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Supreme Court Clears Way for Trump Administration’s Plans to Resume Federal Executions

US Border Patrol: Crash Killing 7 Resulted From Human Smuggling Attempt in Texas

U.S. Border Patrol officials said a crash in El Paso, Texas, left at least seven people dead, blaming human smugglers for the incident. “Human smuggling is not a victimless crime,” El Paso Sector Border Patrol Chief Patrol Gloria Chavez said in a statement about the incident on June 25. “This is a tragic loss for our El Paso Community.” Three of the victims were illegal immigrants, including one from Guatemala and two from Mexico, the Border Patrol said on Saturday. The other four victims were residents of El Paso, including the 18-year-old driver, according to officials. The incident started on Thursday morning at around 1:30 a.m. when a border sensor sent out an alert about a suspicious vehicle with several passengers, officials told the El Paso Times. The vehicle was…

Supreme Court Clears Way for Trump Administration’s Plans to Resume Federal Executions

The Supreme Court on June 29 declined a challenge by several death row inmates asking justices to clarify the law on how the government carries out federal executions. The decision paves way for the Trump administration to push forward with its plans to resume federal executions after a nearly 20-year pause.

The four inmates who were convicted for murdering children argued that their scheduled lethal injections would violate the 1994 Federal Death Penalty Act, which states that the method of execution should be determined by the state where a capital crime is committed.

The Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) was initially blocked from carrying out the executions after a district court granted a preliminary injunction, but the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ruled early April that the Trump administration’s plan to resume executions of federal death row prisoners by lethal injection is lawful, tossing out the lower court’s decision.

Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor indicated in the June 29 order that they would have taken up the appeal.

Earlier this month, Attorney General William Barr ordered the BOP to schedule the executions of the four inmates—Daniel Lewis Lee, Wesley Ira Purkey, Dustin Lee Honken, and Keith Dwayne Nelson. Their executions have been scheduled for dates in July and August.

In an emailed statement, Ruth Friedman, director of Federal Capital Habeas and a lawyer for Daniel Lee, criticized the top court’s decision to not take up the case.

“The federal death penalty is arbitrary, racially-biased, and rife with poor lawyering and junk science. Problems unique to the federal death penalty include over-federalization of traditionally state crimes and restricted judicial review,” she said in the June 29 statement.

“Given the unfairness built into the federal death penalty system and the many unanswered questions about both the cases of the men scheduled to die and the government’s new execution protocol, there must be appropriate court review before the government can proceed with any execution.”

The Justice Department didn’t immediately respond to The Epoch Times’s request for comment.

Executions on the federal level have been rare, and the government has put to death only three defendants since restoring the federal death penalty in 1988—most recently in 2003, when Louis Jones was executed for the 1995 kidnapping, rape, and murder of a young female soldier.

Barr announced in July 2019 that they were resuming federal execution and that they were replacing a three-drug procedure that had been used in federal executions with a single drug, pentobarbital.

Isabel Van Brugen and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Follow Janita on Twitter: @janitakan

Focus News: Supreme Court Clears Way for Trump Administration’s Plans to Resume Federal Executions

US to Ship Remdesivir to States With Rising COVID-19 Cases

NEW YORK—The U.S. government will ship more of Gilead Sciences Inc’s antiviral treatment remdesivir to states experiencing an increase in COVID-19 cases including California, Texas, Florida, and Arizona, according to the Department of Health and Human Services’ (HHS) website. The government reallocated remdesivir to states with increasing cases, White House task force coordinator Deborah Birx said during a briefing on Friday. The HHS said on its website that the doses will ship starting Monday and extinguish the full amount of Gilead’s donation of 120,647 treatment courses. It said it would continue to work with Gilead to determine how the company’s anticipated inventory of 2 million doses by year’s end will be allocated. California will receive 464 cases of 40 vials each, Texas will receive 448 cases of 40 vials, Florida…