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Reinstating the Death Penalty
Although the separate opinions by
Justices Brennan and Marshall stated that the death penalty itself was
unconstitutional, the overall holding in Furman was that the specific death
penalty statutes were unconstitutional. With that holding, the Court
essentially opened the door to states to rewrite their death penalty
statutes to eliminate the problems cited in Furman. Advocates of capital
punishment began proposing new statutes that they believed would end
arbitrariness in capital sentencing. The states were led by Florida,
which rewrote its death penalty statute only five months after Furman. Shortly after, 34 other
states proceeded to enact new death penalty statutes. To address the
unconstitutionality of unguided jury discretion, some states removed
all of that discretion by mandating capital punishment for those
convicted of capital crimes. However, this practice was held
unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in Woodson v. North Carolina (428
U.S. 280 (1976)).
Other states sought to limit that
discretion by providing sentencing guidelines for the judge and jury
when deciding whether to impose death. The guidelines allowed for the
introduction of aggravating and mitigating factors in determining
sentencing. These guided discretion statutes were approved in 1976 by
the Supreme Court in Gregg v.
Georgia (428 U.S. 153), Jurek
v. Texas (428 U.S. 262), and Proffitt
v. Florida (428 U.S. 242), collectively referred to as the Gregg
decision. This landmark decision held that the new death penalty
statutes in Florida, Georgia, and Texas were constitutional, thus
reinstating the death penalty in those states. The Court also held that
the death penalty itself was constitutional under the Eighth Amendment.
In addition to sentencing
guidelines, three other procedural reforms were approved by the Court
in Gregg. The first was
bifurcated trials, in which there are separate deliberations for the
guilt and penalty phases of the trial. Only after the jury has
determined that the defendant is guilty of capital murder does it
decide in a second trial whether the defendant should be sentenced to
death or given a lesser sentence of prison time. Another reform was the
practice of automatic appellate review of convictions and sentence. The
final procedural reform from Gregg
was proportionality review, a practice that helps the state to identify
and eliminate sentencing disparities. Through this process, the state
appellate court can compare the sentence in the case being reviewed
with other cases within the state, to see if it is disproportionate.
Because these reforms were
accepted by the Supreme Court, some states wishing to reinstate the
death penalty included them in their new death penalty statutes. The
Court, however, did not require that each of the reforms be present in
the new statutes. Therefore, some of the resulting new statutes include
variations on the procedural reforms found in Gregg.
The ten-year moratorium on
executions that had begun with the Jackson and Witherspoon decisions
ended on January 17, 1977, with the execution of Gary Gilmore by firing
squad in Utah. Gilmore did not challenge his death sentence. That same
year, Oklahoma became the first state to adopt lethal injection as a
means of execution, though it would be five more years until Charles
Brooks became the first person executed by lethal injection in Texas on
December 7, 1982.
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