Trend away from death penalty continues as states and courts halt executions

Governors Wolf and Brown

In 2014, the United States saw its fewest executions in twenty years. Now, less than a quarter of the way into 2015, two new governors – Tom Wolf of Pennsylvania and Kate Brown of Oregon – have declared a halt to executions in their states. In other states, lingering questions over lethal injection are also keeping executions on hold.

Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf made his announcement in mid-February, shortly after he took office. In an eloquent, multi-page statement, he said he would not allow executions to go forward in Pennsylvania until the recommendations of a forthcoming study on Pennsylvania’s death penalty are fully addressed.

Oregon’s Governor Kate Brown stepped into the Governorship after the resignation of John Kitzhaber last month. As soon as she took office, she promised to continue the moratorium on executions that Kitzhaber imposed in late 2011. Brown said she believes there needs to be a broader discussion about the death penalty in the state, and she will not consider going forward with executions until that time.

Pennsylvania and Oregon join Colorado and Washington as states where governors have imposed moratoria. Elsewhere, the courts are stepping in.

Executions in Florida, Oklahoma, and Alabama are all on hold while the states wait for a U.S. Supreme Court ruling over their specific execution protocols. Ohio has canceled all executions in 2015 because they cannot get the necessary drugs needed for their lethal injection procedures. And Georgia – where the execution procedure is an official state secret – has indefinitely postponed all of its upcoming executions while they look into why their lethal drugs appeared “cloudy” when they should be clear.

When the Supreme Court announced it would once again take up questions over lethal injection, Attorney General Eric Holder offered his own opinion that the entire country should put executions on hold. Beyond the specifics of execution methods, Holder admitted, “there’s always the possibility that mistakes will be made…There is no ability to correct a mistake where somebody has, in fact, been executed. And that is from my perspective the ultimate nightmare.”


Sarah Craft

Sarah Craft is the program director of EJUSA's program to end the death penalty in the United States. She has worked with EJUSA’s state partners all over the country to develop winning strategies for their campaigns. Read More