Tag Archives: Capital punishment

Mississippi to Execute Man Without DNA Testing Crucial Evidence

29 Apr

In 5-4 decision, Mississippi Supreme Court denies DNA testing for Willie Manning

Willie Manning is on death row in Mississippi, awaiting execution for the abduction and murder of two college students in 1992. He was convicted on circumstantial evidence, including the testimony of a jailhouse informant who had previously given a statement implicating another person. No physical evidence has ever linked Willie to the crime, and he has always maintained his innocence. He has been seeking DNA testing of crime scene evidence for years.

Incredibly, the Mississippi Supreme Court ruled in a 5-4 decision that there is “overwhelming evidence of guilt,” so no DNA testing is needed. His execution has been set for May 7th. Eighteen men have been exonerated by DNA testing after being sentenced to death, including Kennedy Brewer of Mississippi. We are asking the Governor to stay the execution and order the DNA testing that will definitively prove Willie Manning’s guilt or innocence.

Join us in calling on Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant to stay Willie’s execution and order DNA testing!

Click  >>here to take action NOW <<

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

Crime and punishment in California

11 Nov

Voters softened the three-strikes law but kept the death penalty. What does it mean for California?

California prisoners

Prisoners are seen at California State Prison-Lancaster in 2010. On Nov. 6, voters passed Proposition 36, which will curb some of the excesses of the state’s three-strikes law. (Los Angeles Times)

 

Is California’s costly tough-on-crime era over? That’s perhaps too optimistic a conclusion to draw from Tuesday’s election results. In passing Proposition 36, voters curbed some of the excesses of the state’s three-strikes law, but they also rejected a measure to roll back the death penalty and adopted one — Proposition 35 — that broadens the sex offender registry and imposes new life terms for some human trafficking offenses. The state has ceased its relentless march down a road toward ever-tougher sanctions, ever-more-crowded prisons and ever-rising costs. It has not turned the corner, but it’s peering around it, trying to get a sense of whether it’s safe to proceed.

For the last two decades California voters have listened too often to their fear when going to the polls, so it’s important to remember that in previous years, initiatives generally steered clear of crime and punishment. Voters adopted a host of prison construction bonds in the 1980s and approved a victim’s bill of rights in 1982, but it wasn’t until 1990′s Proposition 115 that an initiative cut back severely on the procedural rights of criminal defendants. There followed a series of measures that fed on the cynical politics of crime. Voters expanded the range of offenses subject to the death penalty. In 1994, even after crime rates began their historic decline, voters adopted the three-strikes law. In 2000, they approved Proposition 21, a measure to revoke many of the state’s landmark protections for juvenile offenders as young as 14. In 2006, they turned their attention to sex offenders with Jessica’s Law, and in 2008, on the heels of a decade-long crime drop of 20%, they adopted a new victim’s bill of rights and virtually eliminated parole for many offenders with Marsy’s Law.

Continue Reading @ LA Times

Todd Willingham’s family seeks posthumous pardon

25 Oct

Executed Texan’s Family Seeks Pardon

By
Associated Press

Cameron T. Willingham

 

Two decades after a Texas man was convicted of murdering his three young daughters by setting his own house on fire, and eight years after a campaign to prove his innocence failed to stop his execution, his family petitioned on Wednesday for a posthumous pardon.

The case of Cameron Todd Willingham of Corsicana, Tex., has drawn attention because it seems to offer evidence that an innocent man was executed based on flawed science. Spurred partly by this case, the Texas fire marshal recently agreed to re-examine questionable arson convictions.

The battle to clear Mr. Willingham’s name has symbolic value for those fighting to end the death penalty. Six years ago, Justice Antonin Scalia of the Supreme Court wrote that he was unaware of “a single case — not one — in which it is clear that a person was executed for a crime he did not commit.”

Mr. Willingham’s conviction was based heavily on testimony by the Texas state fire marshal, who asserted that the scene offered clear signs of arson. Recent research has raised substantial questions about his conclusions and led to a review of other arson convictions in Texas. That research is scheduled to be presented to a panel of fire experts by January, and advocates say it could lead to the reversal of several wrongful convictions.

“Todd’s last words were: ‘Please clear my name. I did not kill my children,’ ” said Stephen Saloom, policy director of the Innocence Project, which has led the work on this case, with the pro bono assistance of the New York law firm Schulte Roth & Zabel. The Innocence Project is affiliated with Cardozo Law School at Yeshiva University.

“All the evidence against him has been disproven,” Mr. Saloom said. “There have been nine reports issued about this case over the years. We are saying to the board: you couldn’t have known before, but now you have all this evidence before you.”

Continue Reading @ NY Times

Life in prison — for stealing a leafblower

23 Sep

It’s long past time for California to rethink their criminal justice system. Prop 34 Death Penalty & Prop 36 Three Strikes are on the November ballot.  I like to think that people are waking up and realizing that what is currently in place is not working and was never designed to work.

Here is yet another example of how Three Strikes has been applied- unfairly and unjust.

By ELAINE LEEDER

The main entrance way to San Quentin State Prison.

ERIC RISBERG / Associated Press

Life in prison is unpleasant, to say the least.

To be there when you have done little to deserve it makes it particularly hard. And to expect to remain there for the rest of your life, without the possibility of parole, is almost unimaginable.

I know people for whom this is the reality. Having met many who are three strikers, I always assumed that they had committed three felonies and were there for good reasons. Then I met folks for whom this is not true.

I know a man at San Quentin State Prison, for example, who has done 17 years in prison so far for stealing a $100 leaf blower. This was his third felony, the other two were both drug possession, all non-violent crimes. Yet this man was sentenced to life imprisonment because it was his third strike under California’s three strikes law.

Enacted in 1994, this law requires a sentence of 25 years to life for someone who has committed three crimes, even non-violent ones, and has either served time for the previous crimes or committed felony petty theft. Crimes committed as youths can be counted among the three.

As a result, one person was incarcerated for stealing a piece of pizza and another for stealing golf clubs. The man who stole the leaf blower has never been violent but nevertheless sits in prison, costing us $46,000 a year, because of his crime. He was in the country legally and was working and raising a family at the time.

He is a model citizen in prison. He is well respected by his peers, has never had an infraction while incarcerated and makes sure to work and participate in regular rehabilitation programs in the hope someone eventually will see the injustice of his sentence and the fact that he has made amends.

The California Innocence Project has taken up his case in the hope it can help bring about a just result. It is obvious that this type of sentence is cruel and unusual punishment, which the U.S. Constitution forbids, and needs to be overturned. We can only hope that the criminal justice system begins to use its resources more justly and more wisely, given the overkill we see in this case. I know this man: He is not a criminal who needed to be incarcerated for 17 years for such a small crime. Where is the justice here?

I also know a woman who was the warden at San Quentin and who presided over two executions. She is now working to overturn the death penalty because she believes it is cruel and inhumane. We are the only Western society that still has the death penalty. In fact, we are listed with China, Zimbabwe, Iran and Iraq as one of the few countries in the world that still has the death penalty. Is this the company we want to be in?

If you want to learn more about issues such as this, as well as the death penalty concerns, attend a public forum on Oct. 14 from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. at Congregation Shomrei Torah, 2600 Bennett Valley Road, Santa Rosa. You can have an impact this election day, so please become more informed on three strikes and the death penalty.

Elaine Leeder is the dean of the School of Social Sciences and a professor of sociology at Sonoma State University and has recently published her latest book, “My Life with Lifers: Lessons for a Teacher, Humanity Has No Bars.” She has worked for more than 15 years at Elmira Correctional Facility in New York and at San Quentin State Prison.

Via @ PressDemocrat

 

 

 

Advocates plead for clemency in looming execution of Terrance Williams

7 Sep

“Terry’s acts of violence have, alas, an explanation of the worst sort: enveloped by anger and self-hatred, Terry lashed out and killed two of the men who sexually abused him and caused him so much pain.”

By Joseph A. Slobodzian

Inquirer Staff Writer

Terrance Williams is scheduled to die Oct. 3. He killed a man in 1985, soon after turning 18.
 
Terrance Williams is scheduled to die Oct. 3. He killed a man in 1985, soon after turning 18.

With less than a month before condemned murderer Terrance Williams is scheduled to die by lethal injection, his advocates on Thursday chose an option not used in a half-century: a plea for clemency from the governor.

Lawyers for Williams, 46, formerly of Philadelphia, filed the petition asking Gov. Corbett and the state Board of Pardons to stop Williams’ Oct. 3 execution and commute his sentence to life in prison without parole.

A broad-based group of lawyers and former judges, child advocates, and religious figures – including the widow of the man Williams killed in 1984 – urged that his life be spared for a crime committed three months after he turned 18, the minimum age for someone to be sentenced to death in the United States.

Moreover, the petition says, five members of the Philadelphia Common Pleas Court jury that condemned Williams for the murder of Amos Norwood have said they would have opted for life in prison had they heard mitigating evidence about Williams’ horrific childhood of sexual abuse by a neighbor, a teacher, and Norwood himself.

“The evidence of abuse in this case is clear,” reads a letter of support signed by 26 child advocates and experts in sexual abuse. “There can be no doubt that Terry was repeatedly and violently abused and exploited as a child and teenager by manipulative older men.

“Terry’s acts of violence have, alas, an explanation of the worst sort: enveloped by anger and self-hatred, Terry lashed out and killed two of the men who sexually abused him and caused him so much pain.”

Continue Reading @ Philly.com

 

The Supreme Court says it’s unconstitutional to sentence juveniles to life in prison without parole for murder.

25 Jun

The high court on Monday threw out Americans‘ ability to send children to prison for the rest of their lives with no chance of ever getting out. The 5-4 decision is in line with others the court has made, including ruling out the death penalty for juveniles and life without parole for young people whose crimes did not involve killing.

The decision came in the robbery and murder cases of Evan Miller and Kuntrell Jackson, who were 14 when they were convicted.

Miller was convicted of killing a man in Alabama. Jackson was convicted of being an accomplice in an Arkansas robbery that ended in murder.

 

SCOTUS opinion striking down Juvenile Life Without Parole: http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/11pdf/10-9646g2i8.pdf

 

 

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.

 

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

 

Just sit there to rot away

22 Dec

English: San Quentin State Prison Español: Pri...

Image via Wikipedia

Interview with James Horton released from prison in CA after spending years on death row and years more serving LWOP

“In a level four prison, there are no programs – there is nothing there except riots, misery, hatred and mentally ill people.”

 

This is an interview with James Horton who was released from prison in California in 2010 after spending years on death row and years more serving a life without the possibility of parole sentence. Pat Foley, a board member of the Campaign to End the Death Penalty (CEDP) and activist in the Bay Area, conducted this interview.


James, you spent over 27 years in prison, 12 of them on death row at San Quentin in California. Can you tell us about that and how you came to be released?
I was found guilty in 1985 and sentenced to death. In 1996, my case was finally heard before the California Supreme Court. It threw out the death sentence because the evidence that the prosecution had used from an old case in Chicago was found to be based on an illegal conviction. So the court threw out the death sentence and gave me life without the possibility of parole.
I was still going through the appeal process, and in 2006, at an evidentiary hearing, it was discovered that the witness who testified against me had received a deal. He had a two-year suspended sentence over his head, and they threatened him and then gave him a deal.
On March 9, 2006, the court ruled in my favor that this had been a Brady violation, because they had not disclosed the immunity deal. They threw out the conviction. I was transferred to LA County Jail, and the district attorney finally decided to reduce the charge to manslaughter. I served nine additional months on that sentence and was released on December 30, 2010.


Do you think that life without the possibility of parole (LWOP) is a just replacement for the death peanlty?
No, and this is the reason: In California, when someone has a sentence of, for sxample, 15 to 25 years, and they do what they are supposed to do inside and turn their life around, the parole board is still not letting them out. And in the cases where they do say they can get out, the governor is saying no.
So, it really doesn’t matter whether you get LWOP or not – either way, you are not gettin gout in California.
The sentence of life without the possibility of parole is just saying that the person is so deeply rotten that there is no way they can be a healthy, sane and intelligent person ever in their lirfe. And that is not the case. It just keeps a person locked up.
When you get LWOP you can never go to lower than a level four prison. And in a level four prison, there are no programs – there is nothing there except riots, misery, hatred and mentally ill people. No programs or vocational programs.
They are like the old prisons – like Alcatraz, Sing Sing. The only difference is you have a TV. That’s it – you just sit there to rot away. They should do away with both the death penalty and LWOP.
If a person changes their ways inside prison and does all the things the parole board asks them to do, they should be granted parole.
For some people inside prison, it can take awhile to snap to the reality that if they want something different in the cooking pot of their life, they are going to have to use different ingredients if they want life to taste better. It shows our lack of intelligence if we think that locking people up is going to solve the problem. We ned to end both the death penalty and life without parole.


What do you want to tell people about the death penalty?
That it’s not a deterrent. All you have to do is look at Texas. They execute more peopl in Texas then anywhere else, and yet it has the highest murder and crime rates. If it was a deterrent, you would see a defference in Texas, but you don’t.
All the death penalty does is waste money. If we didn’t have the death penalty in California, we could have money for many other things we need to do in this state, like education jobs and child care.
James can be reached at:
lumumbaafreeman@yahoo.com

Published inNewsletter of the Campaign to End the Death Penalty The New Abolitionist November 2011, Issue 55

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