COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Condemned killer Steven Smith’s argument for mercy isn’t an easy one. Smith acknowledges he intended to rape his girlfriend’s 6-month-old daughter but says he never intended to kill the baby.
The girl, Autumn Carter, died because Smith was too
drunk to realize his assault was killing her, Smith’s attorneys argued in court
filings with the Ohio Parole Board, which heard the case Tuesday. And Ohio law
is clear, they say: A death sentence requires an intent to kill the victim.
“The evidence suggests that Autumn’s death was a
horrible accident,” Smith’s attorneys, Joseph Wilhelm and Tyson Fleming, said
in a written argument prepared for the board.
They continued: “Despite the shocking nature of
this crime, Steve’s death sentence should be commuted because genuine doubts
exist whether he even committed a capital offense.”
Smith, 46, was never charged with rape, meaning the
jury’s only choice was to convict or acquit him of aggravated murder, his
attorneys say.
However, rape was included in the indictment
against Smith as one of the factors making him eligible for the death penalty.
Under Ohio law, an aggravated murder committed in the course of another crime –
such as burglary, robbery, arson or the killing of a police officer or child – is
an element that can make someone eligible for capital punishment.
The Richland County prosecutor said Smith continues
to hide behind alcohol as an excuse and calls Smith’s actions “the purposeful
murder of a helpless baby girl.”
Prosecutor James Mayer told the board in his
written statement that the girl’s injuries were consistent with a homicide that
contradicts Smith’s claim he didn’t intend to kill her.
“The horrific attack upon Autumn Carter showed much
more than Smith’s stated purpose,” Mayer said.
Mayer said Monday he didn’t know why Smith wasn’t
charged with rape, but he said it wasn’t part of a trial strategy.
The attack happened early in the morning of Sept.
29, 1998, in the Mansfield apartment of the girl’s mother, Kaysha Frye, whom
Smith had been dating about six months.
Frye was awakened after 3 a.m. by a naked Smith,
who placed Autumn beside her in bed, according to records prepared for the
parole board hearing. Frye realized the girl wasn’t breathing, told Smith he’d
killed her and then ran to a neighbor’s house for help.
Smith, known to consume as many as 12 beers a day,
had had several beers the previous evening and had a blood-alcohol content of
0.123, well above the legal limit for drivers, when he was tested almost eight
hours later, at 11 a.m., records show.
Smith had unsuccessfully tried to have sex with his
girlfriend the evening before the attack, according to records. The prosecutor
argued that Smith’s assault of the girl was revenge for Smith’s failure to
perform with Frye.
Smith’s attorneys dispute this, saying the
girlfriend was not upset with Smith.
Prosecutors presented evidence at trial that
Smith’s attack lasted as long as 30 minutes, during which time Smith beat the
girl to death.
Expert witnesses for Smith conclude he may have
accidentally suffocated the girl within three to five minutes while he lay on
top of her, according to Smith’s clemency petition.
Smith’s attorneys have an uphill battle in their
argument because of the “moral repugnancy” surrounding the claim of partial
innocence, said Doug Berman, an Ohio State University law professor and death
penalty expert.
“But if the lawyers for this defendant can
legitimately assert that the evidence doesn’t show or support that this was an
intentional killing, not only is it appropriate to bring this up at clemency, I
think they’re obliged, representing their client appropriately, to stress this
point,” Berman said.
If executed, Smith would become the 51st inmate put
to death in Ohio since the state resumed executions in 1999. The state has
enough of its lethal injection drug, pentobarbital, to execute Smith and two
other inmates before the supply expires. Eight more inmates are scheduled to
die from November through mid-2015.
By Jason Howerton, The Blaze / The Associated Press
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