Floridas Vengeful Governor
ORLANDO, Fla. Gov. Rick Scott of Florida overreached last month when he issued an executive order stripping a state attorney of her authority to prosecute a man charged with killing his pregnant ex-girlfriend and an Orlando police officer. On Monday, he also removed her from 21 other murder cases.
Mr. Scotts executive orders appear to be without precedent in Florida. They are meant to punish the state attorney, Aramis D. Ayala, Floridas first black elected prosecutor, for announcing she would no longer seek the death penalty because it was not in the best interest of her jurisdiction, which stretches from Orlando to Kissimmee.
Ms. Ayala rightly argued that capital punishment does not deter crime, nor does it protect police officers. Instead, it often leads to protracted appeals, and rarely delivers closure to the victims family. Punishment is most effective when it happens consistently and swiftly, she said. Neither describe the death penalty in this state. In retaliation, Governor Scott reassigned the cases to a prosecutor who will most likely seek executions.
This is not just a dispute over the death penalty. Its also about the governors brazen lack of respect for prosecutorial independence, which is critical to the functioning of the legal system. Not only is it unclear whether the governor has the authority to make these reassignments, but in substituting his judgment for Ms. Ayalas, he is also sending a dangerous message to prosecutors in Florida that politics will supersede their discretion.
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https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/04/opinion/floridas-vengeful-governor.html