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Monday
Aug162004
Monday, August 16, 2004 at 02:01AM
The U.S. Supreme Court is expected to decide in
its fall term whether the Constitution forbids the execution of killers
who were younger than 18 when they committed their crimes, but the
issue could come to a head in Delaware before then. New Castle County
Superior Court Judge Peggy Ableman heard pretrial arguments earlier
this month in the case of Laquan T. Robinson, 22, who is charged with
the shooting deaths of two Wilmington residents in 1999. Delaware
prosecutors are seeking the death penalty for Robinson, who was 17 at
the time of all three killings, but defense attorneys have asked
Ableman to preclude the death penalty. "It is both cruel and unusual,"
said defense attorney Kevin O'Connell, noting that most states prohibit
the death penalty for crimes committed by juveniles, and the ones that
do allow it rarely use it. Prosecutors argue that until the U.S.
Supreme Court says otherwise, Delaware's death penalty law, which
allows capital punishment for killers as young as 16, stands. [more ]