Feb. 28


TEXAS----impending execution

'Texas 7' leader faces execution this week, says he's sorry for killing Irving cop


George Rivas, the head of a band of Texas prison escapees who killed a 29-year-old Irving police officer on Christmas Eve in 2000, is scheduled to die for his crimes on Wednesday.

In an interview published Sunday , Rivas tells Fort Worth Star-Telegram reporter Darren Barbee that he's sorry for shooting Aubrey Hawkins, the 29-year-old policeman who was the father of a 9-year-old boy.

Rivas (right) and his fellow escapees were robbing an Irving sporting goods store when Hawkins tried to stop them. Rivas, 41, has previously admitted being the one who fired the shots that killed the officer.

He says now that among his many regrets is that he "didn't find Christ sooner."

He adds: "I take no pride in none of my crimes. Someone like me had to lose everything to appreciate anything."

(source: Dallas Morning News)






OHIO:

Killer Faces Possibility Of Death Penalty----Sentencing Phase Set For Tuesday


A man convicted of killing a homeowner with an ax could be sentenced to death. M

A Butler County jury found 26-year-old Victor Gantt guilty last week of killing 75-year-old Leroy Jones last May at Jones' Middletown home.

Jurors will decide whether to recommend that Gantt die for his crimes or sentence him to life in prison.

If jurors recommend death, the judge can still sentence Gantt to life in prison, but judges rarely ignore jury recommendations.

(source: WLWT News)






DELAWARE:

Del. Death Row Inmate Competent to Waive Appeals


A Delaware judge has ruled that a death row inmate who wants to waive all appeals and be executed is mentally competent to make that decision.

Shannon M. Johnson was sentenced to death in 2008 for the September 2006 murder of a man who he found sitting in a car with Johnson's former girlfriend. Johnson later shot the former girlfriend, but she survived.

After the state Supreme Court upheld his conviction and death sentence, Johnson said he did not want to pursue any further appeals.

In a ruling Monday in which she cited reports from several mental health experts, Superior Court Judge M. Jane Brady said Johnson's IQ is above 70 and that he is not mentally disabled. She concluded that Johnson understands the legal consequences of waiving his rights to pursue further appeals.

(source: Associated Press)






ARIZONA:

Arizona switching to 1 drug for next execution


The Arizona Department of Corrections will use a single dose of the barbiturate pentobarbital instead of a 3-drug cocktail to carry out Wednesday's execution of convicted killer Robert Moormann.

And though Death Row defense lawyers have long lobbied for a "1-drug protocol" as used in other states, the corrections department did not make the change willingly. According to a notice filed Monday in the Arizona Supreme Court, corrections officials discovered during a rehearsal for the Wednesday execution that the supply of pancuronium bromide, the 2nd drug in the 3-drug process, had passed its expiration date and could not be used.

The current corrections protocol, however, says that such decisions are to be provided to the inmate in writing 7 days prior to the scheduled execution date. Ironically, the Corrections Department was sued in December over its inability to adhere to its own protocol, but a federal judge ruled that the lapses did not violate constitutional rights.

A new protocol, which gives broad discretion to Corrections Director Charles Ryan, went into effect on Jan. 25 and authorized the department to use either the old 3-drug protocol or a 1-drug protocol. But that protocol has the 7-day-notice clause, meaning that the corrections department is already out of compliance with its new guidelines for executions.

For years, Arizona used a 3-drug combination of the fast-acting barbiturate sodium thiopental to anesthetize the condemned person, followed by pancuronium bromide to cause paralysis, and potassium chloride to stop the heart.

When thiopental became unavailable in the U.S. in fall 2010, Arizona, like many states, began purchasing it from Europe on the "gray market." But in June 2011, days before a scheduled execution, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration informed the Arizona Department of Corrections that its thiopental had not been legally imported. The department then switched to a three-drug protocol using pentobarbital instead of thiopental.

Defense attorneys have argued that the 3-drug protocol carries risks of suffocation and pain. They reason that if the barbiturate wears off prematurely, the inmate will be conscious but paralyzed and unable to call out or signal any distress.

Figures released last week by the Federal Public Defender's Office in Phoenix showed that the last 5 deaths in executions in Ohio using only one drug occurred about a minute faster than the last 5 in Arizona using 3.

Moormann will be a subject of 2 hearings before the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Monday afternoon.

(source: Arizona Republic)

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

Lawyers for Arizona death-row inmate seek stays


The Arizona Supreme Court and a federal court both have refused to stop the scheduled execution of death row inmate Robert Henry Moormann.

Monday's decision was the 2nd time in 5 days that the Arizona Supreme Court has denied a stay for Wednesday's pending execution.

The U.S. District Court in Phoenix issued its ruling Monday night and Moormann's lawyers have appealed to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco.

The 63-year-old Moormann was sentenced to death for the 1984 killing of his adoptive mother while on a prison furlough.

Moormann's attorneys claim he was diagnosed in early childhood as being mentally retarded and therefore the state can't execute him.

They have asked the federal appeals court for a preliminary injunction over questions regarding Arizona's lethal-injection protocol.

(source: Associated Press)






MASSACHUSETTS:

Amnesty International chapters begin Death Penalty Action Weeks


As part of its campaign to abolish the death penalty, Amnesty International USA has declared Feb. 27 to March 11 Death Penalty Action Weeks. During that period the group will organize protests, workshops, online forums, and other events.

Although support for the death penalty appears to be dwindling in this country, there are still 34 states whose laws permit it. Many well-meaning people who support the policy hold beliefs about it that are not supported by the facts. Take the following quiz to see how much you know about this important issue.

How much do you know about the death penalty?

True or false?

1. The death penalty deters murder.

2. “Life without parole” (permanent imprisonment) is more expensive than the death penalty.

3. In most murders, the victim and the murderer belong to different races.

4. People of color are murdered more frequently than whites, proportionately to their numbers in the general population.

5. Those who murder people of color represent about 80 % of those who have been executed.

6. Most people on death row could afford a lawyer.

7. 29 people have been wrongly convicted and sentenced to death since the 1970s in the United States.

8. Findings involving DNA are the main reason for death row exonerations.

9. Belarus is the only European country that has the death penalty.

10. In 2009, most of the executions in the world happened in these 5 countries: China, Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and the United States.

Answers

1. False. 88% of this country’s top academic criminologists reject the idea that the death penalty deters crime. States without the death penalty have lower murder rates. Most murders are crimes of passion and are not premeditated.

2. False. A death sentence is far more costly than life without parole; legal expenses are much higher in capital cases and most of those costs are accrued during the trial, not during the appeals process. States spend millions more dollars on the death penalty than they would if all death-row prisoners had been sentenced to life without parole.

3. False. Most murders occur within the same racial group.

4. True. About 1/2 of all murder victims are African-American.

5. False. On the contrary, 77 % of those executed were convicted of killing white victims. People of color who murder whites are far more likely to be sentenced to death than whites who murder people of color.

6. False. An overwhelming majority of death-row inmates could not afford a lawyer and were assigned court-appointed lawyers. Even public defenders who care about their clients are often overloaded with cases and have few resources. There have been numerous cases involving public defenders who slept or were drunk during trials. In Georgia, 5 men on death row had been referred to with a racial slur in court by their own attorneys.

7. False. As of October 2011, 138 people had been exonerated and released from death row. It has been estimated that at least 12 persons have been wrongly executed in recent decades (see the report “Reasonable Doubts” by Equal Justice USA at www.ejusa.org).

8. False. The majority of death-penalty cases do not involve biological material that can be tested for DNA. Most wrongful convictions have involved not DNA, but prosecutorial and police misconduct and mistaken eyewitness identifications.

9. True. Only Belarus has the death penalty in Europe, and the European Union has banned it. South Africa repealed capital punishment when it abandoned apartheid. South Africans had studied the U.S. death penalty and concluded that it was not good for a country trying to move toward racial equality. 2/3 of the world’s nations no longer impose the death penalty.

10. True.

(source: The Concord Journal)




CONNECTICUT:

Death Penalty Commutation


A decent time having elapsed, sort of, since 2 multiple murderers had been sentenced to death for having 1) beaten with a baseball bat a husband of a family in Cheshire, 2) forced the husband’s wife to travel to a bank to withdraw funds for the two murderers, 3) raped the wife and one of the daughters, 4) bound the daughters to their beds, 5) set fire to the house, murdering the daughters and their mother, and anti-death penalty legislators in the General Assembly are planning once again to file a bill that would prospectively abolish the death penalty, replacing it with a sentence of life in prison without possibility of parole. Prospective abolition would leave intact the 11 death penalty sentences of the murderers awaiting justice on Connecticut’s death row.

Such a bill would leave intact the legislature’s power to commute death penalty sentences to life in prison at any time after the General Assembly had abolished the death penalty. Unlike most states, the pardon power in Connecticut is invested in the legislature rather the governor’s office (McLaughlin v. Bronson, 206 Conn. 267 (1988), citing Palka v. Walker, 124 Conn. 121 (1938)). The General Assembly exercised this power until it created the Board of Pardons in 1883. Although the General Assembly had delegated its power of pardon to a board, it never-the-less retains pardon powers; and since the power to commute is considered a part of the pardon power (Attorney General’s Opinion 96-10, citing 59 Am.Jur.2d, Pardon and Parole § 23), it would appear that the legislature may commute death sentences, according to an Office of Legislative Research report.

The anti-death penalty legislators did succeed in passing an abolition bill during the administration of former Republican Governor Jodi Rell, but the governor disappointed them by vetoing it. Current Democratic Governor Dannel Malloy has pledged to sign such a bill should it cross his desk. Encouraged by the governor’s pledge, anti-death penalty proponents in the General Assembly reintroduced their bill after Malloy’s installation as governor, an effort doomed by two key Democratic legislators one of whom, state Senator Edith Prague, withdrew her support for the measure after having had a conversation with Dr. William Petit, the father of the Cheshire murder victims.

At a time when a jury had convicted and sentenced to death only one of the two Cheshire murderers, the trial of the second murderer being in process, Prague emerged from her conversation with Petit firmly convinced that both murderers should suffer the penalties prescribed for them by a jury of their peers. She expressed herself on this point in rather unforgiving language: “They should bypass the trial and take that second animal and hang him by his penis from a tree out in the middle of Main Street.” At the same time, Prague indicated she might support future efforts to abolish the death penalty. But she found it difficult to look Petit in the face and “not give him something that would make his life a little easier.” The 86 year-old Prague since then suffered a mild stroke but returned at the end of January to the General Assembly.

Democratic Senator Andrew Maynard of Stonington, meeting at the same time with Petit, followed Prague’s lead. “It’s a toss-up,” he said, “I don’t support the death penalty broadly but I don’t support repealing it at this time. For my own personal reasons and as a matter of public policy, I don’t think it’s the right way for the state to act. But in this instance there are such mitigating circumstances, in my mind, that I could not in good conscience vote for repeal this year.” The mitigating circumstances having disappeared and the timing being better, Maynard now says “I’m inclined to support repeal.”

Even without the 2 wavering senators, there are, according to some head counters, enough votes in the General Assembly to pass the death penalty abolition bill.

The inevitable passage of the bill will unleash a flood of appeals that will at a minimum further delay the executions of Connecticut’s 11 death row inmates. It is almost certain that at some point in the future a Democratic dominated legislature supported by a Democratic governor, all of whom will have been instrumental in abolishing the death penalty, would be morally derelict in resisting the commutation of the death sentences of the 11 prisoners now awaiting execution on death row. The death penalty having been abolished for prospective criminals who in the future might violate Connecticut’s narrowly circumscribed rarely applied death sentence, no moral justification for the death penalty could withstand a call for the commutation of those awaiting execution authorized by a lapsed and outmoded law.

Don Pesci is a writer who lives in Vernon

(source: Opinion; Don Pesci is a writer who lives in Vernon----West Hartford News)
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