PAGE 8A --- THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2013 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN REGIONAL Death penalty changes may lead to more executions ASSOCIATED PRESS JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — Once one of the most active death penalty states in the U.S., Missouri carried out its first execution in nearly three years Wednesday after turning to a compounding pharmacy to make the drug it needs for lethal injections. The state's success in court over its new execution method could lead to Missouri carrying out more death sentences. Although the Democratic governor and attorney general both support the death penalty, there have been few death sentences carried out in recent years and legal wrangling over execution procedures. "The courts at this point have given Missouri a green light to proceed with executions that are scheduled," said Peter Joy, a law professor at Washington University in St. Louis. "And barring either specific appeals related to some of the planned executions that may deal with issues unrelated to the execution protocol or courts revisiting the issue of the execution protocol that is now being used, basically there's green light and the door is open, and I anticipate more executions." The execution of Joseph Franklin, a white supremacist responsible for slayings throughout the country, was the first lethal injection carried out in Missouri since 2011 and just the third since 2009. Missouri has another execution scheduled for December, which would make this the first year since 2005 that the state has carried out multiple death sentences. The attorney general's office has asked the Missouri Supreme Court to set execution dates for 17 others, with some requests dating back to 2006. In a May 2012 motion to the Missouri Supreme Court, the attorney general's office wrote that "unless this court sets an execution date after a capital murder defendant's legal process is exhausted, the people of Missouri are without legal remedy." tranklin's execution went forward after the U.S. Supreme Court upheld an appeals court's decision overturning two stays granted Tuesday evening by federal district court judges. It was the first time Missouri has used the single drug pentobarbital for an execution, and Franklin's lawyers had raised that as an issue in one of his appeals. Like other states, Missouri had a hard time obtaining drugs used in executions when drug-makers stopped selling them to prisons. Last year, Missouri announced a plan to use propofol, but it backed off that after an outcry from medical professionals concerned that supplies of the drug would dwindle if the European Union followed through on its threat to limit exports. Missouri then turned to a compounding pharmacy to make pentobarbital, something states such as Texas also have done to carry out lethal injections. Few details have been made public about the compounding pharmacy Missouri is using because state law provides privacy for parties associated with executions. Franklin was the 69th person executed in Missouri since it reinstated the death penalty. That's the fifth most in the U.S., behind Texas, Virginia, Oklahoma and Florida, according to figures from the Death Penalty Informa- scheduled to die for the 1994 killing of Excelsior Springs businessman Richard Drummond, who stopped to help when a car used by Nicklasson and two others broke down on Interstate 70 in central Missouri. tion Center. Since 1989, there have been seven years without an execution in Missouri — all but one within the past decade. About 50 people in Missouri are currently on death row. Meanwhile, the American Civil Liberties Union says it has litigated over Missouri's execution protocol and that will continue. "The shroud of secrecy surrounding the state's execution process leads us to question its legitimacy," said Jeffrey A. Mittman, executive director for the ACU of Missouri. The next execution is scheduled for Dec. 11. Allen Nicklasson is "The shroud of secrecy surrounding the state's execution process leads us to question its legitimacy." JEFFREY A. MITTMAN ACLU of Missouri executive director "Besides being overly furtive, the state also fails to give the public the opportunity to provide oversight of the execution protocol to ensure it is safe and appropriate." was executed for killing Gerald Gordon in a sniper shooting at a suburban St. Louis synagogue in 1977. Franklin was convicted of seven other murders, but the Missouri case was the only one that brought a death sentence. Franklin, 63. A death penalty opponent holds a sign during a vigil outside St. Francis Xavier Church where a small group protested against the death penalty and the execution of Joseph Paul Franklin on Nov. 19 in St. Louis. ASSOCIATED PRESS RockChalkLiving SEARCH ▶DON'T SETTLE REGIONAL ASSOCIATED PRESS - Correspondent news, entertainment and sports writers BE A PART OF KANSAN MEDIA AVAILABLE STAFF POSITIONS INCLUDE: THE UDK NEWS STAFF IS HIRING FOR SPRING 2014 - News reporters - Designers - Opinion columnists or bloggers - Digital Content producer - Photographers Applications due by TUESDAY, DEC. 3. Check out KANSAN.COM/APPLY or email APPLICATIONS@KANSAN.COM for more info. pipelineproductions.com Fri Dec 6 INFAMOUS STRINGDUSTERS Mon Mar 10 DR.DOG LIBERTY HALL 646 Mass • All Ages Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn, center, signs the state's Religious Freedom and Marriage Fairness Act into law Wednesday in Chicago. Illinois governor signs to legalize gay marriage CHICAGO — Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn signed legislation Wednesday allowing same-sex weddings starting this summer, making President Barack Obama's home state the 16th overall — and largest in the nation's heartland — to legalize gay marriage. The festivities at the University of Illinois at Chicago featured a family-friendly crowd, musical performances and a stage lined with American, Illinois and rainbow flags. "We understand in our state that part of our unfinished business is to help other states in the United States of America achieve marriage equality." Quinn said before he signed the bill on a desk once used by President Abraham Lincoln. He said part of that mission was to ensure that "love is not relegated to a second class status to any citizen in our country." References to freedom, equality, fairness and Lincoln — the desk was where he penned his 1861 inaugural address — were peppered throughout the event. In attendance were top elected officials, including Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan and Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel. Organizers estimated roughly 2,300 attended, including activists and members of the public. ASSOCIATED PREFC Illinois, where Democrats lead both legislative chambers and the governor's office, legalized civ- ll unions in 2011, but the road to same-sex marriage was bumpy. When 2013 began advocates hoped Illinois would've been the 10th state, but watched as other states passed it. Gay marriage is allowed in Washington D.C., and 15 other states; Hawaii's governor signed a measure last week. Even with support from top business leaders, unions and some Republican, several lawmakers were resistant to the idea. That included some Democrats in more conservative downstate Illinois and some Chicago-area lawmakers. The measure was fought hard by some of the state's most well-recognized religious figures, including Cardinal Francis George of the Archdiocese of Chicago and the Rev. James Meeks, a former state senator who runs a politically-influential mage church in Chicago. Meeks was part of a coalition of black pastors who said marriage should remain between a man and woman and sponsored robocalls in several legislative districts and on the airwaves. The opposition placed black lawmakers in the House in a spotlight and several evaded public inquiries on the matter for months. Although Illinois once appeared poised to become the first Midwestern state to approve gay marriage in the Legislature, Minnesota did it sooner and started holding its first same-sex weddings over the summer. Iowa allows gay marriages too because of a court ruling, not a legislative vote. Donate plasma today and earn up to $300 a month! 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