South Carolina Supreme Court finds all three of state’s execution methods to be constitutional
As reported in this local article, a “majority on the S.C. Supreme Court has ruled that allowing death row inmates the choice of the electric chair or firing squad to carry out their sentences does not constitute cruel and unusual punishment.” Here is more about the ruling:
The decision, published July 31, comes several years after the state legislature introduced the two methods as an alternative to lethal injection, which was discontinued after the state Department of Corrections was no longer able to procure the lethal drugs necessary to carry out those sentences.
The law prompted an immediate legal challenge, with opponents of the death penalty arguing that both alternative methods were exceedingly painful and unusual in a country where executions have overall been declining. Today, just five states — Idaho, Mississippi, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Utah — deploy firing squads for executions, while the electric chair is currently used in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Kentucky, South Carolina and Tennessee.
A Richland County court ruled in 2022 that both electrocution and the firing squad violated the South Carolina Constitution’s provisions against cruel and unusual punishment.
Writing for the majority on July 31, Justice John Cannon Few wrote that the two methods could not be considered cruel and unusual because, rather than representing an effort to inflict pain, the execution methods represented the S.C. General Assembly’s “sincere effort” to make the death penalty less inhumane while enabling the state to carry out its laws.
The full ruling in Owens v. Stirling, Opinion No. 28222 (S.C. July 31, 2024) (available here), which includes some partial dissents on certain execution methods, runs nearly 100 pages. Because there seems to now be only a few (if any) current US Supreme Court Justices eager to police state execution methods, these kinds of state supreme court rulings are nearly certain to be the last legal word on these matters for the foreseeable future.