Tag Archives: Alabama

When Death Row Lawyers Stumble, Clients Take the Fall

7 Jan

By

Twice in recent years, the Supreme Court rebuked the federal appeals court in Atlanta for its rigid attitude toward filing deadlines in capital cases. The appeals court does not seem to be listening.

A few days after Christmas, a divided three-judge panel of the court ruled that Ronald B. Smith, a death row inmate in Alabama, could not pursue a challenge to his conviction and sentence because he had not “properly filed” a document by a certain deadline.

As it happens, there is no dispute that the document was filed on time. But it was not “properly filed,” the majority said, because Mr. Smith’s lawyer did not at the same time pay the $154 filing fee or file a motion to establish something also not in dispute — that his client was indigent.

Nor did the majority place much weight on the fact that the lawyer himself was on probation for public intoxication and addicted to crystal methamphetamine while he was being less than punctilious. In the months that followed, the lawyer would be charged with drug possession, declare bankruptcy and commit suicide.

Mr. Smith is almost surely guilty of murdering a convenience store clerk in 1994 in Huntsville, Ala. But it is not clear that he deserves to die for his crime.

His jury, by a vote of seven to five, determined that the murder did not warrant the death penalty, recommending instead that Mr. Smith be sentenced to life in prison.

But the Alabama capital justice system has many idiosyncrasies. One of them is that it allows judges to override such recommendations. The judge rejected the jury’s recommendation and sentenced Mr. Smith to death.

Continue Reading @ New York Times

Thomas Arthur execution halted in Alabama

29 Mar

From our friends at Campaign to End the Death Penalty:

Good news!

Folks will hopefully have read the recent article we sent out from the New Abolitionist about this case and Arthur’s fight for new DNA testing that could prove his innocence: http://nodeathpenalty.org/new_abolitionist/april-2012-issue-56/thomas-arthur-will-alabama-execute-innocent-man

He was scheduled to die today, but received a stay earlier in the week (based not on the DNA question but instead on a challenge to Alabama’s lethal injection protocol) and today the 11th Circuit Court denied the state’s request to lift the stay.
Hopefully this will also give Arthur more time to win the right to the crucial DNA testing he is requesting – we will be thinking of ways we can continue to push for justice in this case!

Arthur execution halted, case not over

Updated: Thursday, 29 Mar 2012, 2:19 PM CDT
Published : Thursday, 29 Mar 2012, 2:19 PM CDT

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) – A Thursday execution was halted for a man set to die for the 1982 murder-for-hire of a Muscle Shoals businessman, but his legal battle is far from over.

The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Wednesday denied Alabama’s request to reconsider the stay of execution for Thomas Douglas Arthur, who has maintained his innocence for more than 29 years on death row.

The stay was granted after a three-judge panel overturned a judge’s ruling to stop Arthur’s appeal, which contends Alabama’s lethal injection procedure is cruel and unusual.

The court has yet to rule on a motion to have the full 11th Circuit re-examine the decision to allow the appeal.

If the court declines, Arthur will be allowed to appeal his death sentence.

 

Alabama Prison Guards Indicted in Fatal Beating of Handcuffed Inmate

13 Mar

John Rudolf

 

FBI agents arrested three former Alabama prison guards on Monday after a federal grand jury indicted them on charges of beating a handcuffed prisoner to death and lying to investigators about the attack.

Michael Smith, 37, Matthew Davidson 43, and Joseph Sanders, 31, former guards at Ventress Correctional Facility in Clayton, Ala., are accused of assaulting Rocrast Mack, a 24-year-old Ventress inmate, and making false statements to state and federal investigators about the attack after his death.

Mack was sentenced to 20 years in state prison after pleading guilty to selling $10 worth of crack cocaine to an undercover cop in 2009.

The fatal beating occurred Aug. 4, 2010, after a female guard, Melissa Brown, accused Mack of looking at her inappropriately while she did evening rounds in one of the prison’s crowded dorms. Prison records obtained by the Huffington Post during a 2011 investigation into Mack’s death showed that Brown struck Mack, slapping him across the face, then called for assistance after he struck her, bloodying her lip.

Smith, Davidson and Sanders responded and severely beat Mack in several areas of the prison using their feet, fists and batons, the indictment says. During part of the beating, Mack was handcuffed.

Continue Reading @ Huffington Post

Another Death Row Debacle: The Case Against Thomas Arthur

27 Feb

 

In Alabama, a death row prisoner could be exonerated by a DNA test. Why are the courts preventing this from happening — especially when another man has already confessed to the crime?

d-row-body3.jpg

AP Images

By

 

Another month, another man on death row, another excruciating case that illustrates just some of the ways in which America‘s death penalty regime is unconstitutionally broken. This time, the venue is Alabama. This time, the murder that generated the sentence took place 30 years ago. And this time, there is an execution date of March 29, 2012, for Thomas Arthur, a man who has always maintained his innocence. He also has the unwelcome distinction of being one of the few prisoners in the DNA-testing era to be this close to capital punishment after someone else confessed under oath to the crime.

Late last month, I profiled the wobbly capital conviction against Troy Noling in Ohio and there are remarkable similarities between it and the Arthur case. Both involve white defendants. Both include contentions of innocence and allegations of bad lawyering at trial. Both include a lack of physical evidence linking the defendants to the crime. Both include crucial witness testimony that borders the farcical. And both include state officials reluctant to permit sophisticated DNA testing that might definitively answer questions about whether the defendants committed the murders they will die for.

Arthur’s attorneys are even willing to pay for that testing, the few thousand bucks it would be, and the testing could be completed by the execution date. It is here where prosecutors and judges lose me when they prioritize “finality” in capital punishment cases at the expense of “accuracy.” It would cost Alabama nothing to let Arthur’s lawyers do the testing. And it might solve a case that already has cost the state millions of dollars. Instead, Alabama wants to finally solve its Arthur problem by executing him. No matter how the new DNA test could come out, the state is more interested in defending its dubious conviction.

THE TRIALS OF THOMAS ARTHUR

thomas arthur-body.jpg

Thomas Arthur / AP

Apart from the fact that he may have spent decades on death row for a crime he didn’t commit — based upon the testimony of a convicted murderer with a motive to lie — Arthur isn’t exactly a sympathetic figure. In 1986, while awaiting his second trial, he escaped from jail by shooting one of his guards. But any reasonable person looking at the tortuous history of his case through the decades would see that there is something wrong here. Three times Alabama tried Arthur for murdering Troy Wicker on February 1, 1982. Three times the state got a conviction and death penalty against him. Three times there were problems at trial.

Some of this has been litigated – over and over again — at both the state and federal level (the back story alone raises important constitutional concerns). What’s important today, however, is that Alabama now seems to have based its entire case against Arthur upon the testimony of Judy Wicker, Troy’s wife, who said at the time of the murder that she had been raped by a stranger. Over and over again state investigators asked her if Thomas Arthur was involved in the crime. And over and over again she said no. So what happened?

What happened was that Judy Wicker was lying. Turns out she had hired someone to murder her husband — and got caught doing so! Several months after her husband’s death, Wicker was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison. A few years later, however, she cut a deal with prosecutors. In exchange for a recommended early release from prison, she would change her testimony and accuse Arthur of the crime. And that’s what happened. Wicker’s testimony secured Arthur’s third and final conviction. And this time, for over 20 years now, all of the state and federal courts that have reviewed the case have endorsed that result.

Continue reading @ The Atlantic

 

Alabama considers inmates to replace immigrant labor

12 Dec

Alabama agriculture officials are considering whether prisoners can fill a labor shortage the agency blames on the new state law against illegal immigration.

The Alabama Department of Agriculture and Industries is meeting with south Alabama farmers and businesses in Mobile on Tuesday. Deputy commissioner Brett Hall says the agenda includes a presentation on whether work-release inmates could help fill jobs once held by immigrants.

Hall says planting season is coming up, and some growers fear most of their workers are gone. The agriculture agency says the new law has caused a chronic labor shortage on Alabama farms.

Prison spokesman Brian Corbett says the state has about 2,000 work-release prisoners, and most already have jobs.

Corbett says the prison system isn’t the solution to worker shortages caused by the law.

Via AP News

AMMIANO INTRODUCES BILL TO CREATE TIERED REGISTRATION FOR SEX OFFENDERS IN CALIFORNIA

22 Feb

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: February 22, 2011
Contact: Quintin Mecke
Office: 415-557-3013; Cell: 415.505.2417

 

AMMIANO INTRODUCES BILL TO CREATE TIERED REGISTRATION

FOR SEX OFFENDERS IN CALIFORNIA

 

Sacramento – Assemblymember Tom Ammiano (D-San Francisco) has introduced a bill, AB 625, to create a Tiered Registration system for sex offenders in California.  The bill is based on the recommendations of the California Sex Offender Management Board, which was created in 2006 by Governor Schwarzenegger to improve policies and practices regarding the management of sex offenders. California is one of only four states (Alabama, Florida, South Carolina) that require lifetime registration for all convicted sex offenders regardless of offense.

 

“With the skyrocketing costs of corrections in California, we need to base our management and enforcement of sex offenders on the research and data available rather than emotion.  This means focusing our efforts and resources on the most dangerous offenders to ensure that the registry achieves its primary goal – to keep our children and communities safe,” said Ammiano.

 

“California needs to modify its current policy and start devoting our limited resources to those individuals who pose the greatest risk of re-offending.  Common sense and solid research both agree that not all sex offenders pose the same degree of risk of re-offending.  Many pose very little risk.  Unless one accepts the myth that “all sex offenders are alike,” there can be no defensible justification for treating them all the same and requiring lifetime registration for each and every convicted sex offender.  This puts an increasing burden on law enforcement and does not make our communities any safer,” said Tom Tobin, Ph.D., California Sex Offender Management Board Vice-Chair.

 

The members of the California Sex Offender Management Board have recommended that California rethink its registration policies and move toward a smarter approach based on solid information about what is effective in managing sex offenders.

 

For the full Sex Offender Management Board report, go to:

http://www.casomb.org/docs/CASOMB%20Report%20Jan%202010_Final%20Report.pdf

 

###

 

 

Quintin Mecke

Communications Director

Office of Assemblymember Tom Ammiano

455 Golden Gate Avenue, #14300

San Francisco, CA 94102

Email: quintin.mecke@asm.ca.gov

Phone: 415.557.3013

Fax: 415.557.3015

Website: http://democrats.assembly.ca.gov/members/a13/

From Montgomery to Los Angeles and Beyond: Formerly Incarcerated People Building a Movement

19 Feb

It’s time to build a Civil and Human Rights Movement for the 21st Century. We hope you’ll join us – in Alabama, Los Angeles, and beyond.
February 18, 2011 |
TAKE ACTION
Petitions by Change.org

Would you feel like a full citizen if most of your civil and human rights were denied you? If the privileges afforded to community members were withheld from you, would you feel like a welcome member of the community? Probably not.

As formerly incarcerated people, every day is another reminder that we do not have full access to our civil and human rights. Having served our sentences and returned home, we face circumstances that often seem designed to prevent our full participation in our communities and country: stigma for having a criminal conviction. Barriers to gaining meaningful employment and decent housing. Barriers to constructive educational opportunities. Lack of access to healthcare. Denial of our voting rights.

This is a widespread problem. Consider this: there are nearly 2.4 million people incarcerated in prisons and jails in the U.S. today. Most people currently incarcerated are coming home — according to the Department of Justice, over 700,000 people were released from incarceration in 2006 alone. Across the country, over five million people are under state supervision like parole or probation. There are millions of people who are currently and formerly incarcerated, and millions more who were never incarcerated but have a criminal conviction–all of whom live, every day, without our full civil and human rights.

What happens when people’s civil and human rights are denied for too long? Movements for change spark and catch fire.

As we near the 46th anniversary of the Bloody Sunday March over the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, we’re reminded of the Civil Rights Movement. For nearly 100 years after the end of chattel slavery, Black people were denied their human and civil rights, including the right to vote. People got tired and organized all over the country to win their rights. In Alabama, the movement was especially vibrant.

Continue Reading…..

Report: Inmate allegedly attacked by prison officers had severe injuries

13 Jan

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Medical records obtained by The Associated Press show that an Alabama inmate who died in an alleged attack by prison officers was hurt so severely his body was covered with deep bruises, his face was swollen and at least one tooth was missing.

The documents show that 24-year-old Rocrast Mack had a traumatic brain injury, was unresponsive when he reached a hospital and never regained consciousness before he died.

State personnel records obtained by AP show a female officer was the first to strike Mack and she and a second officer attempted to cover up what happened. The records do not indicate what happened before the assault.

Prison officials have said as many as six former officers could face criminal charges in the death of Mack, who was serving 20 years on a drug charge.

A medical expert who examined Mack’s body tells AP the extent of his injuries was unusually severe.

Link

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