Monday, June 7, 2010

California hopes for OK on execution procedure

Approval would reignite legal fight over resuming rarely carried-out penalty.

SACRAMENTO -- When Caryl Chessman died in California's gas chamber 50 years ago -- probably the state's most notorious execution -- 18 inmates were left on death row. Today, there are 702.

The last execution at San Quentin State Prison was that of Clarence Ray Allen on Jan. 17, 2006, the 13th in California since 1978.

Since that day, at least 205 convicts have been executed in other states, 24 death row inmates at San Quentin have died from natural causes or suicide, and 83 people have been sentenced to death in California courts.

But no one has been executed in California since Allen, including Modesto's Scott Peterson, who has been on death row for five years since being convicted of murdering his pregnant wife, Laci.

That's largely because of two court challenges over the state's lethal injection methods and its attempt to short-circuit the procedure for revising those methods.

Now corrections officials hope they are on the verge of winning approval of their rewritten lethal injection rules, which will give the rules the force of law.

That approval, due by Friday, will reignite a legal battle over whether California can rejoin 34 other states that have the death penalty, and whether it should.


Source: The Modesto Bee, June 7, 2010 - Photo: Holding cell in San Quentin's new death chamber.

No comments:

Post a Comment