death penalty news

October 7, 2004


TEXAS:

It's getting personal for death penalty protester

David Atwood has devoted much effort over the last 10 years to abolish the 
death penalty, and has taken a vow to hold vigil at the Huntsville "Walls" 
Unit during each execution this month and fast until the Oct. 26 execution 
of Dominique Green.

He began fasting Tuesday night during the execution of Edward Green II.

"I'm doing this for more personal reasons right now," Atwood said. "It took 
me a long time to decide to do this, and I thought about it a lot. In terms 
of choosing this month, I am involved in a lot of education programs about 
the death penalty, and I saw 11 coming up, and there could be more. I 
needed to do something different than I've ever done before."

Atwood is a member of the Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty and 
said the high number of executions scheduled throughout he balance of 2004 
is a reason to protest. Eleven executions are scheduled through the end of 
the year - eight from Harris County.

"I wanted to be out here for a longer period of time," he said. "When I'm 
out here, I am writing, reading and praying. I pray that we would stop 
executions at some point because it's useless and immoral. I know it's not 
a perfect system. It's a human system, and Ernest Willis is a perfect example."

Convicted in the 1986 arson murder of Betsy Beleu, Willis was sentenced to 
death. Another woman, Gail Allison, also died in the fire.

But Willis' conviction was overturned this week by 112th District Judge M. 
Brock Jones, who issued the order granting the state's motion to dismiss. 
He was released Wednesday from death row.

"In the case of Edward Green last night, I know he was guilty - he 
confessed, and there is no arguing that," Atwood said. "But I think if you 
look at his upbringing and childhood, that should have been a mitigating 
factor for getting a life sentence.

Atwood will fast on bread an water throughout the month and will be outside 
the "Walls" Unit during each execution. His organization will continue to 
educate and research the death penalty.

"We have great sympathy for the victims of the crime and their families and 
friends, but the death penalty is a false solution to a crime," Atwood said 
in a media release. "We can protect society by long-term incarceration of 
dangerous criminals. People who promote the death penalty in Texas are not 
doing this state any favor - they are only creating more victims and 
perpetuating he cycle of violence and vengeance.

"We would be doing much more for the citizens of this state by addressing 
the root of causes of violence such as the horrific abuse and neglect of 
children, untreated mental disabilities and negative peer pressure."

Atwood also said he has the opportunity in his protest to answer questions 
from stoppers-by and through the organization.

"I'm doing this because of the moral perspective," he said Wednesday. "I 
come from a Catholic background, and it was just a very natural thing for 
me to come out here."

(source: Huntsville Item)


==================


USA:

Study of Capital Jurors Challenges the Juvenile Death Penalty

A just-published study by two University of Delaware faculty members and 
two Northeastern University researchers challenges the constitutionality of 
the juvenile death penalty.

The study, which was conducted by UD?s Valerie P. Hans, professor of 
sociology and criminal justice, and Benjamin D. Fleury-Steiner, assistant 
professor of sociology and criminal justice, in conjunction with William J. 
Bowers and Michael E. Antonio of Northeastern University, finds jurors very 
reluctant to give the death penalty to juvenile defendants because of their 
immaturity and dysfunctional family backgrounds.

"We've discovered why jurors across the nation very rarely sentence a 
juvenile defendant to death,? Hans said. ?Jurors see juveniles as 
cognitively and socially immature, which makes them less than fully 
responsible for their crime. They're too young for the death penalty."

"Juvenile capital defendants come from families that are often 
dysfunctional and have done a poor job raising children,? Fleury-Steiner 
said. ?Jurors are especially angry at the defendants? families and hold 
them partly to blame. As one female juror told us, 'I wish we could put his 
parents on trial.'"

"Jurors find the death penalty less acceptable for juveniles than 
defendants with mental retardation for whom the death penalty has already 
been declared unconstitutional," Bowers, a principal research scientist, 
said. "Additionally, the likelihood of a death sentence drops off 
drastically when jurors know the defendant was under the age of 18 at the 
time of his crime."

On Wednesday, Oct. 13, the United States Supreme Court is scheduled to hear 
oral arguments about the constitutionality of the juvenile death penalty in 
Roper v. Simmons. Christopher Simmons was 17 at the time of his crime, but 
a jury convicted him and sentenced him to death. Earlier this year, the 
Missouri Supreme Court set aside his death sentence on the grounds that 
execution of persons under 18 years of age at the time of their crimes 
violates the U.S. Constitution.

The U.S. Supreme Court will decide whether the death penalty for juveniles 
violates the "conscience of the community."

The decision-making of capital jurors is a key way to measure community 
conscience, Hans said, and the new study from the Capital Jury Project 
examines the decision-making of 48 jurors from 12 capital cases with 
defendants 17 or younger at the time of their crimes, comparing their views 
with more than a thousand jurors who decided capital cases with older 
defendants.

The study finds that jurors are far less likely to impose the death penalty 
when the defendant is less than 18 years of age than when the defendant is 
an adult. The study shows that the much greater reluctance of jurors to 
impose death sentences in juvenile than in adult cases is explained by 
jurors? thinking about the defendant, his responsibility, and his maturity.

The extensive juror interviews reveal that jurors view juvenile defendants 
distinctively. Jurors in juvenile cases see a defendant's dysfunctional 
family background and upbringing as responsible in part for his or her 
behavior. They see the defendant as less than a fully mature and 
responsible member of society. Jurors emphasize the juvenile defendant's 
diminished or partial responsibility for the crime. All these factors lead 
jurors to decide on life rather than death for the vast majority of 
juvenile capital defendants.

The study also shows that jurors are more reluctant to impose a death 
sentence when the defendant is under 18 than when they believe he or she is 
mentally retarded. The U.S. Supreme Court has now outlawed capital 
punishment for the mentally retarded because it violates the conscience of 
the community.

The findings are based on data from the Capital Jury Project, a study of 
the decision making of capital jurors conducted by university-based 
researchers from 14 states with the support of the National Science 
Foundation.

The project has interviewed 1,198 jurors from 353 capital trials in 14 
states including Alabama, California, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, 
Louisiana, Missouri, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, 
Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia?states responsible for 76 percent of the 
persons on death row and 78 percent of those executed.

The death penalty is rare for juvenile offenders. Nationally, they comprise 
only 2 percent of death row inmates and those executed. Of the 1,198 
capital jurors interviewed by CJP investigators, 48 served on cases with a 
juvenile defendant. The juvenile cases in the CJP sample are regionally 
diverse and representative of juvenile cases on death row. They come from 
Alabama, Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Virginia.

The juror interview findings are consistent with public opinion polls 
showing that most Americans oppose the death penalty for juveniles, 
Fleury-Steiner said.

Two articles describing the findings are posted on the Capital Jury Project 
web site at [http://www.cjp.neu.edu].

A summary of the principal research findings can be found in an article 
titled "Capital Jurors as the Litmus Test of Community Conscience for the 
Juvenile Death Penalty" in the May-June 2004 issue of the journal Judicature.

A full report of the research findings can be found in an article titled 
"Too Young for the Death Penalty: An Empirical Examination of Community 
Conscience and the Juvenile Death Penalty from the Perspective of Capital 
Jurors" in the June 2004 issue of the Boston University Law Review.

(source: Newswise.com)

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