justice Act would not speed up executions.

 

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