[Deathpenalty]death penalty news --- ALA.;USA; PENN.

2005-09-23 Thread Joerg Sommer
death penalty news

September 23, 2005


ALABAMA -- impending execution:

Family Killer Execution Tonight

Death row inmate John W- Peoples Junior is waiting on word for the 
U-S Supreme Court with his execution only a few hours away.

Peoples is scheduled to die at 6 p-m at Holman Prison near Atmore for 
the murders of a Pell City couple and their ten-year-old son. Peoples 
appealed to the U-S Supreme Court to delay his execution after the 
Alabama Supreme Court rejected his appeal and Governor Riley denied clemency.

Peoples was convicted of killing Pell City businessman Paul Franklin, 
his wife, Judy Choron Franklin, and their 10-year-old son, Paul 
Franklin Junior, in 1983 and fleeing in their vintage Corvette.

(source: AP / WTVM9)





USA:

Pro-Life  Pro-Death Penalty

BEGIN TRANSCRIPT


RUSH: Here is Cher in Tampa, Florida. Welcome, Cher. Nice to have you 
on the program.

CALLER: Hi, Rush. It's nice to talk to you.

RUSH: Thanks.

CALLER: This guy that called a few minutes ago aggravated me so much. 
I listen to you on the road all the time, but this guy just warranted 
a call talking about the differences, How can we be against abortion 
and for the death penalty?

RUSH: Cher, Cher, Cher, Cher, Cher. Remember my advice? Don't argue 
with an idiot because people will not be able to tell the difference.

CALLER: I tell you, I just don't understand how people cannot see the 
difference between an innocent child and a murderer.

RUSH: You don't have to say this, everybody does. I'm telling you, 
this did not require any argument or debate. It didn't. I understand 
your outrage. You need to learn to be happy when this stuff happens. 
You need to learn to be happy when these people are willing to 
announce what they believe and how they lie about what we believe or 
what they stupidly believe we believe, whatever it is, but this is a 
new reason to celebrate. I know it's tough. I know it's tough to 
celebrate this --

CALLER: It's aggravating.

RUSH: Yeah, it's aggravating. It's offensive, but it's stupid.

CALLER: It really is.

RUSH: It's absolutely stupid. It's literally stupid.

CALLER: Well, it's not the only stupid thing he said, but that one 
just really stuck out. People can't actually -- you're hearing that 
more and more in the press, that comparison, and it's just -- they 
can't truly believe everybody is that stupid.

RUSH: Look it. The way I look at it, if that's the best the guy could 
come up with, they're hopeless anyway. Pro-life and pro-death? I 
mean, abortion and the death penalty is a... I'll take this one on 
because I do get this one a lot. People who are on the cusp, just 
learning about politics, just learning to follow the ebb and flow, 
and they want to get it right, and they don't quite know who to 
listen to and who not to listen to, people on both sides sound
persuasive, and this is a question that I do get frequently. Rush, 
how do you explain the fact that you are pro-life, anti-abortion, but 
you're pro-death penalty? And that to me is a softball hanging curve 
waiting to be knocked out of the park. Here's the answer. Why am I 
pro-life? Because life in the womb is the essence of innocence. The 
utter essence of innocence. Somebody who is to be put to death, not 
only does the Bible talk about it, not only does our Constitution 
talk about it (when they say nobody should be denied the right to 
life, liberty, pursuit the happiness without due process) someone who 
is condemned to death in this country has been judged by a jury of 
his peers and 14 years minimum of appeals, to have committed 
atrocious, unspeakable acts of mayhem and murder on at least another 
citizen and sometimes multiple citizens. There's nothing innocent 
whatsoever, and in terms of a just punishment, it fits.

People say, Well, what about the deterrent factor?

I don't care whether it deters anybody or not. I never looked at 
punishment of crime as a deterrent. I look at it as a punishment. But 
the whole argument fails when somebody wants to try to compare the 
utter essence of innocence that is a baby in the womb to a convicted 
murderer? That's why I say, had I engaged this caller this way, it 
would not have registered because, understand that you're not dealing 
with people who are acting on thoughts. It's pure raw emotion, and in 
most cases it's hatred and rage, and you have to understand this 
about them, too. They insulate themselves from these intellectual 
arguments and discussions by telling themselves they're superior to 
everybody else. They know more, that they're elitists, they've got a 
better handle on things and if we don't see it their way we're just 
unenlightened, we're just hopelessly stupid and dumb, reactionary 
racist, sexist, bigot homophobic, whatever. It's just the exact 
opposite. They're the bigots, they're the closed-minded ones, they're 
the intolerant ones, they're the ones that are incapable of thought 
and as such if we want to start talking 

[Deathpenalty]death penalty news --- ALABAMA

2005-09-23 Thread Joerg Sommer
death penalty news

September 23, 2005


ALABAMA --- execution

Ala. Man Executed for Killing Family of 3

A man convicted of killing a family of three and driving off in their 
vintage sports car was executed by injection Thursday.

John W. Peoples Jr., 48, died at 6:27 p.m. at Holman Prison near 
Atmore, prison officials said.

Peoples was convicted in 1983 in the killing of Pell City businessman 
Paul G. Franklin, his wife, Judy Choron Franklin, both 34, and their 
10-year-old son, Paul.

Peoples did not look at or offer an apology to relatives of the 
Franklins, but thanked his own family for their support.

The Franklins' relatives said they were relieved that Peoples was 
dead, but were surprised at his apparent lack of remorse.

Seemed a lot easier on him the way he died versus the way they 
died, said Bill Choron, the slain woman's brother.

The execution was carried out after the Supreme Court denied Peoples' 
request for a delay and Gov. Bob Riley turned down his bid for clemency.

Peoples argued in his plea that he had a right to die by 
electrocution, as his original death sentence stipulated, instead of 
lethal injection, a method Alabama adopted beginning in 2002.

The state, in its response to the Supreme Court, said Peoples missed 
the deadline to request the electric chair.

The boy and his mother were beaten to death with a rifle, but the 
father's body was too decomposed by the time he was found for 
investigators to determine the cause of death.

Prosecutors say Peoples killed the three because he wanted their 1968 
red Corvette, and he was arrested after attempting to sell the car 
shortly after the killings.

Peoples' cousin, Timothy Gooden, is serving a life sentence in the 
case. He allegedly was with Peoples the night of the slayings.

John W. Peoples Jr. becomes the 4th inmate executed in Alabama this 
year and the 34th since the state resumed capital punishment on April 22, 1983.

He is the 39th person put to death nationwide in 2005 and the 983rd 
overall since 1977.

(source: AP / Tuscaloosa News  Joerg Sommer)





Alabama inmates executed since death penalty reinstated

By The Associated Press

Condemned inmates executed in Alabama, and date of death, since the 
state restored its capital punishment law in the mid-1970s:

John Louis Evans III, April 22, 1983

Arthur L. Jones, March 20, 1986

Wayne Eugene Ritter, Aug. 28, 1987

Michael Lindsey, May 26, 1989

Horace Dunkins, July 14, 1989

Herbert Richardson, Aug. 18, 1989

Arthur J. Julius, Nov. 17, 1989

Wallace Norrell Thomas, July 13, 1990

Larry G. Heath, March 20, 1992

Cornelius Singleton, Nov. 20, 1992

Willie Clisby, April 28, 1995

Varnall Weeks, May 12, 1995

Edward Horsley, Feb. 16, 1996

Billy Wayne Waldrop, Jan. 10, 1997

Walter Hill, May 2, 1997

Henry Francis Hays, June 6, 1997

Steven Allen Thompson, May 8, 1998

Brian Keith Baldwin, June 18, 1999

Victor Kennedy, Aug. 6, 1999

David Ray Duren, Jan. 7, 2000

Freddie Lee Wright, March 3, 2000

Robert Lee Tarver Jr., April 14, 2000

Pernell Ford, June 2, 2000

Lynda Lyon Block, May 10, 2002

Anthony Keith Johnson, Dec. 12, 2002

Michael Eugene Thompson, March 13, 2003

Gary L. Brown, April 24, 2003

Tommy J. Fortenberry, Aug. 7, 2003

James B. Hubbard, Aug. 5, 2004

David Kevin Hocker, Sept. 30, 2004

Mario Centobie, April 28, 2005

Jerry Paul Henderson, June 2, 2005

George Sibley Jr. Aug. 4, 2005

John W. Peoples Jr. Sept. 22, 2005

(source: Alabama Department of Corrections / Tuscaloosa News)


[Deathpenalty]death penalty news --- NJ; FLORIDA

2005-09-23 Thread Joerg Sommer
death penalty news

September 23, 2005


NEW JERSEY:

Suspect in Warren murder will not face death penalty

The Warren County Prosecutor's Office will not seek the death penalty 
if an Easton man charged with murdering his former girlfriend is 
convicted, authorities said Thursday.

Alonzo Brown, 49, of the 600 block of James Street, is also charged 
with the attempted murder of a Glassboro, N.J., man. Brown allegedly 
shot the two victims Aug. 6, 2004, outside the Clarion Hotel and 
Conference Center on Route 22 in Pohatcong Township.

Early on in the case, prosecutors notified the court they might seek 
the state's ultimate penalty if Brown is convicted of murder.

Warren County Prosecutor Thomas Ferguson said Thursday the decision 
against seeking the death penalty followed a lengthy review of the 
case by the prosecutor's death-penalty committee.

We looked at the facts of the case as we know them and the law 
surrounding the death penalty in New Jersey, Ferguson said.

He said the committee concluded a death sentence could not be 
sustained in the Brown case. The prosecutor declined to discuss 
specifics since the case is pending.

I think they made the appropriate decision in not seeking the death 
penalty, said defense attorney Bruce Farrier.

Farrier said his client, jailed since the shootings, is holding up 
well under the circumstances.

In court Thursday, Farrier rejected a plea bargain offered by the 
assistant prosecutor trying the case, Angela Borkowski.

The offer called on Brown to plead guilty to murder and attempted 
murder. The rejected plea agreement recommended a life sentence 
(30-year minimum) on the murder and a consecutive 20-year prison 
sentence on the attempted murder.

Authorities said plea negotiations are continuing and the case is now 
headed to a grand jury.

Carmen L. Santiago Gonzalez, 36, of Allentown, was pronounced dead at 
the scene of the 12:10 a.m. shooting. She died of a single gunshot 
wound to the chest, authorities said. Brown and Gonzalez had recently 
ended a romantic relationship, sources said. The accused murderer 
worked as a cook at the hotel at the time of the shootings.

Gonzalez's companion that night, Theodore P. Harris, 45, of 
Glassboro, was shot three times, authorities said. Family members 
have said he has undergone several surgeries and that one of the 
bullets remains lodged near his spine.

Brown is also charged with weapons offenses and three counts of 
pointing a gun at a man who intervened in the shootings.

He is additionally charged with possession of the .38-caliber handgun 
he allegedly used to shoot the victims and possession of a 
.22-caliber handgun allegedly found in his vehicle, authorities said. 
Brown is being held at the Warren County jail in lieu of $1 million bail.

Court papers show he admitted to the shootings when interviewed by 
investigators.

(source: The Express-Times)





FLORIDA:

Man, 24, May Get Death Penalty

A judge ruled Thursday that a 24-year-old man convicted of executing 
two cousins in April 2000 isn't retarded and remains eligible for the 
death penalty.

After listening to testimony and arguments from prosecutors and 
Wright's lawyers, Polk Circuit Judge Dick Prince decided that Tavares 
Jerrod Wright could still be sent to death row for killing James 
Felker, 18, and David Lee Green, 21.

Wright is scheduled for sentencing Thursday.

On Nov. 13, a jury convicted Wright of abducting Felker and Green on 
April 21, 2000, from a Winn-Dixie parking lot in North Lakeland then 
fatally shooting them in an orange grove near Polk City.

The trial of Wright's co-defendant, Samuel Pitts, 25, remains on hold 
as prosecutors appeal a ruling that suppresses statements Pitts made 
to detectives.

After hearing the jury's verdict, Wright waived his right to have the 
jury recommend a life or death sentence. He agreed to let Prince make 
the decision without a jury recommendation.

The judge requested that experts evaluate Wright to determine whether 
he is mentally retarded. Under Florida law, the death penalty cannot 
be imposed upon a mentally retarded defendant.

Prosecutors argued that several psychological experts determined 
Wright's IQ to be between 75 and 82.

The experts testified that an average IQ is about 100 and that scores 
below 70 would likely mean someone was retarded.

Clearly, Mr. Wright has been tested since he was 9- or 10-years-old 
up until just a couple months ago, said Assistant State Attorney 
John Aguero. He's never been found to be retarded.

The defense maintained that Wright's IQ must be considered along with 
the effects of other mental health problems.

But Prince concluded that Wright did not meet the statutory 
requirements of a mentally retarded defendant.

(source: The Ledger)


[Deathpenalty]death penalty news --- INDIANA; NORTH CAROLINA

2005-09-23 Thread Joerg Sommer
death penalty news

September 24, 2005


INDIANA:

Matheney execution becoming a circus

The circus is coming to town Tuesday.

In the center ring this time is death row inmate Alan Matheney, who 
is scheduled to die by lethal injection just after midnight on 
Wednesday. Anyone who's been around this area for the past 15 years 
remembers Matheney's case. He's the man who was given an eight-hour 
furlough to go to Indianapolis from Pendleton Reformatory. Instead, 
he drove to Mishawaka and clubbed Lisa Bianco, his ex-wife, to death 
with a shotgun. He hit her in the head so hard that the gun's stock 
broke in two.

Matheney started the circus on Monday when he refused to show up at 
his clemency hearing. Under state law, if an inmate doesn't show at 
his clemency hearing, he forfeits the right to ask for clemency.

Matheney claims (or at least his lawyers claim) he is mentally ill 
and doesn't understand what is going on. By the way, Matheney is 
represented by Alan Friedman and Carol Heise, who represented D.H. 
Fleenor six years ago and made the same argument, which apparently 
fell on deaf ears because Fleenor was executed in 1999.

To his credit, Gov. Mitch Daniels has announced he will conduct a 
full clemency review of Matheney's case, even though he doesn't have 
to. The governor will conduct his customary, independent review of 
the case where he takes into account all the particular facts and 
circumstances and the reasons that in this case Mr. Matheney provided 
to support his request for clemency, said a spokeswoman for the governor.

Anyone who follows the death penalty in Indiana shouldn't be 
surprised at what is happening. It was to be expected since Daniels 
granted clemency to Arthur Baird on Aug. 29. Everyone on Death Row 
will now play the mentally ill card, hoping to be spared.

At least Baird showed up for his hearing. He told the Parole Board he 
didn't understand what was going on when he murdered his wife, unborn 
child and parents.

A mountain of testimony was presented that Baird had a mental problem 
and couldn't control his actions, but none of it kept a jury from 
sentencing him to die.

I didn't know I was mentally ill, said Baird. I can't really say 
what should be done. My first choice would be to be released from 
prison. The first thing I would do is go to a mental health clinic 
and get in a mental health program and get the help I obviously need.

Luckily for Hoosiers, he isn't getting his wish. Instead, Daniels 
reduced Baird's sentence to life without parole, an option that 
wasn't available to juries when Baird committed his crimes in 1985.

It's because of guys like Baird and Matheney that I remain convinced 
the death penalty is not a deterrent to homicide. I'm also convinced 
chances are good Matheney will become the fifth person to be put to 
death in Indiana this year. If that happens it will be the most 
executions conducted by the Indiana Department of Correction since 
1938, when nine men were put to death.

It's impossible to defend people like Alan Matheney. He stalked his 
ex-wife, terrorized her and then brutally beat her to death. The 
state-sanctioned killing of Matheney may not be as brutal, but it's 
every bit as wrong.

After all, Indiana has been putting people to death since 1897 and 
not one of those executions has stopped a single murder.

(source: The (Michigan City, IN) News-Dispatch)





NORTH CAROLINA:

Play to examine death penalty issues

Theatre-on-a-Stick opens its production of The Exonerated, by 
Jessica Blank and Erik Jensen, this weekend.

The Exonerated tells the true story of six people wrongly convicted 
of murder who were freed after spending from two to 22 years on death 
row. The play won the 2003 Drama Desk Award and was nominated for 
three NAACP awards.

Three discussions and talk-backs pertinent to death penalty issues 
will be held. After the performance Sunday at the Brown-Penn Center, 
Darryl Hunt and Jennifer Cannino will lead the discussion. Hunt was 
released after serving 18 years of a life sentence for a 1984 rape 
and murder he didn't commit.

Cannino was a rape victim who mistakenly identified Ronald Cotton as 
her attacker.

Cotton served 10 years for the crime before a DNA test exonerated him.

Mark Kleinschmidt, staff attorney, Center for Death Penalty 
Litigation, will lead a discussion after the performance at the Belk 
Centrum Sept. 30. On Oct. 2, a panel of religious and community 
leaders will be led by the Rev. Robert MacDicken of the Unitarian 
Universalist Church of Catawba Valley.

Theatre-on-a-Stick is a group of individuals and organizations who 
have joined together to present theater not usually performed by the 
local established theaters. For this performance, the League of Women 
Voters of Catawba Valley and the Unitarian Universalist Church of 
Catawba Valley have teamed with other citizens interested in the 
death penalty issue.

(source: The Charlotte Observer)