May 6



TEXAS:

Lawyer seeks disqualification of death penalty in Texas County case



An attorney for a Houston man charged with 1st-degree murder in the death of teenager last year northeast of Cabool is asking a judge to drop the case or disqualify the death penalty.

In a filing May 2, Andrew J. Vrba's attorney also wants to stop the attorney general's office involvement in the case. The office's participation is common in death penalty cases. Vrba is represented by a state public defender.

Vrba, 18, is charged with 1st-degree murder, armed criminal action and abandonment of a corpse in the September death of Joseph M. Steinfeld, who went by "Ally" and planned to transition to a female, according to family members. Authorities allege the victim was stabbed and the remains burned.

(source: Houston Herald)








NEW HAMPSHIRE:

Governor, end the death penalty



A society that kills people in the name of its citizens, not in self-defense but as punishment, cannot become a society that sanctifies life. It cannot create a culture in which violence is rare. There are many reasons to oppose the death penalty, but that one is fundamental.

For the 2nd time since the death penalty was reinstated by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1977, both houses of New Hampshire's Legislature have voted to repeal the state's capital punishment law. The 1st attempt died in the face of a threatened veto by then-Gov. Jeanne Shaheen. It was a dark hour in the state's history. New Hampshire is the only New England state to countenance the death penalty, indeed the only Eastern state north of Virginia whose laws call for putting transgressors to death.

This year's repeal vote faces a promised veto by Gov. Chris Sununu. We urge the governor to let the will of the people, as represented by the majority vote of their representatives, be expressed. He should sign the bill or let it become law without his signature. If he does neither, lawmakers should override his veto. In the House, one more vote would have given repeal proponents a veto-proof majority. In the Senate, just two more votes would have done the same.

John Breckenridge, a Manchester police officer who watched his partner, Michael Briggs, die from a bullet fired by Michael Addison, the only inmate on New Hampshire's death row, spoke against the death penalty 4 years ago when the New Hampshire House voted to abolish capital punishment.

"As a Catholic, I could not justify the very pre-meditated act of executing someone who - for all the evil of his crime and all the permanent hurt he caused others - still lives . . . in the possibility of spiritual redemption."

This year, another former Manchester police officer, Rep. Richard O'Leary, once the Queen City's deputy chief, voted for repeal. "I don't believe we have the right under any circumstances, except immediate self-defense, to take a life. Once the criminal has been subdued, arrested, segregated from society and rendered defenseless, I cannot see where the state has any compelling interest in executing him. It's simply wrong."

It is also costly. Because he was sentenced to death the state will spend millions to prosecute Addison for Briggs's murder. That's money that could be put to far better use. We urge Manchester Sens. Lou D'Allessandro and Kevin Cavanaugh to heed the words of Breckenridge and O'Leary and, if it comes to that, vote to override a Sununu veto. Others who voted against repeal should change their vote and at long last put New Hampshire on the right side of moral history.

Capital punishment is not a deterrent. Putting a murderer to death does not bring a lost loved one back. It rarely brings closure. Decades of appeals that precede an execution force family members to relive the crime.

Human beings, and the judicial systems they establish, can never achieve perfection. Since 1973, 162 death row inmates have been exonerated. The imposition of the death penalty, for reasons of race, mental illness and economic status, is not imposed equally on all and so should not be imposed at all.

A wrongful death committed in society's name cannot be undone. It's time for New Hampshire to join the enlightened states and nations that have abolished capital punishment.

(source: Editorial, The Concord Monitor)








NEBRASKA:

Hearing delayed in attorney general's death penalty lawsuit against the Nebraska Legislature



A judge postponed Friday's hearing on a lawsuit seeking to block a legislative inquiry into Nebraska's new death penalty procedure.

The 1st hearing in what could become a constitutional battle between 2 branches of state government is now scheduled for June 18 in Lancaster County District Court.

The delay also means the Legislature's Judiciary Committee won???t hold Tuesday's public hearing, in which it had ordered the state prisons director to answer questions about the lethal injection protocol. A new date for the public hearing has not been determined, said State Sen. Laura Ebke of Crete, chairwoman of the committee.

William Connolly, the lawyer representing the 16 senators named in the lawsuit, said Friday that he needed more time to prepare to argue against a motion by the state to quash the Legislature's subpoena of Scott Frakes, director of the Department of Correctional Services. The Attorney General's Office, which filed the lawsuit Tuesday, agreed to the continuance.

Connolly, a former Supreme Court judge, said the legal dispute raises significant constitutional issues, including the separation of powers between the legislative and executive branches. The Omaha attorney was retained by the senators Wednesday.

The office of Attorney General Doug Peterson sued the senators to prevent them from questioning Frakes about the lethal injection procedure. The lawsuit contends that members of the Legislature's Judiciary Committee and Executive Board made several legal errors in voting to approve the subpoena.

The senators planned to question the head of the Corrections Department next week about how his staff devised the untried 4-drug combination it intends to use to carry out the state's 1st execution in 21 years. Ebke said the public hearing was set as a part of the Legislature's oversight function.

The attorney general has notified 2 of the 11 inmates on Nebraska's death row that it has the drugs necessary to carry out their executions. A decision by the Supreme Court is pending on the attorney general's request for a death warrant for Carey Dean Moore, convicted of the 1979 killings of Omaha cabdrivers Reuel Van Ness and Maynard Helgeland.

(source: sandhillsexpress.com)
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