2 Scheduled for Federal Executions
In a resurgence of the federal death penalty at the end of President Donald Trump’s tenure, his administration scheduled executions this week for two men convicted in separate Texas murders on military property.
Brandon Bernard, 40, was executed in the federal death chamber in Indiana on Thursday night, delayed hours by appeals in court. Alfred Bourgeois, 56, is set to die Friday. Bernard's was the ninth federal execution of 2020, a year that saw the end of a 17-year hiatus of the federal death penalty.
Meanwhile, Texas has executed three people this year — the fewest in nearly a quarter century, due in large part to the pandemic.
The federal executions were set to proceed after eight prison employees who took part in a federal execution last month tested positive for the coronavirus, according to court records. Five of those employees were set to work during this week’s executions, with prison authorities reporting they have completed the isolation timeline recommended by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Prisoner advocates argue that the positive cases highlight the potential danger of carrying out executions, not only to inmates but to staff and community members as well.
“The fact that at least 20 percent of the BOP’s [Bureau of Prison’s] execution team has contracted COVID-19 following Orlando Hall’s execution speaks volumes — particularly given the fact that we don’t know how many people opted in to be tested,” Cassandra Stubbs, director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s Capital Punishment Project, said in a statement. “There is no way to conduct these federal executions right now in a way that is safe.”
Bernard was 18 when he was sentenced to death for his role in the 1999 carjacking and murders of an Iowa couple on a secluded part of the Fort Hood Army post in Killeen. Bourgeois was convicted of killing his 2-year-old daughter in 2002 at the Corpus Christi Naval Air Station. In both cases, the killings were deemed federal crimes because they occurred on military property.
Both men argued to courts that their executions should be stopped: Bernard claimed police evidence revealed in 2018 and several jurors’ changes of heart about the sentence they imposed should have prevented his death, and Bourgeois’ attorneys have long insisted he is intellectually disabled and therefore legally ineligible for execution.
And both inmates challenged the federal government’s new execution protocol, arguing that their execution dates were scheduled without enough warning.
Under federal death penalty law, federal executions must be carried out in the same manner as in the states where the inmates were sentenced. Since Bernard and Bourgeois were both sentenced to death in Texas federal courts, they argue that means their executions must be set at least 91 days in advance, a requirement in Texas statute that allows time for inmates to ask the governor to delay their executions or change their sentences.
The time gap also allows inmates to raise new challenges in court that only become relevant once an execution date is scheduled, like questions of mental competency or the safety of lethal injection drugs.
Bernard’s federal execution for Thursday, however, was set 55 days in advance. Bourgeois only got three weeks’ notice for his Friday execution date.
So far, courts have rejected timing as a reason to stop the executions. U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan in Washington, D.C., acknowledged this week that the government’s scheduling timelines violated the federal death penalty law but said that issue wasn’t sufficient to halt the executions.
“Both have already submitted clemency petitions, and the decision whether to grant those petitions now rests with the President,” she wrote in her ruling Sunday, adding that she was “sympathetic to the argument that such petitions would likely receive more favorable treatment from the incoming administration.”
For Bourgeois, a 91-day notice would have meant his execution could not have been scheduled before the Jan. 20 inauguration of President-elect Joe Biden, who has said he opposes the death penalty.
The Trump administration planned to restart federal executions last year, setting five executions starting in December 2019. After court fights over the lethal injection procedure and the execution drug’s potential painful effects delayed the executions, the first federal execution since 2003 took place in July in Terre Haute, Indiana.
Since then, seven other men had been put to death in the federal execution chamber before Bernard, including Bernard’s co-defendant, Christopher Vialva, who was executed in September. Bernard and Vialva were tried together in 2000 and sentenced to death for the slaying and robbery of Todd and Stacie Bagley.
Vialva, then 19, and other teenagers in a gang carjacked the couple, put them in the trunk and tried to pull money from their bank accounts and pawn a wedding ring, according to court records. Eventually, Bernard and another teen joined them at a secluded spot on Army property.
Vialva shot both of the victims in the head while they were in the trunk, and Bernard set the car on fire, the records state. Bernard was sentenced to death for Stacie Bagley’s death; an autopsy showed that she died of smoke inhalation.
In his recent appeals, Bernard’s attorneys argued that they discovered in 2018 that prosecutors withheld evidence that indicated Bernard was a low-level member of the gang and therefore less likely to be a potential future danger — which jurors consider when weighing a life sentence or death sentence. The attorneys also argued that five jurors from his trial no longer stood by their sentence, including one who said Bernard was prejudiced by being tried alongside Vialva.
The courts rejected the argument that the newly discovered evidence clears the high bar to halt an execution or overturn a death sentence. On Thursday night, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote an opinion disagreeing with her court's decision to allow Bernard's execution to proceed, saying he never got a chance in court to properly raise the "troubling allegations that the Government secured his death sentence by withholding exculpatory evidence and knowingly eliciting false testimony against him."
Bourgeois was convicted after killing his young daughter by slamming her into his truck’s window while making a delivery at the Corpus Christi military base, according to court records.
In court, his attorneys have argued that he is intellectually disabled, and the U.S. Supreme Court has long held that people who are intellectually disabled cannot be executed. Bourgeois’ scheduled execution date last year was postponed while the courts further reviewed his claim. His lawyers presented low IQ scores, repeating grade levels in elementary school and trouble following directions as indicators of an intellectual disability.
An appeals court rejected his petition, though the judges acknowledged that Bourgeois may be deemed intellectually disabled under current medical standards.
“We are unwilling to accept Bourgeois’s sweeping argument that a fresh intellectual-disability claim arises every time the medical community updates its literature,” a three-judge panel on the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals wrote in an October opinion. “The question in this appeal is not whether Alfred Bourgeois is intellectually disabled. It is, instead, whether he was able to litigate his intellectual-disability claim.”
As of Thursday night, Bourgeois had multiple appeals pending in various federal courts, as well as a request for Trump to halt his execution, the last in the nation scheduled for 2020.