Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a potential 2024 presidential candidate, wants to make it easier to execute people. It’s one of the latest signs that he wants to move the law backward not only for his state but for the country, as well, if he takes the White House.
Speaking to Florida sheriffs, Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) questions the jury process on the death penalty, including for the Parkland shooter, and suggests the law should be changed so only “maybe 8 out of 12” jurors have to agree, instead of requiring a unanimous decision. pic.twitter.com/VL47uI5LJ7
— The Recount (@therecount) January 24, 2023
Talking to Florida sheriffs on Monday, DeSantis, a Republican, expressed frustration that a jury didn’t want to sentence Parkland school shooter Nikolas Cruz to death last fall. Because jurors couldn’t agree, Cruz was sentenced to life in prison. DeSantis wondered whether it should be enough for “maybe eight out of 12” jurors to vote for death.
Florida actually allowed non-unanimous death sentences not long ago, before U.S. and state Supreme Court rulings led to state legislation requiring unanimity in 2017. Like the U.S. Supreme Court, the state Supreme Court has become more pro-capital punishment since then, leaving open the possibility of non-unanimous sentences in the state again. If Florida goes back to non-unanimity, as DeSantis apparently favors, it would join neighboring Alabama as outliers in allowing the practice.
According to the Death Penalty Information Center, Florida has had more exonerations from death row than any other state.
Whatever happens in Florida, given his attitude toward the ultimate punishment, it stands to reason that, if DeSantis became president, he’d reignite the federal death penalty machine that restarted during Donald Trump’s tenure after a lengthy hiatus. Recall that the federal government carried out 13 executions in the waning days of the Trump presidency, rushing to do so before Joe Biden took over. The Supreme Court that Trump and the GOP helped create was instrumental in allowing the “spree,” as Justice Sonia Sotomayor called it in a dissent, to go forward.








