WikiLeaks Document Release
                http://wikileaks.org/wiki/CRS-RS22433
                                              February 2, 2009



                        Congressional Research Service
                                       Report RS22433
           The Death Penalty: An Abridged Look at Capital
            Punishment Legislation in the 109th Congress
                                   Charles Doyle, American Law Division

                                              December 11, 2006

Abstract. The USA PATRIOT Improvement and Reauthorization Act (Reauthorization Act), P.L. 109-177,
120 Stat. 192 (2006) contains a number of death penalty related provisions. Some create new federal capital
offenses making certain death-resulting maritime offenses punishable by death. Some add the death penalty
as a sentencing option in the case of pre-existing federal crimes such those outlawing attacks on mass transit.
Some make procedural alterations such as those governing federal habeas corpus provisions for state death row
petitioners. Other proposals offered during the 109th Congress followed the same pattern: some new crimes;
some new penalties for old crimes; and some procedural adjustments. Other than the Adam Walsh Child
Protection and Safety Act, P.L. 109-248, 120 Stat. 587 (2006), none of the other proposals were enacted,
although one House or the other approved several. Among these, H.R. 1279 would have amended the venue
provision for capital cases and made it a federal capital offense to use the facilities of interstate commerce to
commit multiple murders and another to commit murder during and in relation to a drug trafficking offense.
As would have H.R. 4472. H.R. 1751 and H.R. 4472 would have made it a federal capital offense to murder a
federally funded public safety officer. H.R. 3132 would have created special expedited habeas review of state
child murder cases. And S. 2611 would have made murder committed during the course of certain federal
offenses a capital offense. Of the capital proposals pending at adjournment, H.R. 4923 and S. 122 would have
abolished the death penalty as a federal sentencing alternative and H.R. 379 would have imposed a moratorium
barring the states from imposing or carrying out the death penalty.
                                                                                                                 Order Code RS22433
                                                                                                           Updated December 11, 2006




                                           The Death Penalty: An Abridged Look at
                                          Capital Punishment Legislation in the 109th
                                                         Congress
                                                                        Charles Doyle
                                                                       Senior Specialist
                                                                     American Law Division
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                                        Summary

                                             The USA PATRIOT Improvement and Reauthorization Act (Reauthorization Act),
                                        P.L. 109-177, 120 Stat. 192 (2006) contains a number of death penalty related
                                        provisions. Some create new federal capital offenses making certain death-resulting
                                        maritime offenses punishable by death. Some add the death penalty as a sentencing
                                        option in the case of pre-existing federal crimes such those outlawing attacks on mass
                                        transit. Some make procedural alterations such as those governing federal habeas
                                        corpus provisions for state death row petitioners. Other proposals offered during the
                                        109th Congress followed the same pattern: some new crimes; some new penalties for old
                                        crimes; and some procedural adjustments. Other than the Adam Walsh Child Protection
                                        and Safety Act, P.L. 109-248, 120 Stat. 587 (2006), none of the other proposals were
                                        enacted, although one House or the other approved several. Among these, H.R. 1279
                                        would have amended the venue provision for capital cases and made it a federal capital
                                        offense to use the facilities of interstate commerce to commit multiple murders and
                                        another to commit murder during and in relation to a drug trafficking offense. As would
                                        have H.R. 4472. H.R. 1751 and H.R. 4472 would have made it a federal capital offense
                                        to murder a federally funded public safety officer. H.R. 3132 would have created
                                        special expedited habeas review of state child murder cases. And S. 2611 would have
                                        made murder committed during the course of certain federal offenses a capital offense.
                                             Of the capital proposals pending at adjournment, H.R. 4923 and S. 122 would have
                                        abolished the death penalty as a federal sentencing alternative and H.R. 379 would have
                                        imposed a moratorium barring the states from imposing or carrying out the death
                                        penalty.
                                            This is an abridged version of CRS Report RL33395, The Death Penalty: Capital
                                        Punishment Legislation in the 109th Congress, by Charles Doyle, without the footnotes,
                                        appendices, or most of the citations to authority found in the longer report.
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                                             Procedural Adjustments. The Reauthorization Act changes procedures
                                        associated with federal capital cases including those relating to air piracy cases arising
                                        before 1994 and habeas procedures for state capital petitioners.

                                             Pre-1994 Capital Air Piracy Cases. In the early 1970s, the U.S. Supreme Court
                                        held unconstitutional the imposition of capital punishment under the procedures then
                                        employed by the federal government and most of the states. In 1974, Congress
                                        established a revised procedure for imposition of the death penalty in certain air piracy
                                        cases. In 1994, when Congress made the procedural adjustments necessary to revive the
                                        death penalty as a sentencing option for other federal capital offenses, it replaced the air
                                        piracy procedures with those of the new regime. At least one court, however, held that
                                        the new procedures could not be applied retroactively to air piracy cases occurring after
                                        the 1974 fix but before the 1994 legislation, in the absence of an explicit statutory
                                        provision. The Reauthorization Act adds an explicit provision to the end of the 1994
                                        legislation. H.R. 1763 and H.R. 3060 contain comparable provisions.

                                             Habeas Corpus in State Capital Cases. Federal law provides expedited
                                        habeas corpus procedures for state death row inmates in those states that qualify for
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                                        application of the procedures and have opted to take advantage of them. As of enactment
                                        of the Reauthorization Act apparently, few if any states had sought and been found
                                        qualified to opt in. Under the Reauthorization Act, states opt-in or have opted-in as of the
                                        date, past or present, upon which the Attorney General determines they established or
                                        have established qualifying assistance of counsel mechanism. The earlier provision
                                        required that the mechanism include competency standards for appointed counsel. The
                                        Reauthorization Act removed the requirement, but granted the Attorney General
                                        regulatory authority sufficient to establish such standards. The act establishes a de novo
                                        standard of review for the Attorney General's determination before the D.C. Circuit. The
                                        Streamlined Procedures Acts in the House and Senate, H.R. 3035 and S. 1088, would
                                        make similar changes in the opt in procedure.

                                             S. 956, H.R. 2388, and H.R. 3132 (House-passed legislation is noted in italics),
                                        contain a common amendment governing federal habeas cases of an individual convicted
                                        under state law of killing a child, proposed 28 U.S.C. 2254. Habeas under section 2254
                                        would have been unavailable in such cases except for claims that both (1) relied on a new
                                        constitutional interpretation made retroactively applicable by the Supreme Court or on
                                        evidence that the petitioner could not reasonable have been previously discovered and (2)
                                        were predicated upon facts in the face of which no reasonable judge or jury would have
                                        found the petitioner guilty but for the constitutional error, proposed 28 U.S.C. 2254(j)(1),
                                        (2). Under the bills, judicial consideration of claims that meet the dual criterion would
                                        have been expedited.

                                              Additional Procedural Proposals: Venue. Several anti-gang bills purport to
                                        change the place where capital cases may be tried. S. 155, H.R. 970, H.R. 1279, and H.R.
                                        4472 contain the same provision that would have rewritten 18 U.S.C. 3235. Section 3235
                                        provides that where possible capital cases should be tried in the county in which the crime
                                        occurred. The proposal would have repealed the "county trial" language of section 3235
                                        and replaced it with language reminiscent of the multi-district terms of section 3237(a):
                                        "(a) the trial of any offense punishable by death shall be held in the district where the
                                        offense was committed or in any district in which the offense began, continued, or was
                                        completed. (b) If the offense, or related conduct, under subsection (a) involves activities
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                                        which affect interstate or foreign commerce, or the importation of an object or person
                                        into the United States, such offense may be prosecuted in any district in which those
                                        activities occurred," proposed 18 U.S.C. 3235. The proposal would have operated subject
                                        to two constitutional provisions and two Supreme Court cases which construe them.

                                               Mitigating and Aggravating Factors. The death penalty may be imposed in a
                                        federal capital case only after consideration of the mitigating and aggravating factors
                                        listed in 18 U.S.C. 3592 and only if at least one aggravating factor is found. Several bills
                                        would have adjusted the factors. One of the aggravating factors in homicide cases
                                        consists of the fact that the death resulted from the commission of a list of designated
                                        felonies. The Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act adds 18 U.S.C. 2245 to the
                                        list, 18 U.S.C. 3591(c)(1). Among the proposals that failed to secure final passage, H.R.
                                        3860 would have added 18 U.S.C. 2245 (sexual abuse resulting in death) to the list,
                                        proposed 18 U.S.C. 3591(c)(1). H.R. 3060 would have placed 18 U.S.C. 2339D (receipt
                                        of military training from a foreign terrorist organization) on the list, and H.R. 5040 would
                                        have done the same and also added 18 U.S.C. 241 (civil rights conspiracy), 245
                                        (deprivation of federally protected activities), 247 (interference with religious exercise),
                                        1512 (tampering with federal witnesses), and 1513 (retaliating against federal witnesses),
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                                        proposed 18 U.S.C. 3592(c)(1). Both H.R. 3060 and H.R. 5040 would have made
                                        obstruction of justice an aggravating factor in homicide cases, proposed 18 U.S.C.
                                        3592(c)(17).

                                             Other Procedural Proposals. H.R. 3060 would have allowed the court upon
                                        a finding of good cause or agreement of the parties to proceed with a capital sentencing
                                        jury of fewer than 12 members, proposed 18 U.S.C. 3593(b). Existing law requires
                                        agreement of the parties. The bill also amends Rule 24(c) of the Federal Rules of Criminal
                                        Procedure to allow for the selection of a maximum of 9 alternate jurors and allows each
                                        side 4 peremptory alternate juror challenges when either 7, 8, or 9 alternates are to be
                                        selected, proposed F.R.Crim.P. 24(c). The present Rule calls for a maximum of 6
                                        alternates and affords the parties 3 alternate juror peremptory challenges. These and other
                                        similar proposals passed the House initially as part of H.R. 3199, but were dropped in
                                        conference and were not part of the Reauthorization Act as passed.

                                             H.R. 5040 would have struck the provision which outlaws the execution of the
                                        mentally retarded, proposed 18 U.S.C. 3596(c). The omission, although perhaps
                                        surprising to some, appeared inconsequential since execution of the mentally retarded is
                                        constitutionally proscribed. The bill also would have required notice to the government
                                        and would have permitted the government to request an independent mental health
                                        examination when a defendant intends to enter mental retardation as a mitigating factor
                                        for capital sentencing purposes, proposed 18 U.S.C. 3593(b). The existing statute
                                        mentions no such requirements. Presumably recourse to the proposed procedure would
                                        have been more infrequent in those cases where the district court conducted a pre-trial
                                        evidentiary hearing to determine whether the mental retardation of the accused precluded
                                        imposition of the death penalty following any conviction. Present law permits a capital
                                        jury to unanimously recommend a sentence of death or of imprisonment without
                                        possibility of release; if they do not, the court is to sentence the defendant to any lesser
                                        sentence authorized by law, i.e., imprisonment for life or a term of years. H.R. 5040
                                        would have provided that if the jury cannot agree on a capital recommendation, a new
                                        sentencing jury would have been empaneled and the issue retried, proposed 18 U.S.C.
                                        3594. Existing law specifically contemplates that the execution of federal capital
                                                                                  CRS-4

                                        sentences will be carried out in state facilities. H.R. 5040 would have granted the
                                        Attorney General regulatory implementing authority without exclusive reference to state
                                        facilities, proposed 18 U.S.C. 3596, 3597. The bill also would have rewritten 18 U.S.C.
                                        3005 which assures defendants two assigned counsel in capital cases. The proposal would
                                        have made it clear that the statute only applied when the government sought the death
                                        penalty and not in capital cases where it had elected not to do so, proposed 18 U.S.C.
                                        3005(a). The federal appellate courts are divided on the question over whether section
                                        3005 now entitles a defendant to the assistance of two attorneys in all capital cases or only
                                        in those in which the government actively seeks the death penalty. The proposal also
                                        would have explicitly authorized the government to strike for cause potential jurors in
                                        capital cases whose opposition to the death penalty "would prevent or substantially impair
                                        the performance" of their duties as jurors, proposed 18 U.S.C. 3005(b). The proposal
                                        borrowed language from Supreme Court cases indicating that a potential juror may be
                                        struck if his views on capital punishment "would prevent or substantially impair the
                                        performance of his duties as a juror in accordance with his instructions and his oath."

                                             New Federal Capital Offenses. Title III of the Reauthorization Act, designated
                                        the Reducing Crime and Terrorism at America's Seaports Act, creates three new federal
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                                        capital offenses: (1) 18 U.S.C. 2282A (devices or dangerous substances in waters of the
                                        United States likely to destroy or damage ships or to interfere with maritime; causing a
                                        death); (2) 18 U.S.C. 2283 (transportation of explosive, biological, chemical, or
                                        radioactive or nuclear materials; causing a death); and 18 U.S.C. 2291 (destruction of
                                        vessel or maritime facility; intentionally causing a death). Two other port security bills
                                        would have suggested similar new death penalty offenses, H.R. 2651 and S. 378 (as
                                        reported) (proposed 18 U.S.C. 2282A, 2283, and 2291), and a third would have offered
                                        three slightly less comparable offenses, H.R. 173 (proposed 18 U.S.C. 1372 (destruction
                                        of vessel or maritime facility; if death results), 2280A (devices or substances in waters of
                                        the United States likely to destroy or damage ships; if death results), and 2282 (malicious
                                        dumping; if death results)).

                                              The bills drafted to counter gang violence � H.R. 4472, H.R. 1279, H.R. 970, and
                                        S. 155 � frequently include two new federal death penalty offenses. One of the proposed
                                        offenses would have proscribed the use of interstate facilities with the intent to commit
                                        multiple murders and would have been a capital offense where death results. The other,
                                        modeled after the provision that condemns the use of a firearm during or in relation to a
                                        crime of violence or a drug offense, would have outlawed crimes of violence committed
                                        during or in relation to a drug trafficking offense and makes the offense punishable by
                                        death if a death results. A few other bills would have made it a federal capital offense to
                                        kill a police officer under various circumstances. For example, H.R. 2363 would have
                                        outlawed killing a peace officer and fleeing the country, proposed 18 U.S.C. 1121(c).
                                        H.R. 1751 and H.R. 2194 would have prohibited murdering federally funded state or local
                                        law enforcement officers, proposed 18 U.S.C. 1123.

                                             Other proposed new federal capital offenses would have included (1) agroterrorism
                                        when death results, proposed 18 U.S.C. 2339D (S. 1532); (2) interference with federal
                                        disaster relief efforts if death results, proposed 18 U.S.C. 1370 (H.R. 3728); (3) death
                                        resulting from a violation of 18 U.S.C. 1590 (trafficking in persons) that involves raping
                                        or kidnaping more than one person, proposed 18 U.S.C. 1590 (S. 2437); (4) death
                                        resulting from a violation of proposed 18 U.S.C. 555 (S. 2611) that would have proscribed
                                        evading immigration, customs or agricultural inspection at the border; and (5) death
                                                                                  CRS-5

                                        resulting from the commission of federal crimes of terrorism, violations of 18 U.S.C. 175
                                        (biological weapons), 175b (biological materials), 229 (chemical weapons), 831 (nuclear
                                        materials), or of 42 U.S.C. 2284 (atomic weapons), or conspiracies or attempts to commit
                                        such crimes or violations, proposed 18 U.S.C. 2339E (H.R. 3060, H.R. 5939, S. 3882, S.
                                        3848).

                                             Capital Punishment for Violation of Existing Crimes. Section 110 of the
                                        Reauthorization Act merges 18 U.S.C. 1992 (2000 ed.) (wrecking trains) and 18 U.S.C.
                                        1993 (2000 ed.) (attacks on mass transit) into a new 18 U.S.C. 1992. The train wreck
                                        offense was a capital offense; the mass transit offense was not; under the new section both
                                        are now capital offenses, 18 U.S.C. 1992.

                                             The most common example of a proposed death penalty sentencing option for an
                                        existing crime comes from some of the child safety bills, many of which would have
                                        made the death penalty available where a child dies as a result the commission of a
                                        federal crime of violence or some other federal crime: (1) S. 956 (crime of violence,
                                        proposed 18 U.S.C. 3559(d)); (2) H.R. 2388 (same); (3) H.R. 3132(same); (4) H.R.
                                        4472(same); and (5) H.R. 3860 (violations of 18 U.S.C. ch.110 (sexual exploitation of
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                                        children), ch. 117 transportation of illegal sexual activity), or 1591 (sex trafficking in
                                        children), proposed 18 U.S.C. 2245(b)). Congress adopted a variation of this theme in
                                        the Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act when it amended 18 U.S.C. 2245 to
                                        make murder a federal capital offense when committed in the course of a wider range of
                                        federal child sexual abuse offenses.

                                             The gang bills generally would have rewritten the federal criminal gang statute (18
                                        U.S.C. 521) to permit imposition of capital punishment for a death-resulting violation of
                                        the newly crafted provisions or of the Travel Act (18 U.S.C. 1952): H.R. 1279, proposed
                                        18 U.S.C. 521, 1952; S. 155, proposed 18 U.S.C. 523, 1952; H.R. 4472, proposed 18
                                        U.S.C. 521, 1952; see also, H.R. 970, proposed 18 U.S.C. 523.

                                              H.R. 3060, H.R. 5939, S. 2883, and S. 3848 would have made capital offenses of
                                        several death-resulting terrorism-related offenses that are now punishable by no more than
                                        life imprisonment, specifically, proposed 18 U.S.C. 832 (participating in foreign nuclear
                                        or other weapon of mass destruction programs), proposed 18 U.S.C. 2332g (anti-aircraft
                                        missiles), proposed 18 U.S.C. 2332h (radiological dispersal devices), proposed 18 U.S.C.
                                        175c (smallpox virus), and proposed 18 U.S.C. 42 U.S.C. 2272 (atomic weapons). It is
                                        possible that the drafters of H.R. 3060 also intended to treat receipt of military training
                                        from a foreign terrorist organization, 18 U.S.C. 2339D, like treason and espionage; that
                                        is, to make it a capital offense even if no death results from commission of the offense.
                                        The statutes that outlaw treason and espionage make them punishable by death or a term
                                        of imprisonment, 18 U.S.C. 2381, 794. Section 3591(a)(1) of the federal capital
                                        punishment procedures provides that treason or espionage are punishable by death if
                                        execution is found justified after considering the mitigating and aggravating factors listed
                                        in section 3592. Section 3592(b) lists three aggravating factors for treason and espionage
                                        cases, i.e., (1) the offender has a prior espionage or treason conviction, (2) the offense
                                        involved a grave risk to national security, and (3) the offense involved a grave risk of
                                        death.

                                             Violation of section 2339D is punishable by imprisonment for not more than 10
                                        years, 18 U.S.C. 2339D(a). H.R. 3060 would have made no change in section 2339D, but
                                                                                 CRS-6

                                        it would have amended section 3591(a)(1) of the capital procedures provisions to say that
                                        violations of sections 2381 (treason), 794 (espionage), or 2339D (terrorist training) may
                                        be punished by death if execution is found justified after considering the mitigating and
                                        aggravating factors listed in section 3592, proposed 18 U.S.C. 3591(a)(1). It also would
                                        have amended the list of 3592(c) aggravating factors to add a fourth factor, i.e., the
                                        defense involved substantial planning by the defendant, proposed 18 U.S.C. 3592(c)(4).
                                        Assuming the conforming amendment to section 2339D � making it a capital offense �
                                        was an oversight and in spite of the proposal's caption ("addition of terrorism to death
                                        penalty offenses not resulting death"), it is not clear that the courts would permit
                                        imposition of the death penalty for a violation of section 2339D unless the offense also
                                        involved a first degree murder. The Eighth Amendment's cruel and unusual punishment
                                        clause precludes imposing the death penalty for the rape of an adult woman by an
                                        individual already under a sentence of life imprisonment at the time of the rape; it
                                        precludes imposition of the death penalty even in the case of murder unless the defendant
                                        at least acted intentionally or acted with reckless indifference to human life while
                                        participating in a felony involving a murder; and since the Court's decision in Furman v.
                                        Georgia, it has never been called upon to approve, and consequently has never approved,
                                        imposition of the death penalty for a crime that did not involve murder.
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                                             Moratorium. H.R. 4923/S. 122 would have repealed federal death penalty
                                        provisions and barred imposition or execution of any capital sentence for violation of
                                        federal law. It made no mention of capital punishment imposed for violation of state law.
                                        H.R. 379, on the other hand, would have set a ten year moratorium on imposition and
                                        execution of capital sentences in any state in which an individual originally sentenced to
                                        death had subsequently been judicially found innocent. It said nothing of capital
                                        punishment imposed or executed under federal law.