The Justice Department has asked the Supreme Court to rehear Kennedy v. Louisiana, the case from earlier in 2008 in which the Court held that the death penalty for raping a child is unconstitutional. This is a bold move, since it is very rare for a case to be reheard.
The federal government was not involved in the first hearing of the case, which turned out to be an oversight.
“The United States,” acting Solicitor General Gregory G. Garre argued in the motion, “has a substantial interest in rehearing because the Court’s decision casts grave doubt on the validity of a recent Act of Congress and Executive Order of the President authorizing capital punishment for child rapists under the Uniform Code of Military Justice” -- the law that governs crimes committed by those serving in the military.
Primarily, what happened was a major mistake on the part of the Solicitor General’s office. The Supreme Court held that there was a “national consensus” against the use of the death penalty for child rape, and that said national consensus depended in large part on the absence of a federal law. But the capital punishment law for the military did already exist -- everyone simply missed it until after the opinion was announced.
Louisiana seized on that oversight to ask for a rehearing. And now the Justice Department is backing that effort. While stating that it “regrets” not having brought the military law to the Court’s attention, the government filing said that the decision “rests on an erroneous and materially incomplete assessment of the ‘national consensus’ concerning capital punishment for child rape. That error undermines the foundation for the Court’s decision.”
For Louisiana and the DOJ to get their rehearing, they have to get five votes from the Justices, with at least one of those votes coming from the majority in the original decision. Accordingly, it is unclear whether there will be a rehearing. If not, the reasoning in this case will remain flawed -- fatally flawed -- by the standards of many observers.