logo
Democrat's effort fails, and the death penalty lives on in ‘pro-life' South Dakota

Democrat's effort fails, and the death penalty lives on in ‘pro-life' South Dakota

Yahoo21-02-2025
State Sen. Jamie Smith, D-Sioux Falls, participates in a South Dakota Senate Health and Human Services Committee meeting on Jan. 22, 2025. (Makenzie Huber/South Dakota Searchlight)
Admittedly, the death penalty isn't used often here, but thanks to the actions of the Senate Judiciary Committee, South Dakota will continue to have the right to kill its citizens. The committee ensured that death is still an option when it defeated Senate Bill 119, a measure to repeal capital punishment.
The main sponsor of SB 119 was Sen. Jamie Smith, a Sioux Falls Democrat. While his testimony was short because he had to be in another committee hearing, Smith raised some points not usually heard when the subject is repealing the death penalty.
He covered the common themes like the cost of death penalty appeals versus the cost of lifetime incarceration and the irony of such a pro-life state having capital punishment as the law of the land. It was more interesting when he noted that an inmate who gives up his death penalty appeals may be causing the state to take part in assisted suicide. A former candidate for governor, Smith said he didn't know if he could make the call to the penitentiary to order the warden to take a life.
Smith's hesitance to make the call points to the fact that the death penalty has many victims. Everyone who touches a death penalty case has a chance to be changed by it, and not necessarily for the better. Former state Sen. Arthur Rusch, who testified in favor of SB 119, served as judge for the trial of Donald Moeller and sentenced him to death. One of his rulings was that the jurors in the case would have access to free counseling. The defense and prosecution lawyers can also suffer effects from a death penalty case, not to mention the poor person who has to pull the switch at the prison.
Bizarre legal debate shows it's time to talk about the death penalty
Senators heard from SueZann Bosler of Journey of Hope, an organization that lobbies against death penalty laws. Bosler and her father, a minister, were attacked during a home invasion. Bosler was stabbed multiple times; her father was killed by the intruder. An opponent of the death penalty, Bosler's father had told her that if he was ever the victim of a homicide, that the killer should not face the death penalty. Bosler testified in her attacker's multiple trials, seeking to get his death penalty overturned. Eventually, she was successful.
Bosler told the senators her father was known to ask, 'Why do we kill people who kill people to show Americans that killing is wrong?'
Also testifying in favor of the bill was Denny Davis of South Dakotans Opposed to the Death Penalty. He said that in the United States since 1976, there have been 200 exonerations of prisoners on death row, an average of four per year. This raises the specter of wrongly executing an innocent person.
Testimony opposing SB 119 led off with Attorney General Marty Jackley who said it was his job to speak for crime victims. He said South Dakota's capital punishment law was 'responsible, humane and limited.' The death penalty, according to Jackley, prevents some murders and saves the lives of law enforcement officers.
Repealing the death penalty doesn't come up every year in the Legislature, but when it does, it comes up against Lynette Johnson. She always makes a compelling case for keeping capital punishment on the books. Her husband, prison guard Ronald Johnson, was murdered by prisoners serving life sentences. It must be tough for her reliving her husband's murder each time legislation repealing the death penalty is offered. In that way, she has much in common with the family members of murder victims who must relive their ordeal every time the murderer's death row case comes up for appeal.
This year, it sounded as if Johnson's presentation was particularly graphic. Those of us monitoring the committee hearing online couldn't see the photos of Ronald she shared with lawmakers, taken after the inmates had beaten her husband with a lead pipe. Her lesson was clear: This is what sentencing someone to life in prison will get you.
Jackley urged senators to keep the death penalty because it serves as a deterrent. It certainly didn't deter the lifers who bludgeoned Ronald Johnson.
On a 4-3 vote, the committee deferred SB 119 to the 41st day of the 38-day legislative session, in their own way, giving the legislation a death sentence. That vote doesn't change the fact that our death penalty is rarely used and of dubious repute when it comes to keeping the peace. Maybe someday South Dakotans will repeal the death penalty and truly live up to their pro-life values.
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Schatz locks down votes to replace Durbin as whip
Schatz locks down votes to replace Durbin as whip

The Hill

time20 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Schatz locks down votes to replace Durbin as whip

Hawaii Sen. Brian Schatz (D) has locked down the votes he needs to replace Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) as Senate Democratic whip once Durbin retires from Congress at the end of next year, according to a person familiar with Schatz's support. Schatz, the Democratic chief deputy whip, has also earned the endorsement of Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (N.Y.) to succeed Durbin as whip in 2027. 'I'm grateful for the support from so many of my colleagues. I intend to continue earning their support in the months to come,' the Hawaii Democrat said in a statement. It would be the biggest change to the Senate Democratic leadership team since Schumer ascended to leader after the 2016 election. Durbin has served as Democratic whip since 2005, first under the leadership of Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), from 2005 to 2017, and then under Schumer from 2017 until today. Punchbowl News first reported that Schatz had collected enough votes and Schumer's support. Schatz, 52, formally launched his bid to become Democratic whip in April, telling The Washington Post at the time: 'Not everybody loves the aspects of politics that occurs on the floor. … This is where I think I can be most useful.' He assumed his Senate office in December of 2012, making him Hawaii's senior senator by a few days. He previously served as the Aloha State's lieutenant governor.

Republicans' next redistricting target: Missouri
Republicans' next redistricting target: Missouri

Politico

time21 minutes ago

  • Politico

Republicans' next redistricting target: Missouri

Kehoe 'will always consider options' which 'provide congressional districts that best represent Missourians,' his spokesperson Gabby Picard wrote in a statement to POLITICO on Tuesday. Both parties are currently locked in a national fight to gerrymander state lines ahead of the midterms. Republicans in Texas have put forward a new map that could flip as many as five seats red — sending Texas Democratic lawmakers scrambling out of the state to deny the legislature the quorum needed to pass the map. And in response, Democrats in other states — particularly California — are eyeing ways to do their own mid-decade redistricting. In an interview with CNBC Tuesday, President Donald Trump said Republicans were 'entitled' to the seats in Texas. A White House spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment about whether Trump is pushing for Missouri to redistrict, but Missouri House Speaker Pro Tem Chad Perkins told The Missouri Independent in July that he had received a call from a White House staffer encouraging it. Cindy O'Laughlin, Missouri Senate's president pro tem, said in a statement to POLITICO 'no decision has been made' yet, but that if Kehoe calls a special session 'the Senate will be ready to engage in those discussions.' Cleaver, the Missouri Democrat whose seat would likely be affected by the potential redistricting, said Democrats in states like California and New York 'are now required to respond' in kind. 'I think this is absolutely awful what they're doing, it's not helpful or wholesome for our democracy,' Cleaver said. 'But, I think Democrats are going to be required not only by their constituency, but by the demands of democracy, to fight back.' Cleaver said he spoke to Kehoe on the phone about redistricting after learning about it on the news, but that neither man made requests or commitments to each other out of respect. However, the lawmaker, who has served in the House since 2005, noted that his team is already working on legal options in the case the plan moves forward. 'If we can't convince Republicans that this is damaging to their brand and to this country, then we'll have to convince a judge,' Cleaver said.

Maclay math teacher fired, facing charges after allegedly sending nude photos to minor
Maclay math teacher fired, facing charges after allegedly sending nude photos to minor

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Maclay math teacher fired, facing charges after allegedly sending nude photos to minor

A former middle school math teacher at Maclay School was arrested for allegedly sending an "inappropriate photo" to a minor. Joseif Pinkston, 45, was arrested July 30 on a charge of obscene material distributed, transmitted or shown to a minor. He was taken to the Leon County Detention Facility and released shortly after on a $2,000 bond. Maclay said it doesn't comment on HR matters but the Tallahassee Democrat confirmed that Pinkston was fired immediately and is no longer employed at the school. The alleged incident also did not involve a Maclay student. His teacher profile was scrubbed from the school's website shortly after the arrest. On July 7, the Florida State University Police Department received a report that a 17-year-old girl had been viewing nude photographs on a social media platform that was linked to Pinkston, according to court records. The girl had screenshots of several photos Pinkston posted on his "close friends story," which is an avenue on social media platforms that allows a user to specifically select who can and cannot see a post. The girl told investigators in an interview that he had added her and several others to the private channel where the nude photos were posted, but Pinkston had never directly sent nude photos to her. Investigators reviewed messages sent back and forth between the two, and on several occasions, Pinkston sent voice recordings, according to court records. "One of the reasons why I post weird stuff on my close friends and my Snapchat is because I'm really doing it for me because it allows me to have confidence in myself," Pinkston said in a recording sent to the girl, according to court records. "I'm not explaining that well, but I'm not weird. I'm really not. I know what I'm doing; I know I can get in trouble, but I'm definitely a long ways from weird. I'm probably on the opposite spectrum actually." The photos and messages were sent roughly a year ago, and the incident had been reported to the Gadsden County Sheriff's Office at the time. According to archived social media pages, Pinkston used to be a teacher at Gadsden County High School prior to being hired at Maclay, but it is unclear if the incident involved a Gadsden County High School student. When asked about the photos and conversations in July, Pinkston told investigators the photos were from last summer when he was working out and that he did post the photos to his social media accounts but thought he "took them down right away." Regardless, they were only available to the select people he allowed to view the content. He previously told GCSO detectives that he has roughly 25 people on his "close friends list," and the followers he lets access his posts may change each time he posts. In another voice recording sent to the girl, Pinkston told her that he selects who he wants to see the posts and there were times that he'd only have her included in the list to view his content. "You know what I'm saying, like sometimes I let a bunch of people see a post and sometimes only a handful of people, and sometimes only one person, and a lot of the times over the summer it's been just you," Pinkston said, according to the report. "And it's never weird, but it's just because if I know I want you to see something, and I know I can trust you with it," he added. Local government watchdog reporter Elena Barrera can be reached at ebarrera@ Follow her on X: @elenabarreraaa. This article originally appeared on Tallahassee Democrat: Ex-Tallahassee teacher charged, allegedly sent nude photos to minor Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store