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Current Iowa law does not provide for punishment of any crime by
death. Despite the fact that Iowa does not have the death
penalty, in 2005 Dustin Honken and Angela Johnson were sentenced
to death in the Federal Court system for the 1993 murders of
three adults and two children. Johnson will be the first woman
executed by the U.S. since 1953. The victims were Terry DeGeus,
Greg Nicholson, Lori Duncan; and Duncan's daughters, Kandi, 10,
and Amber, 6. More than sixty federal crimes are punishable by
death, thus the death penalty can be imposed for a federal crime
committed in Iowa even though Iowa itself does not have a death
penalty.
Public opinion surveys have shown that a majority of Iowans tend
to favor capital punishment, but although broad, support is not
very deep. In fact, support for the death penalty drops to
barely 50% when survey respondents are asked whether they prefer
death or life with no chance for parole as punishment for
first-degree murder. Many Iowans are unaware that Iowa law
already provides for imprisonment with no chance for parole, and
many who favor the death penalty in principle support it less
enthusiastically, or turn against it outright, when they learn
how it works (or doesn't work) in practice in other states.
In March 1995, the Senate voted 39-11 to reject a capital
punishment bill. Ten Republicans and one Democrat voted in favor
of the bill, and 13 Republicans and 26 Democrats were opposed.
The bill voted down by the Senate was nearly identical to one
approved, 54-44, a week before in the Iowa House.
The bill would have left people guilty of several serious crimes
eligible for death by injection. The crimes would have included
murder committed to silence a rape or kidnap victim; the murder
of a child, police officer or prison guard; and murder marked by
"exceptional depravity." IADP efforts were instrumental in
defeating this legislation.
During the 1998 legislative session IADP's efforts overwhelmed
pro-death penalty politicians who had again mounted a death penalty
bill. Iowans from across the state, and from the religious
community in particular,stood together to resist the
reinstatement effort. A public hearing on February 4, 1998, in
the chamber of the Iowa House of Representatives proved a
landslide victory for those opposed to state executions. Leaders
of several religious communities, including an archbishop,
bishops, rabbis, and pastors, were among nearly 70 Iowans who
testified in opposition to the bill. Then-governor Terry
Branstad, an enthusiastic promoter of the death penalty,
lamented in a press conference shortly after the hearing that
Iowa's death penalty opponents were "strong and well organized."
Chronology
1834: First (nearly) legal execution in Iowa Territory, in
Dubuque: Patrick O'Connor is hanged 6/20 for murdering his
cabin-mate George O'Keaf on 5/9. Criminal law of Michigan
Territory, which governed neighboring Iowa County (now part of
Wisconsin) was not extended west of the Mississippi to the
"counties of Dubuque and Demoine" until 10/1 of that year, but
O'Connor was tried and sentenced in an orderly manner several
days after the crime by a jury of peers, and appeals were made
to the governor of Missouri and to President Jackson, both of
whom determined that they had no jurisdiction over the case.
(Childs, pp. 363-66; Oldt, p. 447)
1838: From Governor Robert Lucas's first annual message to the
Territorial General Assembly: "[T]he general conclusion [of
'some of the greatest statesmen and philanthropists of the age']
has been . . . that the general policy of all criminal laws
should be to prevent crimes, rather than to inflict punishment,
and that all punishments should be inflicted with a view to
reform, rather than exterminate, the criminal. In these
conclusions I heartily concur, and would wish to see confinement
at hard labor, for life, substituted in all cases, in lieu of
capital punishment, when suitable prisons for the purpose can be
had." (Acton, p. 30)
1839: Iowa’s first Territorial Legislature passes criminal code
prescribing punishment by death for first-degree murder (1);
arson, burglary, and robbery when death of an innocent person
ensues (27, 28, 32); and perjury resulting in a wrongful
conviction for murder (56). Section 101 specifies hanging as the
means of execution, and 102 makes the defendant's body available
"on application of any reputable surgeon or surgeons" for
dissection. (L1838-39; Acton, p. 136)
1845: First execution under Iowa territorial law: Mormon
brothers William and Steven Hodges are hanged together before a
large crowd near Burlington on 7/15. Both vehemently maintain
their innocence to the end and blame prejudice against Mormons
for their conviction and sentence based on scanty evidence.
(Acton, pp. 49-51; BHE 7/17/1845)
1851: Public sentiment grows against capital punishment. The
Iowa Senate votes to abolish; the revised criminal code
ultimately adopted that year limits eligible crimes to murder in
the first degree (2569, 2572) and treason (2565). The method for
execution (3079-86) provides for executions to be held either in
public or in private. (C1851; Acton, pp. 136-145)
1872: Governor Cyrus Carpenter signs abolition bill passed by
Iowa House and Senate 5/1 following an enthusiastic campaign led
by Wisconsin abolitionist Marvin Bovee and supported by Quakers
and many newspapers. (L1872, Ch. 136; C1873, 3845, 3849, 3852;
Acton, pp. 137-140)
1874: Charles Howard is lynched by a mob in Des Moines following
conviction on 12/14 for first-degree murder. In sentencing
Howard, a passionate Judge Hugh Maxwell had expressed regret
that the death penalty had been abolished and had virtually
recommended lynching, calling Howard "a fiend" and lynch mobs
"our best citizens." Howard's lynching at the jail that same
night by a mob of some 100 masked men, along with two subsequent
lynchings in 1875 and 1877, were widely blamed in the press on
the unavailability of a legal death penalty. (Acton, p. 141; ISR
12/15/1874)
1876: Restoration of capital punishment fails by one vote in the
Iowa Senate. (Acton, p. 142)
1878: Governor John Gear signs bill passed by Iowa Legislature
3/26 to restore capital punishment, giving juries a choice of a
life sentence or death by hanging for first-degree murder.
Treason remains punishable only by life imprisonment. The new
law bars under-age persons and any but authorized persons
(necessary officials and guards plus invited witnesses,
relatives, clergy, etc.) from witnessing executions. Iowa
becomes the first English-speaking jurisdiction in the world to
abolish capital punishment and then reinstate it. (L1878, Ch.
165; C1880, 3845, 3849, 3852; Acton, pp. 143-144) [The 1878 law
remains unchanged until repeal in 1965, but sections are
renumbered as 4724, 4728, and 4731 in 1897; 12911, 12924, and
12961 in 1924; and 690.2, 692.1, and 697.1 in 1946. (ICA 1979,
707)
1894: James Dooley, at 18 the youngest person to be executed in
Iowa, is hanged on 10/19 for murdering his aunt and cousin two
years earlier when he was 16. His was apparently the first
execution at the Iowa State Penitentiary in Fort Madison. (DMWL
10/25/1894)
1918: Iowa’s only triple execution as black soldiers Robert
Johnson, Fred Allen, and Stanley Grammel are hanged on 7/5 at
Camp Dodge, near Johnston, after being convicted by an Army
court martial of raping a white 17-year-old girl. (Watts, p. 25;
DM Reg 7/5/1918)
1935: The first double execution under Iowa state law as Pat
Griffin and Elmer Brewer are hanged 6/5 at Fort Madison for
murdering a deputy sheriff. (Watts, p. 25; DM Reg 6/4 and
6/5/1935; DM Trib 6/5/1935; DM Reg editorial 6/6/1935)
1938: Peak year for executions (4) in Iowa: John M. Mercer and
Allen B. Wheaton on 1/24, and Marlo Heinz and Franz A. Jacobsen
on 4/19. Mercer's body was claimed by Ida Chamness, a Quaker who
had befriended him during his imprisonment, and was buried on
her farm near West Branch. (Watts, p. 25; DM Reg 1/23, 1/24,
1/25/1938; DM Reg 4/19, 4/20/1938)
1946: Father and son Philip and William Heincy are hanged
together on 3/28 for murder. Philip, 72, is the oldest person to
be executed in Iowa. (Watts, p. 25; DM Reg 3/27, 3/28,
3/29/1946)
1962: Last executions under Iowa law, at the Iowa State
Penitentiary in Fort Madison, of Charles Noel Brown on 7/24 and
Charles A. Kelly on 9/6, convicted together of murder. (DM Reg
7/24, 9/6/1962)
1963: A bill to abolish Iowa’s death penalty passes the House
(2/6) but apparently dies in the Senate without coming to the
floor for debate. A public hearing on the bill is held 3/28. (DM
Reg 3/29/63)
1963: The federal government executes Victor Harry Fegure at the
Iowa State Penitentiary on 3/15 for kidnapping and murder. (DM
Reg, 3/14 and 3/15/63; more detailed Associated Press stories
appeared in ICPC, 3/14, and DMD 3/16/63) Fegure was the 41st
person legally executed in Iowa since statehood (DM Reg,
3/3/95); the first person to be executed under the 1932 federal
kidnapping statute ("Lindbergh Law") (DMD 3/15/63); and last
person executed by the federal government until Timothy McVeigh
was executed on 6/11/2001. (DM Reg 6/12)
1963: Nine days after the highly publicized Feguer execution: "A
Davenport boy was in serious condition in a Davenport hospital
Sunday [3/24] after he became entangled in a rope while playing
'hangman' with his younger brother." A 12-year-old neighbor
passing on his way to church noticed the 11-year-old victim
hanging by his neck from a rope thrown over a bar in the garage
and alerted the victim's mother. She cut the boy down and
performed mouth-to-mouth resuscitation (a novel rescue technique
at the time) until firefighters arrived and administered oxygen.
(DM Reg 3/25/63; DMD 3/26)
1965: Iowa Legislature votes to abolish capital punishment
(House votes 39-29 on 2/6; Senate votes 35-20 on 2/19) (DM Reg
2/6 and 2/19/65); bill signed into law by Governor Harold
Hughes. Iowans Against the Death Penalty is instrumental in
lobbying for abolition. (C1966, 690.2, 692.1, and 697.1; Acton,
p. 279)
1968: First year in U.S. history with no legal executions
nationwide. (NY Times, 1/5/69, sec. IV, p. 11)
1970: Reinstatement bill passes House Law Enforcement Committee
(March or early April). Most 1970s proposals specify
electrocution; at least one would retain hanging.
1975: Three reinstatement bills defeated in Iowa Senate on 2/19
and 2/20. (DM Reg 2/21/75)
1976: Reinstatement bill defeated on 3/9 in Iowa House. (DM Reg
3/10/76)
1990: Governor Terry Branstad makes reinstatement of capital
punishment a cornerstone of his successful campaign for
re-election. Iowans Against the Death Penalty re-activates.
1993: Reinstatement bills die in House subcommittee (January and
March). All 1990s proposals specify lethal injection.
1995: Reinstatement bill passes Iowa House on 2/23 following an
unusually candid, emotional, and widely publicized floor debate.
Senate votes on 3/2 against reinstatement. (DM Reg, 3/3/95)
1997: Reinstatement bill fails again. (DM Reg, 4/15/97)
1997: Arguing that defendants should not face a federal penalty
that is not permitted under state law, U.S. Attorney Don
Nickerson accepts guilty pleas in exchange for life without
parole instead of going to trial and seeking the death penalty
on federal carjacking charges against two defendants in an Iowa
double murder/carjacking/bank robbery case. Plea bargain is
upheld in U.S. District Court over protests from politicians and
the victims' families. (DM Reg 12/31/1997, 1/1/1998, 1/7/1998)
1998: Reinstatement bill fails yet again (DM Reg, 2/13/98);
Governor Branstad characterizes death penalty opponents as
"strong and well organized."
2001: Two legislative leaders announce they intend to introduce
death penalty legislation during the 2002 legislative session.
(DM Reg 10/26/01)
References
Acton, Richard, Lord and Patricia Nassif Acton. To Go Free: A
treasury of Iowa’s legal heritage (Ames, Iowa: Iowa State
University Press, 1995).
BHE: Burlington Hawk-Eye
C(year): Code of Iowa (year)
Childs, C. The History of Dubuque County (Chicago: Western
Historical Co., 1880).
DMD: Davenport Morning Democrat
DM Reg: Des Moines Register
DM Trib: Des Moines Tribune
DMWL: Des Moines Weekly Leader
ICA 1979: Iowa Code Annotated, 1979
ICPC: Iowa City Press-Citizen
ISR: Iowa State Register (newspaper), Des Moines
L(year): Laws of Iowa (year)
NY Times: New York Times
Oldt, Franklin T., ed. History of Dubuque County, Iowa (Chicago:
Goodspeed Historical Association, 1911?, facsimile ed. 1994)
Watts, Fred N. Iowa State Penitentiary, 1839-1965 (Fort Madison:
I.S.P., 1965). Contains a list of executions (names, dates,
crimes) at the Iowa State Penitentiary from 1878 through 1965.
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