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Alabama enacts death penalty law for child rapists

FILE - Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey speaks to supporters after the Republicans's reelection victory, Nov. 8, 2022, in Montgomery, Ala. Ivey begins her second full term on Monday, Jan. 16, 2023 with her inauguration. (AP Photo/Vasha Hunt)
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FR171624 AP
FILE - Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey speaks to supporters after the Republicans's reelection victory, Nov. 8, 2022, in Montgomery, Ala. Ivey begins her second full term on Monday, Jan. 16, 2023 with her inauguration. (AP Photo/Vasha Hunt)

Governor Kay Ivey signed The Child Predator Death Penalty Act into law. The measure strengthens Alabama’s criminal penalties against those who are convicted of felony sexual crimes against a child. Crimes of first-degree rape, first-degree sodomy, and first-degree sexual assault of victims under the age of 12 would automatically become punishable by death.

State lawmakers took up the measure last year, but it failed to pass. Part of debate over the law was reportedly due to the 2008 U.S. Supreme Court decision Kennedy v. Louisiana, where the justices ruled that the death penalty for non-homicide crimes was unconstitutional because it violates the eighth amendment against cruel and unusual punishment.

Back in 2025, the Associated Press reported how Alabama lawmakers on advanced legislation that would allow child rapists to be sentenced to death as some Republicans hope to entice the U.S. Supreme Court to revisit the decision banning capital punishment for such crimes. The Alabama House of Representatives voted 86-5 for the bill that would allow prosecutors to pursue the death penalty when an adult is convicted of rape or sodomy of a child under 12. The legislation now moves to the Alabama Senate.

Florida and Tennessee passed similar bills in the last two years and at least six other state legislatures have introduced similar measures over that same period, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

The death penalty for child rape or sexual assault was considered unconstitutional under current Supreme Court precedent. The U.S. Supreme Court in 2008 ruled that the death penalty for child rape is unconstitutional. Justices in the 5-4 decision in the case arising from Louisiana stated that the death penalty is not a “proportional punishment” for the crime and would violate the Eighth Amendment’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment.

Republican Rep. Matt Simpson, a former prosecutor who sponsored the legislation last year and this, said in 2025 the goal is to get the Supreme Court to revisit the decision.

“This is the worst of the worst offenses you can do,” Simpson said after the vote, adding that the worst crimes deserve the harshest punishment. “That’s something that the child has to live with for the rest of their life.”

Alabama lawmakers who spoke out against the bill last year said they had moral opposition to the death penalty. Another questioned the wisdom of passing something unconstitutional under current Supreme Court precedent and that would likely prompt litigation.
“It seems fiscally irresponsible to pass something that we’re going to have to ask taxpayers to have to defend yet again when people are having a hard time, at least in my district, paying for gas, paying for milk,” said Rep. Phillip Ensler, a Democrat from the state capital of Montgomery.

The strategy was similar to the one successfully employed by conservative states to get the Supreme Court to revisit Roe v. Wade, the court decision that once guaranteed national access to abortion. Simpson said that if more states allow capital punishment for child rape then the justices are less likely to view it as an outlier.

The 2008 Supreme Court majority opinion notes only six states had laws authorizing the death penalty for rape of a child, and that the majority of death penalty states did not allow the punishment for that crime. Justices said the standard for what constituted “excessive” punishment should be evolving based on a national consensus.
However, the move to add another death penalty offense comes amid declining use of the death penalty. The number of executions in the U.S. remained near historic lows in 2024 and was mostly carried out in a small group of states, according to a report by the Death Penalty Information Center.

Those included Alabama, which became the first state to use nitrogen gas as an execution method.

Florida prosecutors previously pursued the death penalty in 2023 for a man accused of committing sexual battery of a minor under the age of 12, but the man pleaded guilty and was sentenced to life in prison. According to the Death Penalty Information Center, the case is considered the first to be pursued under the new law.

“I’d love Florida to be able to say, ‘Look at what Alabama has done as well,’ to help them strengthen their case,” Simpson said.

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