President Clinton will consider a request that he suspend federal
executions, the White House said today. A spokesman said Clinton is
"certainly concerned" about Illinois' decision to halt executions and
evaluate how that state handles the death penalty.
The suspension request, made in a letter from Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wis., is being reviewed by White House counsel, spokesman Joe Lockhart said.
But he said that does not guarantee that Clinton would act on the matter
soon.
"The president was certainly concerned by the issues raised by the
governor of Illinois," Lockhart said. "If there are legitimate concerns
that are brought to us, we will look at the concerns. But I can't predict
anything beyond that until we've had a chance to study the issue."
Feingold based his request on Gov. George Ryan's halt of executions in
Illinois until authorities determine whether the death penalty is
administered fairly. Since 1976, Illinois has executed 12 prisoners. But
13 death row inmates have been exonerated since 1987 through appeals, DNA evidence or, in a few cases, persistent investigation by college journalism students.
In a letter dated Wednesday, Feingold asked that Clinton suspend federal
executions and have Attorney General Janet Reno thoroughly review how the federal death penalty has been used, "in light of the serious questions raised in Illinois and elsewhere."
"Before the federal government executes anyone, the Justice Department
should be absolutely certain that innocents have not been condemned to
death," Feingold wrote. "It must ensure that the federal death penalty
is applied in a fair and just manner."
According to Feingold, sponsor of a bill to abolish the federal death
penalty, federal courts have sentenced 21 people to die, 3/4 of whom are
minorities.
Among the condemned is Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh.
Another, Juan Raul Garza, has exhausted his appeals and could become the 1st federally executed prisoner since 1963. Garza, head of a
marijuana-trafficking ring in Brownsville, Texas, was sentenced to die
for the murders of three men he suspected of being police informants.
Nationally, 85 people have been freed from death row since 1973,
according to the Death Penalty Information Center.