Jan. 18


TEXAS:

San Antonio man gets death sentence for slaying of deputy


A man convicted of fatally shooting a Central Texas sheriff's deputy as both were stopped at a San Antonio traffic light more than 4 years ago has been sentenced to death.

The San Antonio Express-News (http://bit.ly/2089eIJ ) reports 46-year-old Mark Anthony Gonzalez was sentenced Friday after a jury found him competent on Jan. 11.

In October, a jury found him guilty of capital murder and recommended the death penalty, but sentencing was delayed so another jury could weigh his lawyers' arguments that he wasn't competent.

Gonzalez fired dozens of bullets at Bexar County Sheriff's Sgt. Kenneth Vann in May 2011. Authorities said Vann was hit 26 times.

On investigator testified that no motive could be established. Gonzalez's attorneys said he was saddled by drugs and alcohol at the time.

(source: Associated Press)






CONNECTICUT:

Hearing on Connecticut death penalty: Did court get it wrong?


On Jan. 7, less than 5 months after a bitterly divided Supreme Court decided by a 4-3 majority in State of Connecticut v. Eduardo Santiago to abolish the death penalty, the issue was back before the court in a hearing on Russell Peeler's appeal of his death sentence. Peeler was convicted and sentenced to death in 2007 for arranging the murders in 1999 of Karen Clarke and her 8-year-old son, Leroy "BJ" Clarke, potential witnesses against Peeler in another homicide.

But the hearing had little to do with the notorious Peeler case. It focused, instead, on the question of whether the court erred in deciding in Santiago that the General Assembly's 2012 prospective-only repeal of the death penalty violated the state's constitutional prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment. Public Act 12-5 repealed the death penalty for all crimes committed on or after April 25, 2012, the date the act took effect.

2 months after 12-5 took effect, the Supreme Court upheld a habeas court decision affirming Santiago's conviction for participating in a murder-for-hire scheme. But it overturned his death sentence because the trial judge had not allowed the jury to see certain potentially mitigating evidence in the penalty phase and remanded the case for another determination of the penalty.

The Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution prohibits cruel and unusual punishment, which includes punishment that is excessive and disproportionate. The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that, in determining whether a punishment is excessive and disproportionate, a court must first determine whether it comports with contemporary standards of decency and then whether it promotes a legitimate penological goal such as deterrence or retribution. The state Supreme Court likewise has said that whether a punishment is cruel and unusual is determined by considering whether it comports with the "evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a maturing society" and is penologically justified.

Santiago appealed the decision to remand his case for a new penalty phase on the grounds that 12-5 represented a fundamental change in the contemporary standards of decency and a rejection of the penological justification for the death penalty, thereby eliminating the constitutional basis for the penalty. Arguments were heard on his motion in 2014.

Last August, the Supreme Court decided Santiago was right and the General Assembly was wrong. Writing for the majority, Justice Richard N. Palmer said that, following the prospective repeal of the death penalty, it no longer comported with contemporary standards of decency and no longer served any legitimate penological purpose. For those reasons, the execution of those who committed capital felonies prior to April 25, 2012, would violate the constitutional prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment.

After the Santiago decision was published in August, the state filed a motion for argument and reconsideration which was denied by the same 4-3 majority. It then filed a motion to postpone the application of Santiago pending resolution of Peeler's appeal. That motion was denied by the same 4-3 majority and Santiago was subsequently resentenced to life without parole. The state then filed a motion to present arguments against the Santiago decision in the Peeler case. Such requests are rarely granted but last month the court agreed to hear oral arguments.

It had been apparent for some time that the General Assembly was skating on thin ice, constitutionally speaking, in enacting a prospective-only repeal of the death penalty. It enacted such a repeal in 2009. Coming as it did less than 2 years after the murders of Jennifer Hawke-Petit and her daughters Hayley and Michaela in Cheshire in July 2007 but before the men charged in that horrendous crime had been tried, that formula appealed to many legislators.

But in testimony before the Judiciary Committee, Chief State's Attorney Kevin T. Kane warned presciently that if the proposed legislation became law the Supreme Court would probably decide, under the evolved community standard of decency doctrine, that the death penalty constituted cruel and unusual punishment. And it was likely the selective retention of the death penalty for some but not for others who committed the same crime, where the only distinction between the 2 was the date on which the crime was committed, would be regarded as unconstitutional. The act was adopted by the General Assembly but vetoed by Gov. M. Jodi Rell.

3 years later, the General Assembly, spurred on by an active anti-death penalty movement, again passed a prospective-only repeal. And again, in hearings before the Judiciary Committee, Kane warned that, after enacting such a repeal, an effort to execute any of those on death row - which by then included the men who murdered the 3 members of the Petit family - would not pass constitutional muster and would in effect nullify the death penalty for those not yet executed.

But coming as it did only months after Joshua Komisarjevsky had been sentenced to death in January 2012 - Steven Hayes had been sentenced in 2010 - a prospective-only repeal was politically irresistible. The General Assembly approved 12-5 by 30 to 16 in the Senate and 86 to 62 in the House, after which Gov. Dannel Malloy signed it into law.

If the General Assembly was on thin ice in adopting a prospective-only repeal of the death penalty, the Jan. 7 hearing - in particular, the lengthy interchange between Palmer and Senior Assistant State's Attorney Harry Weller - suggested the court may have erred in Santiago and that, rather than sweeping away what remained of the death penalty, it should have either deferred to the General Assembly and accepted its prospective-only repeal or ruled Public Act 12-5 unconstitutional and left it up to the General Assembly to decide whether to abolish or retain the death penalty.

Weller made a strong case for the view, forcefully argued by the three dissenting justices in Santiago, that the court erred in concluding that 12-5 demonstrated that the death penalty no longer comported with contemporary standards of decency in the state. The U.S. Supreme Court said in Atkins v. Virginia (2002) "the clearest and most reliable objective evidence of contemporary values is the legislation enacted by the country's legislatures." Weller argued that 12-5 reflected the clear intention of the General Assembly to maintain the death penalty for individuals who committed certain crimes prior to the statute's effective date and was the result of a democratic legislative process, one in which the General Assembly rather than the court has the final word and to which the court should defer.

He also noted more than once the court in State v. Rizzo in 2011, 2 years after the General Assembly had approved a prospective-only repeal for the 1st time, said, "as long as there remains powerful evidence of strong public support for the death penalty in the form of long-standing laws enacted by the democratically-elected representatives of this state...we will not attempt to discern a contrary view of the public will, or to answer complex policy questions best answered by the legislative process."

Surprisingly, in view of what it said in Rizzo, the Santiago majority didn't consider the public's view of the death penalty. Had it done so, it would have found ample evidence of strong public support for retention of the death penalty, not just for crimes committed prior to the effective date but for crimes committed in the future as well.

A Quinnipiac poll of 1,745 registered voters in the state conducted in the week before 12-5 took effect in April 2012 found that 62 % supported the death penalty while 30 % opposed it and that 62 % thought the decision to abolish the death penalty was bad. Given that contemporaneous evidence, it's not at all obvious that the death penalty no longer comports with contemporary standards of decency in the state.

The state also challenged the Santiago majority's claim that, after enactment of 12-5, the death penalty was devoid of any legitimate penological justification. The majority stated that the primary rationale for the prospective-only repeal was neither deterrence nor retribution - both legitimate justifications - but rather vengeance against those on death row - in particular, against the men who murdered 3 members of the Petit family. It argued that, while retention of the death penalty for those already sentenced may serve some minimal retributive function, the prospective repeal, coupled with the lengthy, if not interminable delays, in applying the penalty - the state has executed only one person in the last 55 years, Michael Ross, who insisted on being executed - has deprived it of any retributive justification. Weller argued, probably correctly, that, for many in the General Assembly who supported 12-5 as well as for many in the public as well, the desire to retain it for those on death row had nothing to do with personal, emotional vengeance and everything to do with retribution for the crimes they committed.

In concluding, Weller suggested, albeit fleetingly, that rather than transforming 12-5 into something the General Assembly didn't intend - a blanket abolition of the death penalty - the court should have declared it unconstitutional on the grounds that allowing the death penalty to be applied to some and not to others for the same crime solely on the basis of the date when the crime was committed violated the Eighth Amendment. At least a few observers left this month's hearing convinced that is what the court should have done - and left it up to the General Assembly to decide whether it wanted to eliminate or retain the death penalty for all who committed certain crimes regardless of date.

Will the court reverse its decision in Santiago? Probably not. Stare decisis - to stand by that which has been decided - is a powerful doctrine. Chief Justice Chase T. Rogers, despite her very forceful dissents from the Santiago majority, was clearly concerned, as were others, about reversing the decision, especially with a new justice having just come onto the court in place of one who retired. In all likelihood, the Santiago decision will remain in force and, sooner or later, Peeler and the others on death row will be resentenced to life without parole. And the question will remain: Did the court get it right?

(source: David R. Cameron is a professor of political science at Yale----Register Citizen)






VIRGINIA:

Imperfect justice system executes innocent people


I am not sure what Maurice S. Fisher, Sr. wanted to accomplish with his bizarre Jan. 11 commentary, "Making Virginia's death row a well-executed system." But he repeats false stereotypes about the system of capital punishment in the commonwealth.

First, the penalty of life in prison without parole is cheaper than the death penalty. The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that "death is different," and have accordingly required a complex punishment phase in capital trials as well as mandatory state and federal court appeals of death sentences. These legal expenses far exceed the cost of lifetime incarceration.

2nd, our criminal justice system often makes mistakes. Since 1976 there have been 155 exonerations from death row across the nation compared to 1,423 executions. That is a ratio of 1 innocent person sentenced to death for every 9 executions.

3rd, Virginia is the fastest in the nation from death sentence to execution - just over 7 years on average. For most of the 155 death row exonerations, it took far longer than that for evidence of innocence to be found. Who knows how many innocent men are among the 111 executed by Virginia since 1976?

Imperfect human beings have created a death penalty system here in Virginia that is far from perfect. Abolition of the death penalty is needed to ensure that no more innocent people are executed by the commonwealth.

MICHAEL STONE, Executive Director

Virginians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty

RICHMOND

(source: Letter to the Editor, Roanoke Times)






FLORIDA:

Florida judges must decide how to implement Supreme Court decision on death penalty


The U.S. Supreme Court tossed out Florida's death penalty statute last week.. Still unclear, though, is who will live and who will die.

That decision now falls to the Florida Supreme Court. The 7 justices must answer 2 key questions that will largely determine who among the 390 inmates on Florida's death row will get relief.

Lawyers, judges and death penalty specialists disagree on what that court will do. Many, though, say it's a good bet that the U.S. Supreme Court decision will affect all the defendants who have not exhausted their appeals.

That could be about 60 percent of Florida's death row population.

For those, the benefit may not be an automatic conversion of their sentence to life in prison. It might be a new sentencing hearing, which could leave inmates right back where they started, with new death sentences, should the Florida Legislature, as expected, rewrite the state's capital punishment statute.

The death penalty cases, said Michael Pirolo, chief assistant to the Public Defender in Brevard County, "are coming back, but it's 1 by 1. It's not just some blanket order."

The 2 key questions before the Florida Supreme Court are:

--Is the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling retroactive?

--Was the ruling a fundamental change in the law or merely procedural?

The Florida court could provide answers in the next 3 weeks, because the state is scheduled to execute a 2-time murderer, Cary Michael Lambrix, on Feb. 11.

On Friday, the court refused to halt the execution. A few days earlier, Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi had said there was no need for a stay because the new ruling does not apply to him.

The court will hear arguments Feb. 2, and then rule.

By an 8-1 vote the U.S. Supreme Court declared Florida's capital sentencing system unconstitutional, ruling that in death penalty cases, juries - not judges - must specify at least 1 reason why the defendant should be put to death.

Under the old system, jurors listened to evidence, and then voted on whether to recommend death or life in prison without the possibility of parole. Their decision did not have to be unanimous.

The final decision was left to a judge.

In Tuesday's majority opinion, Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote that by having the judge make the final decision, Florida was violating a defendant's right to be tried by a jury of his peers.

The test case involved Timothy Lee Hurst, who was convicted of murder in 1998.

The U.S. Supreme Court did not convert his sentence to life in prison. It merely threw out his death sentence. He is still a convicted murderer. It's now up to the state to figure out what sentence to impose and how to do it.

The U.S. high court said the Florida Supreme Court, or perhaps a trial court, must now determine whether Hurst would have been given the same sentence if a jury - rather than a judge - had pronounced sentence.

Last week's ruling was broad. It means that everyone on Florida's death row was sentenced under a law that has now been ruled unconstitutional.

But there is a wide span of opinion on how it will affect the people on Florida's death row.

Some lawyers argue that everyone there should have their sentences converted to life in prison. Others say they should all get new sentencing hearings.

Orlando criminal appeals specialist Paula Coffman and Orange-Osceola State Attorney Jeff Ashton predicted that the sentences of a few death row inmates would be reduced.

"It's going to apply to very few inmates," Coffman said.

Retired Circuit Judge O.H. Eaton Jr. of Sanford, a death-penalty scholar, predicted that in several months, the Florida Supreme Court would make a single ruling involving every condemned murderer who is still has an active appeal, and reduce their sentences to life.

The court would do that, he said, to spare the expense and danger of transporting inmates back to the counties where they were originally tried.

Despite the wide range in opinion, many experts agree on some basics: The new ruling is likely to do nothing to help at least 150 death row inmates who have exhausted their appeals.

Defense attorneys are expected to flood state courts with paperwork because of the new ruling.

Maria DeLiberato, a Tampa-area attorney, works for Capital Collateral Regional Counsel, a state agency that represents indigent death row inmates. She has 11 clients on death row.

"Certainly we will be arguing that all of those people, most if not all have been sentenced under an unconstitutional statute and they should be given a new hearing," she said. "Certainly the Florida Supreme Court will weigh in on whether the decision is retroactive and how many people it ultimately affects."

One of the biggest issues Florida judges will face is whether the error harmed a defendant. That is something that must be reviewed case by case basis, Pirolo said.

It's a complex set of issues, said Robert Wesley, the elected public defender for Orange and Osceola counties.

"Nothing could be more important. ... This is going to foster a lot of litigation, and it's not going to be easy and a quick fix by the Legislature and by the Florida courts."

(source: Orlando Sentinel)

**************

High court decision allows chance to rethink broken system


John Barnes, spokesman for Montana Attorney General Tim Fox, said juries in Montana still must decide whether an "aggravating circumstance" exists in a murder case - and that a judge can't impose a death sentence unless there is an aggravating circumstance. Gov. Jack Markell has said he would sign a repeal bill if it made its way to his desk.

"One of the tragedies, I think, that's unfolding before us is, how many people have their lives been taken by a state, and it's found that they didn't commit the crime?" And generous, because Florida legislators now have an opportunity to fix a broken system that has been challenged for being arbitrary, racist and cruel. The jury voted 7-5 in favor of death, and a judge imposed the death sentence. "I would rather have DE as a state make the choice to get rid of the death penalty, instead, of waiting for the Supreme Court to do that for us".

Where Florida's death penalty system goes next, may be in the hands of lawmakers. The case, Hurst v. Florida, involves Timothy Lee Hurst's conviction for the murder of his co-worker Cynthia Harrison in 1998.

The state, which has the second-highest number of inmates on death row in the country, received a request from a condemned inmate shortly after the high court's ruling to delay his execution.

The ruling's direct impact is limited to Florida and does not include the bigger and more divisive question of the constitutionality of the death penalty in general.

Dimmig said prosecutors may argue in some cases that juries did make those determinations, so death sentences in those cases should stand.

More than 20 percent of death sentences imposed in the US since 2010 have been the product of non-unanimous jury recommendations of death-a practice barred in all states but Florida, Alabama, and Delaware.

In addition to the content, no one yet knows whether the ruling is retroactive, potentially affecting all death row inmates.

The US Constitution guarantees criminal defendants the right to a speedy and public trial by an impartial jury.

The ruling was opposed by Justice Samuel Alito, who called the Florida judge's process in the Hurst case a "harmless error". He argues that the Court has purportedly reversed its course that strikes down Florida's capital systems.

Sotomayor said Florida's system is flawed because it allows a sentencing judge to find aggravating factors "independent of a jury's fact-finding".

In an interview, Bondi told the Herald/Times she was unsure of the death penalty's future in Florida. When Jeb Bush was governor, he pushed for a 10-year limit on death row appeals, even after 2 Florida Supreme Court justices cautioned against it. But it's the judge who's charged with finding facts, and judges can and do frequently disregard the jury's recommendation.

Michael Radelet, an expert on the death penalty in Florida, says the bottom line after today's ruling is uncertainty.

(source: leadercall.com)






ALABAMA:

Supreme Court decision raises questions about Alabama death penalty


A U.S. Supreme Court decision released this week deemed part of the Florida death penalty system unconstitutional.

Hurst vs. Florida addresses the issue of judicial override, something only legal in Florida, Delaware and Alabama.

Here's how it works. If a jury recommends a sentence, the judge has the power to overrule its decision to sentence someone to life in prison or to death.

The Supreme Court decision that came out this week doesn't make that illegal, but it does rein in the judge's power.

In the Hurst case, the judge held an independent fact-finding hearing to determine the sentence. According to SCOTUS opinion, "The Sixth Amendment protects a defendant's right to an impartial jury. This right required Florida to base Timothy Hurst's death sentence on a jury's verdict, not a judge's factfinding."

Although judicial override wasn't completely struck down by the decision, some experts say it was weakened.

According to attorney David Kochman, judicial override was originally created to eliminate jury bias in sentencing. It was believed judges would remain more level-headed in the face of gruesome details and thus less likely to sentence convicts to death.

But according to the Equal Justice Initiative, since 1976 judges in Alabama have overruled jury verdicts 111 times. And in 91 % of those overrides, judges chose the death penalty.

"We have a scheme now where a system that was predicated upon mercy and compassion has instead become a scheme of almost a punitive nature," Kochman said.

The attorney of death row inmate Christopher Brooks is asking for a stay on his execution in light of this decision. Brooks was supposed to be executed on January 21st.

But Alabama Attorney General Luther Strange says our system is constitutional, and so is the one in Florida. He filed a friend of the court brief with the Montana attorney general, saying judicial sentencing is less arbitrary and more consistent than jury sentencing.

Alabama's system was last challenged in 2013 in Mario Dion Woodward v. Alabama. SCOTUS declined to hear the case, but Justice Sotomayor wrote in dissent, "No other State condemns prisoners to death despite the considered judgment rendered by a cross-section of its citizens that the defendant ought to live. We owe the validity of Alabama's system a fresh look."

(source: WAAY news)






LOUISIANA:

Derrick Todd Lee gets medical treatment outside of Angola; officials mum on location for 'security reasons'


Convicted serial killer and death row inmate Derrick Todd Lee on Sunday was receiving medical care outside the fences of the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola.

Corrections Department spokeswoman Pam Laborde confirmed in a statement that Lee, 47, was transported away from the Angola prison for medical care but declined to say where he'd been taken or what medical issues he is being treated for, citing state and federal privacy laws.

"Due to security reasons and offender privacy under state and federal laws, the Department (of Corrections) cannot provide any additional information at this time," Laborde said.

Lee was sentenced to death for the 2002 murder of 22-year-old LSU graduate student Charlotte Murray Pace in her Baton Rouge home.

A jury also convicted Lee of 2nd-degree murder in the 2002 killing of 21-year-old Geralyn Barr DeSoto, of Addis, for which he was sentenced to life in prison.

Lee is suspected by authorities of killing 5 other women in south Louisiana between 1998 and 2003: Gina Wilson Green and Carrie Lynn Yoder, of Baton Rouge; Trineisha Dene Colomb, of Lafayette; Randi Mebruer, of Zachary; and Pam Kinamore, of Briarwood. Lee has not been tried in those cases.

According to prosecutors, DNA evidence linked Lee to those 5 slayings. Evidence from these cases was introduced during the penalty phase of Lee's 2004 trial in Pace's murder.

Lee is appealing his conviction and death sentence in federal court. The Louisiana Supreme Court rejected Lee's final state court appeal in September.

(source: The Advocate)






KENTUCKY:

Man Accused In Stabbing Death Of 6-Year-Old Pleads Not Guilt


The Indiana man accused of stabbing and killing a 6-year-old Versailles boy during a home invasion pleaded not guilty.

Police say Ronald Exantus stabbed Logan Tipton to death during a home invasion last year.

Officers said Logan was in his room asleep when Exantus allegedly entered the home and stabbed him. Police said after the stabbing, Logan's father got into a fight with Exantus in the home's hallway. Logan's sisters were also assaulted. Officers arrested Exantus at the scene.

It was the first time that Logan Tipton's family had seen Exantus since that tragic night in December. Family members filled the first two rows of the courtroom.

Afterwards, Logan Tipton's mother issued a statement to the media.

"I just wanted to say thank you to the whole community and everyone for their thoughts and prayers and support and just continue to keep my family especially my children in your prayers," Heather Pujol-Tipton told reporters.

Exantus' attorney, Bridget Hofler told LEX 18 that her client is mentally unstable.

"His mental state is in and out. Some days are better than others. He is obviously not himself, nor has he been since I've come to know him." Hofler told LEX 18.

The hearing was held in Woodford County's District Court building. Exantus waived formal arraignment.

A Woodford County grand jury indicted Exantus for murder, burglary and assault. He could face the death penalty.

(source: lex18.com)






CALIFORNIA:

O.C. victim's father doesn't expect to see death penalty carried out


Steve Herr assumes he won't live to see the execution of the man convicted of murdering and then decapitating his son in the attic of an Orange County theater.

"Realistically, I'm not going to be around when he's put to death," Herr, 67, said a few days after a jury recommended the death penalty for Daniel Wozniak. "I'll be dead."

Orange County Superior Court Judge John Conley is scheduled in March to sentence Wozniak, 31, for the shooting and beheading of 26-year-old Army veteran Sam Herr and the shooting of Herr's friend Juri "Julie" Kibuishi, 23, in May 2010.

Wozniak, a community theater actor from Costa Mesa, was desperate for money to fund his upcoming wedding, so he killed the 2 as part of a plan to steal $62,000 from Herr's bank account, according to prosecutors.

After Wozniak's conviction last month, jurors took less than an hour last Monday to decide that he deserved to die for the slayings. Orange County Dist. Atty. Tony Rackauckas said it was the fastest capital punishment decision he could recall.

Wozniak's case took more than 5 years to go to trial, and despite the jury's decisiveness, its death sentence verdict is just the beginning of another long process that may or may not end with Wozniak's execution.

In California, where capital punishment has been on hold for a decade, it's an open question whether convicts sent to death row today will ever have their sentences carried out.

In 2006, the state placed a moratorium on the death penalty when a judge ruled that a 3-drug lethal injection could cause inhumane suffering.

In November, officials unveiled a 1-drug injection that could lead to a resumption of executions, but the method still faces months of public vetting and possible legal challenges.

Even before the moratorium, "the reality in California is that, of those who are sentenced to death, very few have been executed and it's taken an enormously long time," said Erwin Chemerinsky, dean of the UC Irvine law school.

Since capital punishment was reinstated in California in 1977, juries have sent 900 inmates to death row and 13 have been executed, according to court papers written by Cormac Carney, a federal judge in Orange County.

On average, there is a 25-year delay between a death sentence being handed down and it being carried out, and that gap is getting longer, according to the judge.

Many factors contribute to the decades of lag time between a death sentence and an execution, Chemerinsky said.

To begin with, all death sentences in California are automatically appealed.

Before any work can be done on the case, a lawyer must be appointed. That in itself can take years.

A 2004 report commissioned by the California Legislature blamed that on budget cuts at the state public defender's office and on the low pay offered to private attorneys willing to take the assignments.

Another factor is that all such appeals go directly to California's Supreme Court, which hears only about 20 to 25 such cases a year, according to Carney.

After years of reviewing and briefing their cases, attorneys might wait 2 to 3 more years before the court has time to hear their arguments, the judge wrote.

Inmates who lose their appeal to the Supreme Court can appeal again for the court's consideration. If those appeals are exhausted, inmates can petition a federal court for review, further extending the process.

More condemned inmates die of natural causes than are put to death, according to California Department of Corrections figures that Carney cited in his decision.

"As for the random few for whom execution does become a reality, they will have languished for so long on death row that their execution will serve no retributive or deterrent purpose and will be arbitrary," Carney wrote.

But such arguments and capital punishment's murky future did not deter the Orange County district attorney's office from pursuing a death sentence for Wozniak.

"Cases like this are a perfect example of why the death penalty is appropriate," Senior Deputy Dist. Atty. Matt Murphy said at a news conference after the jury's decision.

Prosecutors in Orange County seek capital punishment on only about 4% of eligible cases, but the brutality of Wozniak's crimes called for the severest penalty, Murphy said.

During the trial, jurors heard testimony that Wozniak dismembered Herr's body before tossing some of the parts in a Long Beach park in a failed attempt to throw police off his trail.

To further the coverup, Wozniak used Herr's phone to lure Kibuishi to Herr's apartment, then killed her and staged her body to make it seem as if Herr had raped her and fled, Murphy said.

(source: Los Angeles Times)

**************

10 Years After Last Execution, California's Death Row Continues to Grow


10 years ago today, on January 17, 2006, California executed Clarence Ray Allen, the oldest person ever put to death in the state. It was just after midnight - the day after Allen's 76 birthday - and the execution was couched in controversy. Allen was legally blind, diabetic, and relied on a wheelchair. He had suffered a heart attack the previous fall. Later, when he asked that they just let him die if he were to have another heart attack before his execution date, prison officials said they could do no such thing.

Yet when the press told the story of Allen's death, the prevailing descriptions were of a man in fine health - not nearly as weak as described by the attorneys who had tried to save his life. "In final moments, killer didn't seem so frail," read the headline in the San Francisco Chronicle, which noted Allen's "robust ability": how he stood up on his own from his wheelchair before being helped to the gurney by 4 prison guards; how he "vigorously craned his head" toward his supporters in the viewing chamber. California Assemblyman Todd Spitzer, who witnessed the execution, called it "incredibly humane," remarking, "For 76 years old, he looked to be in remarkably good shape." When it was revealed that officials at San Quentin had to inject Allen with a second deadly dose of potassium chloride - raising potential questions about the efficacy of the state's execution protocol - the Associated Press presented this as proof that the "barrel-chested prisoner's heart was strong to the end."

The narrative was comforting in its reassurances: Regardless of any last legal challenges or activist hysterics, this was a dangerous killer, not a feeble old man. And Allen certainly had much blood on his hands: Sentenced to life in prison for killing his accomplice in a 1974 robbery, he was then convicted and sentenced to death a few years later for ordering 3 more murders while behind bars at Folsom Prison. In a state that had struggled to carry out executions for decades, Allen's death could be seen as a righteous way to usher in what was expected at the time to be a busy era for the execution chamber. With appeals running out for a number of prisoners, 2006 was to be the year California resumed executions "at a pace unseen in more than a generation," according to the Sacramento Bee.

Yet a full decade later, California has not executed a single person. Soon after Allen's death in 2006, problems with state's lethal injection protocols brought the state's execution machinery to a halt. It has never restarted. In the meantime, California's death row, by far the largest in the country, has continued to grow, from 646 people in January 2006 to some 750 today. Last year, California officially ran out of space for its condemned prisoners, prompting Gov. Jerry Brown to request $3.2 million from lawmakers to expand its death row cells.

But the past decade is only the latest chapter in California's long and sordid death penalty saga, a history that has seen the state pour resources into a punishment regime that, when measured in executions at least, exists more in theory than in practice. To date, only 13 people have been executed since the state brought back the death penalty in 1977. Meanwhile, more than 100 have died facing execution - 1/4 of these prisoners have committed suicide, according to the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR). The cost to California taxpayers, according to a 2011 study, has been more than $4 billion - and by 2030, the projected cost will reach $9 billion, with more than 1,000 people on death row.

Today, a growing number of Californians have reached the inevitable conclusion that it's time to get rid of the death penalty once and for all. In 2012, a hard-fought ballot initiative to replace capital punishment with life without parole lost by a narrow margin - and in 2014 support for the death penalty dropped to a 50-year low. Yet some remain committed to reviving executions in California - and late last year the state took a number of steps in that direction. In November, the same month a federal judge overturned a ruling that had declared the state's death penalty unconstitutional on 8th Amendment grounds, officials introduced a new "humane and dignified" lethal injection protocol, replacing its embattled 3-drug cocktail with an array of one-dose options. In December, pro-death penalty activists began collecting signatures in support of a ballot measure that would jumpstart executions by quickening the appellate process and shorten the amount of time between conviction and execution. This coming November, backers of the measure will face off against an opposing measure that again seeks to abolish the death penalty. Last week, a field poll found California voters evenly divided on the 2 ballot initiatives.

None of this activity makes executions imminent in California. The state's new lethal injection protocol will be subject to a lengthy public vetting process. And even if the pro-death penalty ballot measure prevails, implementing its changes would be costly and complicated. Still, should the state start killing again, Californians can expect to see a lot more prisoners who look like Clarence Ray Allen make their way to the gurney. As of now, the next 16 prisoners in line to die are mostly old men, all of whose sentences date back to the 1980s. 1/2 are in their 60s, and 2 are more than 70; the oldest is 78.

TO JEANNE WOODFORD, who once oversaw executions as the warden at San Quentin, killing these men "serves no penological purpose." The murders they committed "are horrible crimes, no doubt about it," she says. But decades later, their executions seem senseless and arbitrary, devoid even of any retributive value. In Allen's case, the father of 1 of his victims waited 25 years for his execution, only to die months before it was carried out.

Nor do such executions keep Californians safer, Woodford says. It is understood that for a punishment to be a deterrent to crime, it must be "swift and certain." Today, more than ever, the death penalty in California is the exact opposite.

Jeanne Woodford, former San Quentin Warden an now Executive Director of Death Penalty Focus, a national non-profit organization dedicated to educating the public about the death penalty and its alternatives, stands for a portrait in her new offices on Market Street on May 27, 2011 in San Francisco, Calif. She says overseeing four executions convinced her that putting people to death is not right.

Woodford worked at San Quentin for more than 25 years. When she started, there were only 6 people on death row. By the time she left in 2006, the number was more than 700. A lot of the prisoners she saw were young men - "gang members," she recalls, "the very people whose behavior changes over time."

"These were not the people most Americans would imagine as the 'worst of the worst,'" she says. Many had been convicted under a 1978 ballot measure known as the Briggs initiative, which significantly expanded the kinds of crimes eligible for the death penalty. "When they widened the net, they included a lot of people who aren't serial killers," Woodford said. As she reached the end of her time at San Quentin, Woodford saw a death row population that was increasingly aging and infirm - "guys with dementia," she says. Dozens had died of old age, illness, and suicide. "There is a wide gap between who the public thinks is on death row and who is actually on death row."

After she left the CDCR, Woodford became an anti-death penalty activist, briefly heading the group Death Penalty Focus, which led the fight for Proposition 34, the 2012 ballot measure to abolish the death penalty. In doing so, she encountered the unlikeliest of allies: The man who authored the Briggs initiative, a former prosecutor-turned defense attorney named Donald Heller. Once a staunch supporter of capital punishment - he once said he would "throw the switch??? for a criminal defendant - Heller designed the 1978 ballot initiative at the behest of California State Senator John Briggs, a right-wing conservative who aspired to join the U.S. Senate. The measure was designed to increase the number of eligible death penalty crimes through the use of "special circumstances" - aggravating factors that would automatically set the range of punishments for a criminal defendant as either death or life without parole. "Unfortunately," Heller recalls, "I did a really good job." The initiative passed overwhelmingly. A Loyola law professor who conducted a study of the death penalty for the Senate Judiciary Committee later decried the "reckless drafting" of the initiative as well as the political campaign around it: the ballot pamphlet told voters that only those who intended to carry out a murder would receive the death penalty under Briggs, but this did not turn out to be true.

After the Briggs measure passed, prosecutors rushed to seek the death penalty - "Everyone was trying to put a notch on their gun," Heller recalled. "There were a tremendous number of capital cases filed."

As Heller watched the wave of new death sentences, "I had second thoughts about what I wrote." He started to realize that he had made a number of erroneous assumptions about the death penalty. "The 1st was that it would deter murders," he says, a claim for which he says there is no empirical evidence. "The 2nd: I assumed defendants would have competent representation." Heller was "shocked" to see just how shoddy the representation could be for people facing death row.

But the case that ultimately turned Heller against the death penalty for good was that of a man named Tommy Thompson, one of the few people in California whose death sentence has culminated with his execution. Sent to death row in 1984 largely on the word of a jailhouse snitch, Thompson was convicted for a rape and murder that prosecutors later pinned on his codefendant - but only after Heller had already been condemned to die. Once the state "switched theories," Heller told the Los Angeles Times in 2011, "the prosecutor made no effort to notify Thompson's trial judge that evidence now showed that Thompson was not the actual murderer."

Heller was so disturbed by Thompson's case, he agreed to testify at his clemency hearing, "I laid out in detail the reasons that I felt this was wrong, that it violated the letter and spirit of the initiative, the fundamental law, the prosecutor's obligation, and was an injustice," he told the Times. But Governor Pete Wilson declined to commute the sentence and Thompson was executed in 1998. His last words were read by the warden after his death at 12:06AM. "For 17 years the AG has been pursuing the wrong man," Thompson said. "I don't want anyone to avenge my death. Instead I want you to stop killing people. God bless."

The experience forever altered Heller's feelings about capital punishment. "Something I wrote was utilized to execute someone who was innocent," Heller says. He no longer believes the death penalty is worth the financial or human cost. "If you have imperfect system taking someone's life, it's a little bit frightening," Heller says. "Especially with the number of people who have been shown to be actually innocent. It makes you think."

Not everyone in the state is learning from the past. Indeed, as far as stalled executions are concerned, California has been here before. It took 15 years, after bringing back capital punishment in 1977, for the state to carry out its 1st execution, in 1992. In the meantime, hundreds were sent to death row. In 1990, a year that saw 33 new death sentences in the state, the Los Angeles Times ran an article titled: "Next To Die In Gas Chamber: It's Anybody's Guess." Of the 275 people on death row at the time, the story speculated, only those who were willing to drop their appeals and be executed were likely to be executed anytime soon. But even that was no guarantee. One man, on death row since the 80s for killing his wife, told the Times, "I don't wish to die, but I don't wish to live under these conditions." More than 25 years later, that man, Jerry Stanley, is still alive and now in his 70s. He has continued to ask for death. In 2011, as dubious lethal injection drugs made national news, he wrote to the Times, "I am willing to be the experimental guy to see whether or not they work."

These days California sends fewer people to death row. But the state still appears to be in denial about its death row crisis. In 2008, after four years of studying the state's death penalty system, the bipartisan California Commission on the Fair Administration of Justice declared it "dysfunctional." In addition to raising alarm about wrongful convictions, the commission warned lawmakers that sentencing an average of 20 prisoners per year to death - while executing no one - was creating "a backlog ... so severe that California would have to execute 5 prisoners per month for the next 12 years just to carry out the sentences of those currently on death row."

The backlog, the commission found, is inextricable from the fact that virtually every person on California???s death row is indigent - and thus reliant on the state for representation. But even as California has added scores to death row, it has defunded the office of the State Public Defender. So, while death penalty supporters like to blame prisoners??? lengthy appeals for clogging the path to justice, in reality condemned inmates spend years just waiting to be appointed lawyers who can handle their case. Indeed, the commission found "excessive delay" delay at every stage of the review process: Prisoners sentenced to death wait between 3 to 5 years for an attorney to be assigned to their direct appeal. Longer still is the wait for counsel for state habeas petitions (8 to 10 years). These are followed by additional years of waiting for courts to rule: the commission found a more than 6-year wait for a decisions on federal habeas petitions. In all, the commission found, "the total lapsed time from judgment of death to execution is 20-25 years."

That prisoners spend so long languishing on death row was at the heart of a 2014 ruling by U.S. District Judge Cormac Carney, who overturned the death sentence of a California man who had spent 20 years facing execution - and at the same time declared the state's death penalty system unconstitutional on 8th Amendment grounds. For most prisoners on California's death row, he wrote, their sentence "has been quietly transformed into one no rationale jury or legislature could ever impose: life in prison, with the remote possibility of death."

Compounding the problem are prosecutors who continue to seek death sentences despite the state's clear inability to carry them out. In 2015, which marked historic lows in new death sentences across the country, California condemned more people to die than any other state. As in the rest of the country, these sentences were clustered in specific jurisdictions, where a single stubborn DA can still send a lot of people to death row. Of California's 14 new death sentences last year, prosecutors in Riverside County were responsible for 8. In Slate last fall, Robert J. Smith called Riverside "the buckle of a new Death Belt," a place that has "produced more death sentences since 2010 than any other county in America except one - Los Angeles County, which is 4 times its size."

"In one sense, it's irrational," Heller says of prosecutors currently seeking death sentences in California. But more obviously, it is political. "Prosecutors still use it as a notch, I think, more than anything else."

It also means that the state will continue to invest in its death row infrastructure. "Honestly, I don't think they have a choice," says Woodford. "The death penalty is in place because of the voters in the state of California." Keeping it in place means meeting certain constitutional standards. Most recently, responding to a ruling by a federal judge, prison authorities hastily revamped a new medical unit at San Quentin to convert it into a 39-bed psychiatric unit for prisoners with mental illness. ("We are curing them to make them executable," Berkeley law professor and death penalty scholar Frank Zimring told the L.A. Times.)

But perhaps the ultimate emblem of capital punishment in California is the death chamber at San Quentin - a $853,000 renovation project completed years ago, and built by prisoners themselves. In 2010, members of the press were invited to inspect the new and improved death chamber. Reporters noted the roominess of the space (4 times larger than the old one); its hexagonal shape, and the "pistachio-colored vinyl" covering the gurney (the "only splash of color" in the sterile room). The warden told reporters at the time that the prison was "fully prepared to carry out an execution," anticipating it would do so within a week. More than 5 years later, the execution chamber remains unused.

Last December, just 2 days after Christmas, the CDCR once more allowed journalists inside the death chamber. ("It smells of new paint," an L.A. Times reporter observed.) 20 media outlets participated in the 6-hour tour, which gave rare access to San Quentin's death row corridors, along with the solitary confinement unit the CDCR calls the Adjustment Center (otherwise known as "the hole"). The department denied there was any specific reason for the timing. ("One reporter recently asked to visit, and then another," a CDCR official wrote in an email to The Intercept.) The subsequent stories portrayed a grim universe, a prison within a prison that has grown out of the long legal limbo of its inhabitants. ???Some two dozen wheelchairs sit parked outside the cells of aging men no longer able to walk," the Times noted. Meals are eaten in their cells, behind mesh screens. "Group therapy" is an assembly of men in metal cages. (The 21 women on death row are housed in a different prison in Chowchilla, 2 1/2 hours away.)

With no end in sight to their time on death row, prisoners do what they can - writing, exercising, listening to the radio. But there is no escaping the sense of neglect - of being forgotten. Speaking to the alternative weekly Metroactive, one prisoner summed up his life as "being left on a shelf." Another said he had just ended a 27-day hunger strike to protest the absence of capital defense attorneys. "Guys are dying," he said, "and nobody is up here saying, 'You are a human being.'"

(source: theintercept.com)
_______________________________________________
A service courtesy of Washburn University School of Law www.washburnlaw.edu

DeathPenalty mailing list
DeathPenalty@lists.washlaw.edu
http://lists.washlaw.edu/mailman/listinfo/deathpenalty
Unsubscribe: http://lists.washlaw.edu/mailman/options/deathpenalty

Reply via email to