Court rejects death penalty for raping children

MARK SHERMAN, Associated Press

- The Supreme Court on Wednesday outlawed executions of people convicted of raping a child.

In a 5-4 vote, the court said the Louisiana law allowing the death penalty to be imposed in such cases violates the Constitution’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment.

“The death penalty is not a proportional punishment for the rape of a child,” Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote in his majority opinion. His four liberal colleagues joined him, while the four more conservative justices dissented.

There has not been an execution in the United States for a crime that did not also involve the death of the victim in 44 years.

Patrick Kennedy, 43, was sentenced to death for the rape of his 8-year-old stepdaughter in Louisiana. He is one of two people in the United States, both in Louisiana, who have been condemned to death for a rape that was not also accompanied by a killing.

The Supreme Court banned executions for rape in 1977 in a case in which the victim was an adult woman.

Forty-five states ban the death penalty for any kind of rape, and the other five states allow it for child rapists. Montana, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Texas allow executions in such cases if the defendant had previously been convicted of raping a child.

The court struggled over how to apply standards laid out in decisions barring executions for the mentally retarded and people younger than 18 when they committed murder. In those cases, the court cited trends in the states away from capital punishment.

In this case, proponents of the Louisiana law said the trend was toward the death penalty, a point mentioned by Justice Samuel Alito in his dissent.

“The harm that is caused to the victims and to society at large by the worst child rapists is grave,” Alito wrote. “It is the judgment of the Louisiana lawmakers and those in an increasing number of other states that these harms justify the death penalty.”

But Kennedy said the absence of any executions for rape and the small number of states that allow it demonstrate “there is a national consensus against capital punishment for the crime of child rape.”

Kennedy also acknowledged that the decision had to come to terms with “the years of long anguish that must be endured by the victim of child rape.”

Still, Kennedy concluded that in cases of crimes against individuals — as opposed to treason, for example — “the death penalty should not be expanded to instances where the victim’s life was not taken.”

The decision does not affect the imposition of the death penalty for other crimes that do not involve murder, including treason and espionage, he said.

Patrick Kennedy was convicted in 2003 of raping his stepdaughter at their home in Harvey, La., outside New Orleans. The girl initially told police she was sorting Girl Scout cookies in the garage when two boys assaulted her.

Police arrested Kennedy a couple of weeks after the March 1998 rape, but more than 20 months passed before the girl identified him as her attacker.

His defense attorney at the time argued that blood testing was inconclusive and that the victim was pressured to change her story.

The Louisiana Supreme Court upheld the sentence, saying that “short of first-degree murder, we can think of no other non-homicide crime more deserving” of the death penalty. State Chief Justice Pascal Calogero noted in dissent that the U.S. high court already had made clear that capital punishment could not be imposed without the death of the victim, except possibly for espionage or treason.

A second Louisiana man, Richard Davis was sentenced to death in December for repeatedly raping a 5-year-old girl in Caddo Parish, which includes Shreveport. Local prosecutor Lea Hall told jurors: “Execute this man. Justice has a sword and this sword needs to swing today.”

The high court’s decision leaves intact Kennedy’s conviction, but will lead to a new sentence.

The case is Kennedy v. Louisiana, 07-343.

  • http:/ Marilyn PreJean

    As a native of Louisiana, I was proud of and voted for the law–once again the Supreme Court is disappointing in not acknowledging a state’s right to determine what its residents demand. If raping a child is not “taking a life” I don’t know what is–as ugly as it sounds, I hope the next child raped is in Justice Kennedy’s family and then let’s see how he feels about a national consensus that concerns an individual state’s right to determine its laws. The law was in place for a reason–an increasing number of children raped–and that makes Louisiana what? the same as Darfur? Oh, but let’s not forget it’s okay for treason and espionage which are so much harder to prove and no one individual has to be in pain to be a death penalty law, but children are on their own in this country since we can’t give 24/7 protection to them….

  • Skeptic

    Lawmakers are assuming criminals are legal scholars. They are assuming when a horny bastard picks up a child to rape, he knows he may be subject to death penalty. They think it’s more heinous when a horny bastard sticks his prick into a child’s sexual organ than if he stuck a 10 inch knife into the child’s abdomen. How they figured that out is beyond me.

  • educated ron

    I believe raping a child or anyone is worthy of death, but I believe you should now have a death penalty because that would give more incentive for the rapist to kill the victim. In his mind he will say “What’s the difference in my punishment……NONE”

    Some rape victims are not killed, this law would have made sore that a higher percentage of victims would be killed. Not having the death penalty actually protects the victim

  • educated ron

    meant to type “not” not “now”

  • Betty Ann in Texas

    Evidently our children are “throw aways.” Something must be done in this country with child molestors or rapists, they are everywhere, arrested, tried, and let out. These children are emotionally dead and physically disabled internally on young children, some as young as 2 or 3. I personally have worked with some of these children, after they have had surgery, but never able to have normal body functions again. I think these men should meet up from behind, with a sexually aroused stallion or prize bull next time and see how it feels.

  • vanessa brown

    im not a believer in the death penalty. i believe only God has the right to end a life. However most people that molest children was once victims of molestation themselves. there is no cure for molesters. if a person rapes a child they should at least get life without parole. the problem with sentencing these people are they get out and do it again. for every child thats raped and life is spared, there is the potential of creating another molester. most raped children grow up with some serious problems emotionally and sexually. the children need to know they are safe and that they are taken seriously. thats why the molesters never need to see the streets again. the children need therapy so they can grow up understanding what happened to them and how to deal with it. i hate any crime against children but i dont feel the death penalty is the solution.

blog comments powered by Disqus

Switch to our mobile site