The fate of nearly 400 death row inmates in Florida hangs in the balance after Gov. Rick Scott signed a bill into law on Monday that changes the way the state will carry out death penalty cases.
The move came in response to a U.S. Supreme Court decision to strike down Florida’s death penalty law on the basis that it’s unconstitutional for judges alone, and without the input of juries, to impose the sentence. Juries only had an advisory role in recommending a death sentence. The ruling stopped the state from carrying out executions.
Under the newly revised Florida law, judges can no longer impose death penalties if jurors don’t recommend it. At least 10 out of 12 jurors are now required to recommend execution in order for it to be carried out.
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“It is my solemn duty to uphold the laws of Florida and my foremost concern is always for the victims and their loved ones,” the Republican governor said in a statement. “I hope this legislation will allow families of these horrific crimes to get the closure they deserve.”
The January ruling from the Supreme Court came in an eight-to-one opinion, with Justice Sonia Sotomayor writing for the majority that the law was inconsistent with the jury requirement delineated by the Sixth Amendment.
“A jury’s mere recommendation is not enough,” she wrote, adding that sentencing should rely on a “jury’s verdict, not a judge’s fact finding.”









