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Conferenza Hands off Cain
Partito Radicale Alessandra - 19 giugno 2000
An Op-Ed from Vermont and an Editorial from Maine...
>

>

> >From the Brattleboro (VT) Reformer, 6/16/00

>

> KILL THE DEATH PENALTY

> by Marty Jezer

>

> The United States is the only western nation that still has the

> death penalty. There has never been any rational argument for

> it. It doesn't deter crime. Countries without the death penalty

> all have lower crime rates -- and lower murder rates -- than the

> United States. Indeed, the states with the highest homicide

> rates are almost always the states in which the death penalty is

> allowed.

>

> A new study shows that when it comes to sentencing people to

> death, the American judicial system is deeply flawed.

>

> The study (which can be found on the internet at

> > law professor James Liebman. He examined the 4,478 capital cases

> adjudicated in American courts between 1973 and 1995, and found

> that:

>

> 7% of those sentenced to death were proven innocent upon appeal.

>

> 68% of the cases were found to have "serious" and "reversible"

> errors including "egregiously incompetent defense lawyers who

> didn't even look for -- and demonstrably missed -- important

> evidence that the defendant was innocent or did not deserve to

> die" and "police or prosecutors who did discover that kind of

> evidence but suppressed it."

>

> State appeals courts often overlook the judicial errors. While

> state courts overturned 47% of the death sentences due to

> "serious flaws," "later federal review found `serious error' --

> error undermining the reliability of the outcome -- in 40% of

> the remaining sentences."

>

> Some will say, yes!, death sentences are being overturned on

> appeal, justice is triumphant, the system corrects itself. But

> what the Liebman study also found was that it takes, on average,

> nine years from sentencing to the last judicial review and

> execution. (In recent years, the length of time has risen to

> 10.6 years). In human terms, this means that thousands of people

> sentenced to death are wasting away on death-row waiting for the

> appeal cycle to finish. To be sure, most of the convicts on

> death-row are guilty of something, even if not the crime for

> which they can be legally executed. But seven percent of them

> are innocent of everything. They were unjustly arrested,

> unfairly convicted, and have lost years of their lives. By

> unjust legal action, the state separated them from their

> children, their families, their loved ones, their careers, and

> their freedom to have fun -- and came close to killing them.

> Meanwhile, the guilty parties, the killers who committed the

> crimes that they were charged with, are still on the loose.

>

> George W. Bush, Bill Clinton, Al Gore, New Hampshire's Governor

> Jeanne Shaheen, a majority of the current Supreme Court

> Justices, and a majority of the legislators in a majority of the

> states all support the death penalty. George W. Bush and his

> brother, Jeb, Governor of Florida, lead the way in capital

> punishment. George W. Bush, our current "Lord High Executioner,"

> has gone so far as to lower state subsidies for defense appeals.

> Under Bush's rule, Texas inmates are not getting fair trials or

> decent counsel. A study by the Chicago Tribune of 138 Texas

> death sentences found that 29 cases involved a psychiatrist,

> testifying for the prosecution, whose testimony has been

> condemned by the American Psychiatric Association as "unethical

> and untrustworthy"; 43 cases included defense attorneys publicly

> sanctioned for misconduct; and 23 capital cases included

> jailhouse informants testifying for the prosection. Yet,

> according to a story in the Ft. Worth (Texas) Star-Telegram

> (6/12/00) the "Texas error rate" in capital cases, is "below

> average." God protect the innocent from the compassionate

> conservativism of Texas justice. God protect the innocent from

> the justice system of the United States.

>

> The movement against the death penalty will grow stronger with

> these findings. After journalism students at Northwestern

> University uncovered evidence that proved the innocence of one

> death-row inmate, Illinois Governor George Ryan, a Republican,

> courageously suspended the death sentence. Upon further

> investigation, Ryan found 13 additional cases in which convicts

> on death-row were cleared of the crimes under which they had

> been sentenced. Alas, not all Governors are that brave -- or

> just. Democratic Governor Jeanne Shaheen recently rejected a

> proposal by the New Hampshire legislature to suspend the New

> Hampshire death sentence.

>

> In Congress, Vermont's Senator Patrick Leahy, a former

> prosecutor, has introduced the Innocence Protection Act that

> would give convicted inmates the right to DNA testing. DNA is a

> cellular fluid that carries an individual's genetic code. In

> cases where blood or semen is taken as evidence, DNA can

> determine a person's guilt or innocence. Republicans, led by

> Nevada's Senator Orrin Hatch, are trying to weaken the bill.

>

> Leahy's bill, a step in the right direction, still doesn't

> assure death-row prisoners adequate legal counsel.

>

> Whether the Liebman study will lead to the abolition of the

> death penalty remains to be seen. Advocates of the death penalty

> have never been impressed with rational arguments. But there is

> hope. Al Gore, always sensitive to public opinion, avows that

> the Liebman study might lead him to reconsider his support of

> capital punishment. (First of all, I'm sure, he'll take a poll).

>

> Support for the death sentence is rife with hypocrisy. Some of

> its most ardent supporters, for example, want to elevate the Ten

> Commandments to American law. There's even an Alabama judge,

> recently elected, who wants to post them in all public places

> including his court room. The Commandments state, "Thou Shalt

> Not Kill." How people who profess religion can support the

> death penalty and still call themselves religious boggles the

> mind.

>

> The death penalty has always been race and class-based. Wealthy

> white murderers rarely have to enter the executioner's chamber.

> Capital punishment ought to be abolished. It's unnecessary and

> immoral, and it violates basic legal principles of fairness and

> justice.

>

>

> (Marty Jezer is a free-lance writer from Brattleboro, Vermont. He

> welcomes comments at mjez@sover.net)

>

>

> ---------------------------------------

>

>

>

>

> Bangor Daily News Editorial

> Wednesday, June 2000

>

> Death and Texas

>

> When the Supreme Court invalidated death penalty laws in 1972,

> Justice Potter Stewart wrote that the administration of the

> ultimate punishment was so inconsistent and capricious that the

> chances of receiving it were like being hit by lightning. The

> next year, the court began upholding revised laws that addressed

> those objections.

>

> More than a quarter-century later, 640 executions later, the

> death penalty is again under attack. The old issue of arbitrary

> application is back, joined now by new concerns that innocent

> defendants are being railroaded by sloppy defense attorneys,

> overzealous police and prosecutors and politically driven judges.

>

> A new Columbia University study of the death penalty, the most

> comprehensive ever, looked at the 4,578 death sentences handed

> down between 1973 and 1995. It found that error at trial caused

> 68 percent of those sentences to be overturned on appeal. Upon

> retrial, 82 percent of those defendants received lesser

> sentences and 7 percent were acquitted.

>

> In other words, when the question is who deserves death and who

> is guilty, the answer coming out the courts is overwhelmingly

> wrong. Death penalty advocates point to this reversal rate as

> evidence that the appeals process works. This ignores the

> obvious need for an overhaul of the courts, it assumes that all

> errors are caught during appeals and comes at a time when

> Congress and state legislatures are in a mad rush to curtail the

> appeals process, the one part of the system that, more or less,

> seems to work.

>

> The situation was so bad in Illinois that three months ago Gov.

> George Ryan ordered a moratorium on executions. Here's how bad: 13

> men on death row had been cleared found absolutely innocent by

> new evidence. In the case that proved the final straw for that

> Republican governor, a man just 48 hours away from lethal

> injection was proved innocent not by a properly functioning

> appeals process but by evidence uncovered by Northwestern

> University journalism students.

>

> But the focus of attention now is Texas, in part because its

> governor is running for president, but mostly because Texas is

> the most execution-happy of states - 218 since it reinstated the

> death penalty in 1982, 131 since George W. Bush became governor

> in 1995.

>

> Gov. Bush has long defended his state's death-penalty record,

> portraying its criminal justice system as a finely tuned machine

> that never fails. That makes his recent decision to allow a

> review of DNA evidence in a rape/murder case, the first time he

> has stepped in, a welcome admission that sometimes even finely

> tuned machines need checkups.

>

> Now Gov. Bush must take the next step and order an overhaul.

> One death-row inmate has been denied a review because the state

> contends that the mere fact his court-appointed attorney slept

> through much of his trial does not necessarily mean he was

> inadequately represented. Another is scheduled to die next week,

> despite clear and mounting evidence that his identification by a

> lone eyewitness was rigged. At least nine men - Hispanics and

> blacks - ended up on death row after a psychologist engaged as an

> expert witness by the state told juries those particular

> defendants were likely to remain threats to society because of

> their race. Justice Potter's lightning analogy remains true.

> In Texas it appears certain individuals are being sent out into

> the thunderstorm with lightning rods.

>

> The present debate on the death penalty is not about whether

> execution is justice, it's about whether justice is being

> executed. It remains true, as death penalty advocates assert,

> that an executed killer will never kill again. It also remains

> true that an innocent person executed remains forever innocent.

>

>

>

 
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