Justice Barrett dissents to stop/prevent an execution (user search)
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  Justice Barrett dissents to stop/prevent an execution (search mode)
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Author Topic: Justice Barrett dissents to stop/prevent an execution  (Read 959 times)
David Hume
davidhume
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« on: June 29, 2022, 12:21:46 AM »

I felt this was worth bumping in light of a very recent SCOTUS decision, Nance v. Ward. It appears her vote in January may have been misleading in terms of her potential death penalty jurisprudence. This decision was mostly overshadowed by the gun case on Thursday, but it's quite notable as being a rare "win" for a death-row inmate. The majority opinion was written by Justice Kagan, joined by Roberts, Breyer, Sotomayor, and Kavanaugh. As the opinion starts:

Quote
In several recent decisions, this Court has set out rules for challenging a State's proposed method of execution under the Eighth Amendment. To prevail on such a claim, a prisoner must identify a readily available alternative method of execution that would significantly reduce the risk of severe pain. In doing so, the prisoner is not confined to proposing a method authorized by the executing State's law; he may instead ask for a method used in other States. See Bucklew v. Precythe, 587 U. S. ___, ___ (2019) (slip op., at 19).

This case concerns the procedural vehicle appropriate for a prisoner's method-of-execution claim. We have held that such a claim can go forward under 42 U. S. C. §1983, rather than in habeas, when the alternative method proposed is already authorized under state law. See Nelson v. Campbell, 541 U. S. 637, 644-647 (2004). Here, the prisoner has identified an alternative method that is not so authorized. The question presented is whether §1983 is still a proper vehicle. We hold that it is.

Justice Barrett wrote the dissenting opinion, joined by Thomas, Alito, and Gorsuch. Her dissent in this case would leave the inmate with only a federal habeas challenge, which is essentially a de facto automatic loss.

This doesn't guarantee a win for Nance. It merely opens up a Section 1983 civil rights challenge in federal court. If the dissent had won, he would've been relegated to habeas challenge, which have been massively curtailed and restricted under the AEDPA. There's virtually no chance to win a federal habeas challenge under that law. I think the composition of the majority is exceptionally noteworthy considering where Roberts and Kavanaugh have been in the past on these types of cases.
I think what matter is what she would consider as crude and unusual, like if death penalty for child rapist is. Nance v. Ward did not reveal that, since this was decided on procedural ground.
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David Hume
davidhume
Jr. Member
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Posts: 1,691
United States


Political Matrix
E: -0.77, S: 1.22

P P
« Reply #1 on: June 29, 2022, 12:33:26 AM »

It's definitely possible ACB holds to the consistent life ethic, which is of course taught by the Catholic Church.

She wrote law review articles indicating that she did once upon a time, but evidently that was before she emerged from her chrysalis as a full-fledged ~conservative jurist~.
In that article she made it clear that Catholic should recuse if their religious belief may play a factor in their judgement. I am curious how she would have ruled on Kennedy_v._Louisiana. My guess is that she would join the dissent.
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