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[ cerca in archivio ] ARCHIVIO STORICO RADICALE
Conferenza Partito radicale
Partito Radicale Alessandra - 14 giugno 2000
USA: American Medical Association delegates on Tuesday rejected a proposal to seek a moratorium on executions, instead adopting a measure that calls for "appropriate medical forensic techniques" to be used in capital cases.
Dr. Jonathan Weisbuch, author of the original resolution, had asked the

AMA to recommend to the National Governors' Association that all

executions be halted until questions are answered regarding the

availability of DNA evidence, the quality of legal representation and

the effect on the judicial system when innocent defendants are executed.

"It is one of our tenets to do no harm. And if we are not working with

the criminal justice system (to ensure high-quality evidence in capital

cases) we are not doing the work that we should be doing," Weisbuch,

public health director for Maricopa County, Ariz., told the AMA's

550-member House of Delegates on Tuesday.

The delegates voted in favor of an amended resolution asking the AMA to

simply "support the availability and use of all appropriate medical

forensic techniques in the criminal justice system."

Several physicians at the AMA's annual meeting in Chicago said the death penalty is a legal issue, not a medical one.

Calling for a moratorium "presumes that there isn't a single state in

the nation that's doing the right thing," said Dr. Thomas Price, a

physician from Roswell, Ga.

He said, for example, that "Texas has done the right thing" by

postponing the execution of an inmate who may be exonerated by DNA

evidence.

Dr. Steven Thorson, of Fort Collins, Colo., also told the delegates that

he feared a temporary halt would lead to a permanent moratorium -

something he said wasn't the AMA's business.

The discussion comes in the midst of a national debate over the death

penalty, heightened by Illinois Gov. George Ryan's highly publicized

moratorium earlier this year after medical evidence exonerated several

death row inmates. The sponsors of the original resolution also noted a

Chicago Tribune report earlier this week that questioned the reliability

of evidence in dozens of Texas executions during Gov. George W. Bush's administration.

The original resolution, drafted by the American Association of Public

Health Physicians, said "the possibility exists that in several states

innocent individuals may be executed because medical technology will not be made available in time to prevent their death."

The AMA committee overseeing the matter noted that opponents who

testified Monday believed that some issues in the original resolution,

"including the quality of legal representation, fell beyond the realm of

medical professionals and into the realm of law."

But Weisbuch said he considered Tuesday's vote a partial victory.

"I'm pleased with the fact that the AMA recognized ... that there are

people in this country that are being denied adequate services in a

capital punishment environment," he said. "I was disappointed

personally that the association was unwilling to take the next step."

(source: Associated Press)

 
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