death penalty news July 8, 2004
CALIFORNIA: San Fran D.A. makes death penalty stand Kamala Harris' election in December as the new district attorney was supposed to be a turning point for police-prosecutor relations in San Francisco, where lofty, liberal ideals sometimes clash with the street-level realities of law enforcement. Harris, after all, defeated a DA who had antagonized the police by refusing to prosecute many drug crimes and by conducting an ill-fated corruption probe of the chief and his top brass. But then Harris herself promptly had a falling-out with the Police Department. Just three months after she took office, she refused to seek the death penalty against a man suspected of killing a police officer. That brought fire from police as well as Sen. Dianne Feinstein and other politicians. Harris, 39, California's first elected prosecutor of either black or East Indian descent, stuck to her guns, reminding second-guessers that she had made her opposition to capital punishment clear during her campaign. Now the furor appears to have eased, and there are signs of a newfound respect for the new DA. "You have to stay focused on your purpose for being there, which is to do the right thing and to do the just thing," she said in a recent interview. A recent poll showed that 70 percent of San Francisco voters thought Harris had done the right thing by declaring she would pursue life without parole for the officer's alleged killer. The city's Board of Supervisors, a majority of whom backed Harris' predecessor in the election, also issued a statement of support. "Kamala Harris has been heroic in really standing for the principles she ran for office on, and I don't think most people, including myself, are used to politicians actually following through on their convictions," said Van Jones, a police critic who directs the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights. Killing a police officer is one of 25 "special circumstances" that make murderers eligible for the death penalty in California. On April 10, Officer Isaac Espinoza, a married father, was gunned down with an assault rifle while patrolling one of San Francisco's roughest neighborhoods. He was the city's first officer to die in the line of duty in a decade. Less than three days later, Harris announced she would not ask a jury to condemn David Hill, 21, citing Hill's age, lack of an adult criminal record and what she described as the futility in trying to find a San Francisco jury willing to send a man to death row. Of the 640 or so inmates awaiting execution at San Quentin, only one arrived from San Francisco, and that was 15 years ago. The police union and the officer's grieving family called on Harris to reverse her stand or withdraw her office from the case. Fellow Democrats such as Feinstein criticized her, and California's attorney general considered intervening in the case. "Anyone who thought Kamala Harris was going to buckle under pressure doesn't know her very well," San Francisco public defender Jeff Adachi. "She is very adamant in terms of her positions." Harris said she hopes her relationship with the police can be repaired. There have been signs that the union may be ready to mend fences. With Francisco's murder rate climbing this year, it is imperative that the two crime-fighting agencies work together and "agree to disagree on the death penalty," said Gary Delagnes, president of the San Francisco Police Officer's Association. "You have to take a certain position of permissiveness to get elected here, but we believe Kamala knows the job," he said. Harris was a deputy DA in San Francisco before she quit. She had long labored under the perception that she owed her professional success to an ex-boyfriend, former Mayor Willie Brown. Last fall, she ran against her former boss, Terence Hallinan, and won. Harris attended Howard University in Washington and Hastings College of the Law in San Francisco. She was raised in Berkeley as the child of two professors, a Jamaican father and an East Indian mother. In her family's household, civil rights activism was a way of life. "Traditionally, people from my background would think the best way to have an impact on those communities is to become some type of social worker," she said. But she chose instead to "get right in there at the table when the decisions are being made." Harris has tried to avoid getting pigeonholed as either "hard on crime" or "soft on crime" since she took office in January. She thinks of her agenda as "smart on crime." That has meant bringing a backlog of old murder cases to trial and seeking stiffer penalties for those convicted of gun possession. Adachi, the public defender, said that plea offers under the new DA have not been as favorable to his clients. Harris is also pressing for a law that would allow her to charge men who solicit sex from underage prostitutes with child abuse, and is sponsoring fraud-awareness workshops for Chinese immigrants. "The role of the prosecutor is to do justice," Harris said. "It's not about locking people up because you can, or locking them up for the maximum time you can." (source: AP)
