The most
significant death-penalty stories of 2011 have been named by Execution Watch, a news program on
Pacifica Radio Network’s KPFT FM 90.1 that broadcasts and streams live whenever Texas puts a prisoner to
death:
1. Troy
Davis is executed in Georgia
despite lingering doubts about his guilt. The rush to execution was not as unusual
as the broad international awareness of, and support for, Davis.
2. Mumia
Abu-Jamal makes the metaphorically giant leap from Pennsylvania’s
death row into general prison population after the Philadelphia district attorney announces it
will stop its 30-year effort to obtain a durable death penalty against him.
3. Texas executes Mexican
national Humberto Leal, flouting international law by refusing to give him a
new hearing despite the failure by police to tell him at arrest that he may contact
the Mexican Consulate for legal help.
4. Illinois abolishes the
death penalty, reducing the number of states with capital punishment to 34. In
a related story, Oregon’s
governor says no executions will take place during his term but neither
commutes any death sentences nor stops prison officials from selling excess
execution drugs to other states.
5. The
European Union escalates its activism against American use of the death penalty
by banning the export to the United
States of barbiturates that could be used to
in lethal-injection executions.
6. The
number of new death sentences in the United States reaches an historic
low of 78, the first time in more than three decades that fewer than 100 people
were condemned to death.
7. Anthony
Graves, exonerated from death row for a murder he did not commit, successfully
sues the State of Texas
for compensation owed to him by law, accepting from the comptroller a check for
$1.45 million.
8. The
Texas death penalty is declared
unconstitutional by State District Judge Teresa Hawthorne of Dallas, echoing Harris County District Judge
Kevin Fine’s earlier ruling, made moot by a plea deal.
9. The
death penalty becomes part of the GOP primary race when Rick Perry elicits
applause from a debate audience for presiding over more executions than any
governor in history and disbelief from the media for declaring he has never
lost sleep over an execution.
10. Director Werner
Herzog successfully releases INTO THE ABYSS, a gritty documentary describing from
several points of view a triple murder in Texas and its aftermath. Another documentary
involving capital punishment, INCENDIARY, premieres and wins an award at Austin’s South by
SouthWest Film Festival.
Other stories in 2011 that Execution Watch designated as especially noteworthy include:
-- A district judge in Georgetown
takes under advisement a request for a special inquiry into alleged wrongdoing
by the top prosecutor in a murder trial that put an innocent man behind bars
for 25 years. Michael Morton presented evidence that ex-district attorney Ken
Anderson knowingly withheld evidence that might have led to his acquittal.
-- The U.S. Supreme Court vacates a $14 million jury verdict
against former New Orleans District Attorney Harry Connick Sr. for withholding
evidence that might have averted the wrongful conviction and near-execution of John
Thompson. A divided court said a prosecutor’s office cannot be held liable for a
member’s illegal withholding of exculpatory evidence due to inadequate training.
-- The Texas Forensic Science Commission releases its final report on the
Todd Willingham case, directing the Innocence Project of Texas to work with the
state fire marshall to review more than 700 arson cases for possible wrongful
convictions based on outdated science.
-- Literary critics respond enthusiastically to the
publication of AUTHOBIOGRAPHY OF AN EXECUTION, a highly personal and humanistic
memoir by David Dow, litigation director of Texas Defender Service.
-- A Louisiana-based coalition of civic and religious groups
called I Want to Serve launches a campaign to outlaw the exclusion from capital
juries of people who oppose the death penalty.
1 comment:
After Canada abolished the death penalty, the homicide rate went down and the conviction rate went up. (See "How Did We Become Canada's Insane Cousin?" at http://thepoliticali.blogspot.com/2012/01/how-did-we-become-canadas-insane-cousin.html) It's unbelievable to me that executions are still hyped by people like Rick Perry in the face of DNA evidence that innocent people have been killed and that the evidence has been suppressed.
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