John Cornyn Will Be a Texas Thom Tillis and That’s Awful
California Is Doing What Now for Homeless Illegal Aliens?!
UK Residents Just Got a Punch to the Gut Regarding This Economic Survey
'I Dig It': Maine's Dem Senate Hopeful Apparently Likes Watching Jewish People Die
It Seems Ro Khanna Might Be the Next Dem Rep to Get Torched...the...
We Know Who Donated to Eric Swalwell
Scott Jennings Shredded This Former Dem Rep's Iran Cheerleading on CNN Last Night
Here Are the Two People DNI Gabbard Issued Criminal Referrals for Concerning...
Ohio Police Did a Welfare Check on a 91-Year-Old Woman, and It Did...
Pocahontas Wants to Spend Jeff Bezos’s Money
The Pope, Three Cardinals, and the Iran War
In Israel, Garbage Trucks Bring the Garbage
Debunking Five Tax Day Myths
Immigration in America: Legal Pathways, Border Reality, and the Fight Over Who Belongs
Trump’s Hormuz Masterstroke: How American Energy Dominance Is Exposing China’s Fatal Weakn...
Tipsheet
Premium

Sotomayor's Death Penalty Dissent Does More Harm Than Good

Sotomayor's Death Penalty Dissent Does More Harm Than Good
AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File

I am not a fan of the death penalty. After the now disbarred Durham County District Attorney Mike Nifong withheld exculpatory DNA evidence and made false statements during the Duke lacrosse case, I realized I did not want the state to have such power over life and death.

That being said, I also acknowledge the death penalty is the law of the land in some states and is — in some instances — warranted.

In 1993, Gregory Huguley was abducted by Anthony Boyd and several accomplices. They forced Huguley into a van at gunpoint and drove him to a nearby softball field. Huguley was then tied to a bench and weighed down with cinderblocks before he was doused in gasoline and burned alive.

Why? Over a $200 drug debt.

Appellate courts upheld Boyd's conviction, and Boyd was scheduled to be executed via nitrogen gas. Boyd appealed the manner of his execution to the Supreme Court, arguing he wanted to die by firing squad instead. That is not a method of execution used in Alabama. 

Here's more from Reuters:

The Supreme Court's conservative majority had denied a petition by Boyd, who has spent three decades on death row over his role in a 1993 murder, to stop his execution by nitrogen asphyxiation and instead kill him by firing squad.

Support for the death penalty in the U.S. is near a 50-year low around 53%, according to a 2024 Gallup poll.

Capital punishment
is currently permissible in 27 of the 50 states, and last year four states - Alabama, Texas, Missouri and Oklahoma - carried out about three quarters of the country's 25 executions, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

The Supreme Court denied Boyd's request for a stay, and while the majority didn't issue an opinion, the three Leftist Justices did.

There can, and should, be a spirited debate on the death penalty, including the use of nitrogen gas as a method of execution.

The problem is this: that discussion cannot take place when the Left — time and again — hold up the worst offenders as victims of an unfair justice system.

You know who else was suffocating for minutes, struggling to breathe? Gregory Huguley. He was doused with gasoline, restrained, and then set on fire. So not only was breathing difficult, but he was in excruciating pain the entire time.

It's a slap in the face to families, as we saw when President Biden commuted the death row sentences of dozens of inmates before he left office earlier this year.

And therein lies the problem. For far too long, the Left has been soft on crime and more compassionate towards criminals than their victims and those victims' families. When we have Democrat district attorneys, attorneys general, and politicians lecturing us on the need to be "compassionate" to guys like Decarlos Brown Jr. (with 14 prior arrests) or Courtney Boose (with 99 prior arrests), the public isn't going to tolerate those injustices forever.

They are going to demand harsher punishments. They are going to start meting out street justice. They are going to push back on a system that routinely protects the guilty at the expense of the innocent.

If Justice Sotomayor and her fellow dissenters wish to see change, they need to show deference to the victims, not the criminals.

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos