Nov. 21




TENNESSEE----impending execution

Tennessee gives next death row inmate more time to decide how he wants to die



The state says it will extend the deadline for Tennessee's next death row inmate to tell prison officials how he would like the state to execute him.

David Earl Miller previously had until Tuesday to tell prison officials whether he’d prefer the state's default method of execution by lethal injection, or the alternative of the electric chair.

In a federal court filing late Tuesday, Tennessee says it will now give Miller until 5 p.m. Monday to make his decision, 10 days before his scheduled execution date of December 6.

Edmund Zagorski, Tennessee's latest death row inmate to be executed, was the 1st inmate in Tennessee to choose the electric chair since 2007, amid concerns surrounding the chemicals Tennessee uses during lethal injection.

The announcement comes as legal filings in several courts are beginning to ramp up, as is typical in the days before a scheduled execution.

Tuesday, a federal judge in Nashville denied a request from Miller's attorney Stephen Kissinger to reconsider delaying Miller's execution. That denial has been appealed to the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals.

Earlier this week, the U.S. Supreme Court denied issuing a stay of execution for Miller based on arguments he had ineffective lawyers during his trial - an argument Zagorski's attorneys also made in the days before his death sentence was carried out.

Miller's attorneys have also appealed a previous Tennessee Supreme Court ruling about the legality of the state's 3-drug lethal injection protocol to the U.S. Supreme Court. Miller's attorneys are asking for the high court to pause Miller's execution until it decides another death penalty case involving a death row inmate in Missouri that it heard arguments in earlier this month.

The U.S. Supreme Court has not yet decided to stop a scheduled execution in Tennessee since the Tennessee Department of Correction resumed them this year following a 9-year hiatus.

(source: WTVF news)

********************

Tenn. death row inmate asks Supreme Court to halt execution----David Earl Miller's attorneys argue the court needs to give guidance on what inmates must do to establish that a more humane method of execution is available



A Tennessee death row inmate is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to halt his execution, at least until it clarifies a point of law.

In an application filed Tuesday, David Earl Miller's attorneys argue the Supreme Court needs to give guidance to lower courts on what inmates must do to establish that a more humane method of execution is available.

Miller faces death either by electrocution or a three-drug lethal injection mix that uses the controversial drug midazolam.

Miller and others earlier argued a single dose of pentobarbital would be more humane. That case was thrown out by Tennessee courts that ruled the inmates failed to prove prison officials could obtain the alternative drug.

Miller is scheduled to die Dec. 6 for the 1981 murder of Lee Standifer.

(source: correctionsone.com)








MISSOURI:

Missouri Supreme Court upholds death sentence in case that’s been litigated for decades



The Missouri Supreme Court in Jefferson City has upheld the death sentence for a man whose case has bounced up and down through the state's court system for 20 years.

In its 4th time considering the case of Terrance Anderson from southeast Missouri's Poplar Bluff, the high bench backed up a lower court's rejection of claims made by Anderson's attorney.

The Supreme Court's unanimous decision was written by Judge George W. Draper III. Anderson was convicted in 2001 for the 1997 killing of his ex-girlfriend's parents and was sentenced to death for murdering the mother.

In its decision handed down Tuesday, the Supreme Court dismissed contentions from Anderson's attorney that his previous trial lawyers were ineffective for failing to call witnesses, for failing to object more quickly to questions during cross-examination, and for not objecting to the introduction of certain evidence.

The high bench also said Anderson's previous lawyers were not irresponsible in asking him to testify and concluded that his appellate attorney had reason to not question whether the death sentence was appropriate. The high judges also said Anderson did not present evidence showing the lower court failed to properly consider his claims.

The Supreme Court had twice previously ordered new sentencing for Anderson after it found discrepancies in lower court proceedings.

Initially, the Supreme Court upheld the lower court's 2001 decision. But it ordered new sentencing in 2006 when it was revealed that a juror had indicated Anderson's attorneys would have to prove he didn't deserve the death penalty.

The lower bench again sentenced him to death in 2008, and the Supreme Court affirmed that penalty in a 4-3 decision. But in 2013, the high court again found his sentencing to be unfair, this time because the judge had conversed about the case extensively as it was ongoing with the jury foreperson.

The case was once again sent to the lower court with a replacement for the judge who was instructed to recuse himself. The Supreme Court left the death sentence in place but ordered a new hearing on Anderson's request to have his case canceled. Anderson appealed to the high bench once again after the circuit court denied his request. The Supreme Court's latest hand down is a response to that appeal.

The murders occurred in southeast Missouri's Poplar Bluff, but the case was tried 85 miles away in Cape Girardeau on a change of venue from Butler County to Cape Girardeau County.

Anderson killed the parents of his ex-girlfriend the same day she secured a restraining order again him and told him visitation of their 3-month-old child would be arranged through the courts.

(source: missourinet.com)








NEBRASKA:

Judge rejects accused murderer Bailey Boswell's motion to rule out death penalty



A Saline County judge has rejected a motion by accused murderer Bailey Boswell to nullify the state's death penalty.

District Judge Vicky Johnson made the ruling on Tuesday and scheduled a hearing for Dec. 17 to arraign Boswell, 24, on charges of 1st-degree murder and illegal disposal of a body.

Both Boswell and her 52-year-old boyfriend, Aubrey Trail, face the death penalty if convicted in connection with the slaying and dismemberment of Lincoln store clerk Sydney Loofe.

Boswell’s court-appointed lawyer, Todd Lancaster of the Nebraska Commission on Public Advocacy, had argued that Nebraska's death penalty statues should be tossed out as unconstitutional.

Among his arguments was that the death penalty is arbitrary, and that the nation's "evolving standards of decency" are such that execution now represents cruel and unusual punishment.

Loofe’s body was found in plastic bags near Edgar, Nebraska, about 3 weeks after she went on a date arranged online with Boswell.

Boswell and Trail were then living in a basement apartment in Wilber, Nebraska. The pair were recently convicted in federal court of scamming a Kansas couple out of nearly $400,000 in a scheme to buy a rare coin overseas.

Trail, who has a long criminal record, has called reporters to tell them that he was responsible for Loofe's death and that Boswell was not in the room when it happened.

Trail is scheduled to go on trial in June in Saline County. A trial date for Boswell has not yet been set.

(source: omaha World-Herald)








IDAHO:

Wyoming man argues against death penalty in fetus death



A Wyoming man charged with killing his girlfriend in Idaho in July 2016 argues the death of her unborn baby does not qualify as a 2nd murder that makes him eligible for the death penalty.

Attorneys for 41-year-old Erik Ohlson of Jackson say it's "legal insanity" for Idaho law to protect a 1st trimester fetus under the homicide law but not under the abortion law.

Ohlson is charged with killing 39-year-old Jennifer Nalley and her unborn baby. His trial is set for July 2019 in Bingham County, Idaho.

"A woman and her doctors can kill an embryo or fetus in the 1st trimester without repercussions from the law," Ohlson's attorneys Jim Archibald and John Thomas wrote in their Nov. 9 motion to dismiss the murder charge related to the fetus. "To say a potential mother has protection from being prosecuted but a potential father does not have protections violates equal protection under law."

They argue the 12-week-old fetus wasn't old enough to have a right to life.

"Erik Ohlson was put on notice that a fetus in its 1st trimester could be killed," they wrote. "He knew this personally as 2 different women he had relationships with had aborted, or killed, their 1st trimester fetuses."

The attorneys also argued the fetus didn't die because it was shot, but because Nalley was shot. There was no autopsy or death certificate for the fetus, meaning Ohlson can't be charged with a 2nd count of murder.

Prosecutors plan to use text messages apparently sent by Ohlson as evidence for premeditation in Nalley's death.

"She seems to be interested in having this baby without me except for when it comes to money," investigators said Ohlson texted to a friend just before the shooting. "I want to strangle her and witness her last mortal moment."

A motions hearing is set for Dec. 7, the Jackson Hole News & Guide reported .

(source: Associated Press)
_______________________________________________
A service courtesy of Washburn University School of Law www.washburnlaw.edu

DeathPenalty mailing list
DeathPenalty@lists.washlaw.edu
http://lists.washlaw.edu/mailman/listinfo/deathpenalty
Unsubscribe: http://lists.washlaw.edu/mailman/options/deathpenalty

Reply via email to