Accessibility links
Skip to main content
Keyboard shortcuts for audio player
NPR logo
SIGN IN
NPR SHOP
DONATE
NEWS
CULTURE
MUSIC
PODCASTS & SHOWS
SEARCH
NATIONAL
A court in Kansas is reconsidering the death penalty
February 6, 20235:10 AM ET
Heard on Morning Edition
FRANK MORRIS
FROM
KCUR 89.3
3-Minute Listen
Download
Transcript
The ACLU plans to make a case against capital punishment in a Kansas hearing on Monday. Prosecutors there are seeking the death penalty for a man accused of a double murder.
STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:
The death penalty goes on trial today in Kansas. The ACLU argues that a correct reading of the Kansas Constitution would throw out capital punishment in the state. As Frank Morris of member station KCUR reports, the multiday hearing is challenging the death penalty in a new light.
FRANK MORRIS, BYLINE: In Wichita, a man stands accused of stalking and killing his former girlfriend and her new boyfriend. The accused is Black, and so is one of the victims. The prosecutor wants the death penalty, but that case is on hold while the ACLU makes its case against capital punishment here.
HENDERSON HILL: We're bringing litigation under the Kansas Constitution, challenging many aspects of the administration of the death penalty.
MORRIS: Henderson Hill is senior counsel with the ACLU's Capital Punishment Project. He says the big issue here has to do with jury selection. In death penalty trials, prosecutors disqualify prospective jurors who say they could never impose capital punishment. He says Black people are far more likely than whites to feel that way.
HILL: And so essentially, that standard weeds out Black citizens from service in death penalty cases.
MORRIS: Hill argues the death penalty process is racist throughout. He says it shortchanges people with mental disabilities and results in an alarming number of false convictions. None of these arguments are new. But Richard Dieter, who directs the Death Penalty Information Center, says they should get a fresh hearing in Kansas.
RICHARD DIETER: It's building on a prior ruling from the Kansas Supreme Court about how carefully court has to protect certain fundamental rights.
MORRIS: Dieter says that when the Kansas Supreme Court upheld a right to abortion three years ago, it set a high standard for the state to justify laws that infringe on fundamental rights. Support for capital punishment has dropped in recent decades to about 6 in 10 Americans in favor. But Dieter says the actual number of executions in death sentences has fallen much faster - from about a hundred executions and 300 death sentences a year in the late 1990s, down to 18 executions and about 20 death sentences last year.
DIETER: This is a phenomenal change, and it's carved across the country.
MORRIS: Not evenly. Twenty-four states still have the death penalty, but just two of them - Texas and Oklahoma - accounted for more than half of last year's executions. Kansas hasn't killed anyone since 1965, when it hanged two murderers in the case that inspired Truman Capote to write "In Cold Blood."
SEAN O'BRIEN: If you're looking for a program that can't withstand a cost-benefit analysis, this is it.
MORRIS: University of Missouri law professor Sean O'Brien says capital murder cases cost taxpayers at least 10 times more than other murder trials. Marc Bennett, the county district attorney in Wichita, has heard all this before, and all the arguments brought by the ACLU. He says the courts have, too, and that the death penalty is settled law. What's more, he says, the trial at hand hasn't even started, so there's nothing to critique.
MARC BENNETT: We won't know if we had a constitutionally sound jury selection or a constitutionally sound trial until we try it. And to have this hearing ahead of time is premature.
MORRIS: No one involved in this pretrial hearing in Wichita expects it to trigger a ban on the death penalty in Kansas. Opponents hope it will keep pressure on the courts and the legislature and make justifying capital punishment just a little bit tougher.
For NPR News, I'm Frank Morris.
Copyright © 2023 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.
NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.
Sign Up For the NPR Daily Newsletter
Catch up on the latest headlines and unique NPR stories, sent every weekday.
E-mail address
What's your email?
By subscribing, you agree to NPR's terms of use and privacy policy. NPR may share your name and email address with your NPR station. See Details. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
More Stories From NPR
FOOD
Hundreds of ready-to-eat foods are recalled over possible listeria contamination
RELIGION
The 'He Gets Us' commercials promote Jesus. Who's behind them and what is the goal?
NATIONAL
Ohio crews conduct a 'controlled release' of toxic chemicals from derailed train cars
NATIONAL
Busing migrants was a partisan lightning rod. Here's why Democrats have embraced it
NATIONAL
Officials urge evacuation near the Ohio train derailment, fearing an explosion
SPORTS
The Nets trade Kyrie Irving to the Mavericks, reports say
Popular on NPR.org
MUSIC NEWS
2023 Grammy Awards: The full list of nominees and winners
NATIONAL SECURITY
This wasn't the first Chinese balloon over the U.S. Why were the others ignored?
TELEVISION
Hours after its demise, the Chinese spy balloon was the star of the 'SNL' cold open
MUSIC NEWS
10 takeaways from the 2023 Grammy Awards: Whose big night was it?
MUSIC NEWS
Beyoncé sets a new Grammy record, while Harry Styles wins album of the year
MUSIC NEWS
Viola Davis achieves EGOT status with Grammy win
NPR Editors' Picks
MIDDLE EAST
Northern Syria has endured years of war. Now, an earthquake has added to the despair
ELECTIONS
How a major election theory case at the U.S. Supreme Court could get thrown out
ANIMALS
The story of two bird-saving brothers in India gets an Oscar nom, an HBO premiere
WORLD
Brazil cracks down on illegal gold miners on an indigenous reserve in the Amazon
CLIMATE
When the seas rise in Senegal, so do the fortunes of far-right parties in Europe
POLITICS
The State of the Union will showcase the state of the Biden-McCarthy relationship
READ & LISTEN
Home
News
Culture
Music
Podcasts & Shows
CONNECT
Newsletters
Facebook
Twitter
Instagram
Press
Contact & Help
ABOUT NPR
Overview
Diversity
Accessibility
Ethics
Finances
Public Editor
Corrections
GET INVOLVED
Support Public Radio
Sponsor NPR
NPR Careers
NPR Shop
NPR Events
NPR Extra
terms of use
privacy
your privacy choices
text only
© 2023 npr