(Anthony) Kennedy v. Louisiana

The Supreme Court released its decision in Kennedy v. Louisiana today. The majority opinion (written by Justice Kennedy, who was joined by the four other liberal justices) stated that Louisiana cannot constitutionally execute a child rapist (even in the case of aggravated rape), as that would be “cruel and unusual punishment.”

Justice Alito, who was joined by CJ Roberts, Justice Thomas, and Justice Scalia, wrote a spirited, tough, and intellectual dissent.

Very quick analysis:

  • When the Eighth Amendment was written, rape was a capital crime. If the Framers meant to permit only the death penalty for murder, they would have done so.
  • The Fifth Amendment mentions “capital crime” once, and mentions “depriv[ation] of life” twice. Obviously, the Constitution clearly contemplates a legal death penalty.
  • The liberals on the Supreme Court use various tests to show that their policy decisions are correct, with little regard for the underlying logic, consistency, or appropriateness of using those tests. Six states (of the 36 that have the death penalty) permit the execution of child rapists. States cannot, as per the 1977 Coker decision, execute those who rape adult women. It is illogical to declare that a substantial minority constitutes something so unusual as to be outlawed. Furthermore, states have begun to consider expanding the death penalty to encompass crimes that do not involve murder, which would show that our all-important “evolving standards of decency” are moving in the direction of greater protection of our children and a greater awareness of the horrors of rape. (Oddly, liberals have just written a Supreme Court opinion which is the jurisprudential equivalent of “If rape is inevitable, lie back and enjoy it.”)
  • States are meant to be laboratories of experimentation. Policy questions - and empirical questions - about the validity of capital punishment for heinous crimes that do not result in death, or about the deterrent effect of capital punishment - are those best left to the states. We cannot know whether or not the death penalty for child rape will have the desired effect of reducing child molestation, or will have the undesired effect of ensuring that the perpetrator kills the child. We can never find out, however, until such laws are put into place.
  • Embezzlers, drug users, robbers, prostitutes, johns, and arsonists all believe that child rape is such a horrible crime that it is worthy of death. If those among us who are the least likely to view the strong arm of the law as valid also cry for the strongest possible punishment for this crime, a very clear, universal revulsion of this crime has been established.
  • It is legal to use deadly force to protect yourself against both murder and rape. While there is always a fundamental distinction between individual and state action, it is ridiculous to state that a governmental body may not impose the death penalty upon rapists, as such is “cruel and unusual,” but that same governmental body ought to allow individuals to protect themselves from rape by using deadly force.
  • As an aside: conservatives ought to bring this up when told that we only care about children who are in the womb.
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8 Responses to “(Anthony) Kennedy v. Louisiana”


  1. 1 AJWHR

    Coker, dear, not Roper.

    And write more often, d**n it.

  2. 2 Elizabeth Crum

    I had my head in other things today and forgot to follow up on this Decision; glad I ran across your post while clicking down the blogroll list of Conservablogs (most of which seem sadly neglected). Child rape is so reprehensible that I wish we had something worse than death for it - but I trust God will see that justice is done.

    Elizabeth Crum’s last blog post..Don’t Blame It on the Rain

  3. 3 Roxeanne de Luca

    Mea culpa! It’s all fixed now.

    Elizabeth - thank you for stopping by. :) I’m guest-blogging for Tieki. She’s been studying for the LSAT, running around the country, and will be in Israel for a few weeks.

  4. 4 Sunflower Desert

    Ugh! This is difficult to believe. These 5 Justices should be ashamed of themselves. I shouldn’t be, but I am shocked over this decision. :(
    Sunflower Desert’s last blog post..Dodge City’s Lee Hawes takes hunting back to the 1800’s

  5. 5 AJWHR

    The decision surprised me. From the tenor of the oral argument, I thought Louisiana was going to win this one. Did anyone else feel that way?

  6. 6 Sam Pierce

    I held out hope that the rights of the people of Louisiana would be respected by the court. I too hope that justice is carried out through some means. If that liberal moron, Anthony Kennedy (I will never again refer to those 5 as justices) thinks death isn’t proportional to the rape of a child, I could make some suggestions to him as to what might be proportional… and I hope the vile rapist is not completely isolated from the general population in prison.

    Sam Pierce’s last blog post..83 Senators Reach Out To Deadbeat Borrowers

  7. 7 Roxeanne de Luca

    AJWHR - I had not listened to the oral arguments, but heard that a lot of people thought it would go the other way.

    Sam Pierce - you and everyone else thinks that a humane death is too good for child rapists. Apparently, though, we aren’t up on the norms of the time.

  1. 1 iPandora » Blog Archive » “Lie Back And Enjoy It”

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