Capital punishment is legal in the
U.S. state of
Louisiana. A total of 659 individuals have been executed in
Louisiana including 27 since 1976. A total of 88 people are under a
sentence of death in the state as of
October 13,
2007. The current method of
execution in
Louisiana is
lethal injection. Capital crimes in Louisiana are: First degree
murder (
premeditation does not have to be a part of it, but instead requires specific intent), and
treason. Formerly the state also allowed execution for the
aggravated rape of a victim under the age of 12. The
Supreme Court, however, ruled it unconstitutional on
June 25,
2008 in
Kennedy v. Louisiana, saying "there is a distinction between intentional first-degree murder on the one hand and nonhomicide crimes against individual persons.
Process
The jury decides the sentence and may give a sentence of life imprisonment without parole for capital offenses. A unanimous verdict is needed is order to convict of defendant of a capital crime and sentence to death. Clemency rests with the governor of Louisiana, who must have a recommendation from a board.
Method
Executions in Louisiana are currently performed at the Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola, Louisiana, where Louisiana's death row is by lethal injection. Lethal injection is the sole method of execution. Previous methods: hanging up to 1938 and then electrocution for 61 people from 1941 to 1991.
Capital offenses
- Treason against the state of Louisiana.
- First degree murder:
- The murder was committed during the commission of, attempt of, or escape from a specified felony (aggravated kidnapping, second degree kidnapping, aggravated escape, aggravated arson, aggravated rape, forcible rape, aggravated burglary, armed robbery, assault by drive-by shooting, first degree robbery, second degree robbery, simple robbery, terrorism, cruelty to juveniles, or second degree cruelty to juveniles).
- The victim was a fireman or peace officer engaged in his lawful duties.
- The offender has a specific intent to kill or to inflict great bodily harm upon more than one person.
- The murder was committed for pecuniary gain or pursuant to an agreement that the defendant would receive something of value.
- The victim was under the age of 12 years.
- The victim was 65 years or older.
- The murder was committed during an illegal drug deal.
- The murder was committed while the defendant was engaged in "ritualistic acts".
- The murder was committed while the defendant was the subject of a restraining order protecting the victim.
- The murder was committed upon a victim who was a witness to a crime or was a member of the immediate family of a witness to a crime committed on a prior occasion.
Individuals executed since 1976
A total of 27 individuals convicted of murder have been executed by the state of Louisiana since 1976:
|
| Executed person
| Date of execution
| Method
| Victims
| Under Governor |
| 1
| Robert Wayne Williams
| 14 December 1983
| electric chair
| Willie Kelly.
| David C. Treen |
| 2
| Johnny Taylor, Jr.
| 29 February 1984
| electric chair
| David Vogler.
| David C. Treen |
| 3
| Elmo Patrick Sonnier
| 5 April 1984
| electric chair
| Loretta Bourque and David LeBlanc.
| Edwin Edwards |
| 4
| Timothy G. Baldwin
| 10 September 1984
| electric chair
| Mary Lee Peters.
| Edwin Edwards |
| 5
| Ernest Knighton, Jr.
| 30 October 1984
| electric chair
| Ralph Shell.
| Edwin Edwards |
| 6
| Robert Lee Willie
| 28 December 1984
| electric chair
| Faith Hathaway.
| Edwin Edwards |
| 7
| David Dene Martin
| 4 January 1985
| electric chair
| Bobby Todd.
| Edwin Edwards |
| 8
| Benjamin Berry
| 7 June 1987
| electric chair
| Robert Cochran.
| Edwin Edwards |
| 9
| Alvin R. Moore, Jr.
| 8 June 1987
| electric chair
| Jo Ann Wilson.
| Edwin Edwards |
| 10
| Jimmy L. Glass
| 12 June 1987
| electric chair
| Newt Brown and Erlene Brown.
| Edwin Edwards |
| 11
| Jimmy Wingo
| 12 June 1987
| electric chair
| Newt Brown and Erlene Brown.
| Edwin Edwards |
| 12
| Willie Celestine
| 20 July 1987
| electric chair
| Marcelaine Richard.
| Edwin Edwards |
| 13
| Willie Watson
| 24 July 1987
| electric chair
| Kathy Newman.
| Edwin Edwards |
| 14
| John E. Brogdon
| 30 July 1987
| electric chair
| Barbara Jo Brown.
| Edwin Edwards |
| 15
| Sterling J. Rault, Jr.
| 24 August 1987
| electric chair
| Jane Ellen Francioni.
| Edwin Edwards |
| 16
| Wayne Robert Felde
| 15 March 1988
| electric chair
| Glen Thompkins.
| Buddy Roemer |
| 17
| Leslie Lowenfield
| 13 April 1988
| electric chair
| Shiela Thomas, Shantel Osborne, Carol Osborne, Owen Griffin, and Myrtle Griffin.
| Buddy Roemer |
| 18
| Edward R. Byme, Jr.
| 14 June 1988
| electric chair
| Robert Johnson.
| Buddy Roemer |
| 19
| Dalton Prejean
| 18 May 1990
| electric chair
| Donald Cleveland.
| Buddy Roemer |
| 20
| Andrew Lee Jones
| 22 July 1991
| electric chair
| Tumekica Jackson.
| Buddy Roemer |
| 21
| Robert Wayne Sawyer
| 5 March 1993
| lethal injection
| Frances Arwood.
| Edwin Edwards |
| 22
| Thomas Lee Ward
| 16 March 1995
| lethal injection
| Wilbert John Spencer.
| Edwin Edwards |
| 23
| Antonio G. James
| 1 March 1996
| lethal injection
| Henry Silver.
| Murphy J. Foster, Jr. |
| 24
| John Ashley Brown, Jr.
| 24 April 1997
| lethal injection
| Omer Laughlin.
| Murphy J. Foster, Jr. |
| 25
| Dobie Gillis Williams
| 8 January 1999
| lethal injection
| Sonja Knippers.
| Murphy J. Foster, Jr. |
| 26
| Feltus Taylor, Jr.
| 6 June 2000
| lethal injection
| Donna Ponsano.
| Murphy J. Foster, Jr. |
| 27
| Leslie Dale Martin
| 10 May 2002
| lethal injection
| Christina Burgin.
| Murphy J. Foster, Jr. |
Notable cases
The only two people in the
United States who are sentenced to die of a rape that did not result in death were convicted in Louisiana courts:
Patrick O. Kennedy and
Richard L. Davis . Kennedy's case has led to a challenge before the
Supreme Court, which was heard in April 2008. The court ruled in their favor, overturning their death sentences but upholding their convictions.
See also
References
External links