No more electric chair in Nebraska
- Bob78164
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No more electric chair in Nebraska
Relying on the Nebraska State Constitution, the Nebraska Supreme Court ruled today that the electric chair (the only form of capital punishment currently authorized in Nebraska) is unconstitutional because it is cruel and unusual punishment. --Bob
"Question with boldness even the existence of a God; because, if there be one, he must more approve of the homage of reason than that of blindfolded fear." Thomas Jefferson
- Appa23
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Re: No more electric chair in Nebraska
The Nebraska Supreme Court says that they based it on the Nebraska Constitution. However, the Nebraska Constitution copies exactly the Eighth Amendment's language. So, they really decided it on the Constitution. Hence, the Nebraska Atty General will appeal to the USSC, who has ruled the "chair" not to be cruel and unusual punishment in the past.Bob78164 wrote:Relying on the Nebraska State Constitution, the Nebraska Supreme Court ruled today that the electric chair (the only form of capital punishment currently authorized in Nebraska) is unconstitutional because it is cruel and unusual punishment. --Bob
As Nebraska is the only state to rely entirely on the chair as the method of execution, and the current federal stay on lethal injection, Nebraska's death row is totally on hold.
Interesting debate by the court versus the legislature and Governor. Court essentially said that you have to look at what current society thinks is barbaric. According to the Nebraska supremes, we are more civilized now than 200 + years ago. Plus, we know much more now about the details of the death (pain, bodies catching on fire, et cetera) than we ever have known.
There is a proposal in the Unicameral to toally outlaw capital punishment. It is brought up nearly every session by our lone black senator. (You know, the one who sued God and wanted to serve the papers on Tom Osborne. <g> )
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Re: No more electric chair in Nebraska
That's clearly a losing argument. The United States Supreme Court will deny certiorari. As far as the United States Supreme Court is concerned, the interpretation of the Nebraska Constitution is purely a state issue, even if it uses precisely the same language as the federal Constitution. And with no federal issue involved, the United States Supreme Court lacks jurisdiction to review the matter. --BobAppa23 wrote:The Nebraska Supreme Court says that they based it on the Nebraska Constitution. However, the Nebraska Constitution copies exactly the Eighth Amendment's language. So, they really decided it on the Constitution. Hence, the Nebraska Atty General will appeal to the USSC, who has ruled the "chair" not to be cruel and unusual punishment in the past.Bob78164 wrote:Relying on the Nebraska State Constitution, the Nebraska Supreme Court ruled today that the electric chair (the only form of capital punishment currently authorized in Nebraska) is unconstitutional because it is cruel and unusual punishment. --Bob
"Question with boldness even the existence of a God; because, if there be one, he must more approve of the homage of reason than that of blindfolded fear." Thomas Jefferson
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Re: No more electric chair in Nebraska
I would be fine, of course, if the ruling stands.Bob78164 wrote:That's clearly a losing argument. The United States Supreme Court will deny certiorari. As far as the United States Supreme Court is concerned, the interpretation of the Nebraska Constitution is purely a state issue, even if it uses precisely the same language as the federal Constitution. And with no federal issue involved, the United States Supreme Court lacks jurisdiction to review the matter. --BobAppa23 wrote:The Nebraska Supreme Court says that they based it on the Nebraska Constitution. However, the Nebraska Constitution copies exactly the Eighth Amendment's language. So, they really decided it on the Constitution. Hence, the Nebraska Atty General will appeal to the USSC, who has ruled the "chair" not to be cruel and unusual punishment in the past.Bob78164 wrote:Relying on the Nebraska State Constitution, the Nebraska Supreme Court ruled today that the electric chair (the only form of capital punishment currently authorized in Nebraska) is unconstitutional because it is cruel and unusual punishment. --Bob
The intriguing aspect of the majority opinion is its statement that the Nebraska constitution does not provide more protection than the federal constitution with regards to "cruel and unusual punishment". If you look at the opinion, one can see that the Nebraska supremes really are making the ruling on federal constitutional grounds, noting that the Supremes have upehled the chair in the past, but "who knows how they would decide if they had these facts in front of them." They only discuss federal caselaw rather than state caselaw. Plus, if the USSC decide that the "state constitutional decision" really was subterfuge for a decision based on the 8th Amendment , who is going to complain that it was a "state constitution" matter, and to whom are they complaining?
Of course, the whole thing is moot if the Unicameral decides to abolish the death penalty and then overrides the certain veto of the Governor. (About the same chance of that happening as I am of winning any Bored popularity contest.)