Jan. 24


LOUISIANA:

Sabine district attorney disputes author's claims in book


DeSoto-Sabine District Attorney Don Burkett believes a newly released book
that purports to be "an eyewitness account of wrongful executions,"
including that of a Sabine Parish man, belongs on the fiction shelf of
bookstores because of the many inaccuracies he says it contains.

The book, The Death of Innocents, is Sister Helen Prejean's 2nd that deals
with the death penalty in America. A Roman Catholic nun from Louisiana,
Prejean first drew fame with her best selling book, Dead Man Walking,
which was made into a movie featuring Susan Sarandon and Sean Penn.

The Death of Innocents is Prejean's account of two executions that she
witnessed. Prejean believes both men -- Dobie Gillis Williams of Many and
Joseph O'Dell of Virginia -- were innocent. Appeals courts and the U.S.
Supreme Court disagreed.

"I don't know whether she is deliberately trying to mislead the public or
if she's being mislead by others. But she's wrong," Burkett said of
Prejean's review of Williams' case. The high profile case was Burkett's
capital murder trial after his election as district attorney in the fall
of 1984.

Prejean did not sit in on Williams' trial, and she did not interview
Burkett prior to the December publication of the book.

Attempts to reach Prejean through an e-mail address posted on her Web site
and at 2 California book stores where she had scheduled appearances
Thursday and Friday were unsuccessful.

Court records dispute many of Prejean's claims, Burkett said, specifically
her assertion that Williams was mentally handicapped and had a low IQ of
65. Further, Burkett bristles at Prejean's suggestion that an innocent man
was executed.

"I respect her opinion of the death penalty and I'm not going to criticize
her on that. But there are reasonable people who have different opinions
on the death penalty," Burkett said. "I don't celebrate it ... but in this
case, the right thing was done and the right man was convicted. Any
reasonable person familiar with the facts of this case knows that Dobie
Gillis Williams committed this crime."

An all-white jury convicted Williams, who was black, of first-degree
murder in the July 1984 stabbing death of Sonya Knippers. He was hours
away from execution in November 1998 when Burkett requested a delay to
allow for DNA testing of a blood stain found on a curtain in the bathroom
of the Knippers' home. DNA testing was not as advanced when Williams was
convicted.

After the DNA analysis concluded that the sample on the curtain matched
Williams' blood, a new execution date was set and Williams died by lethal
injection on Jan. 8, 1999. Prejean and members of the Knippers family were
witnesses.

He pleaded guilty to armed robbery and was sentenced to 15 years, but the
conviction was thrown out because the state Supreme Court ruled that the
sentencing judge did not give Williams all of his rights in the guilty
plea.

He was then arrested on an attempted burglary charge, after a woman
reported that a man had removed a screen from her window and was
attempting to get inside. Williams was serving time on that charge in 1984
when he was released on a 48-hour furlough and broke into the Knippers'
residence.

Williams' pattern of behavior up to Knippers' slaying disproves Prejean's
statement in her book that he was "not prone to violence," Burkett said.

Sonya Knippers' husband, Herb, told police that he heard his wife scream
from the bathroom "A black man is killing me." He reached the locked
bathroom door just as his wife was stumbling out. She died a short time
later of multiple stab wounds to the upper part of her body.

Williams was arrested within hours at his grandfather's house. He
confessed to the murder in the presence of three officers, one of whom was
a black officer, Burkett said. However, that tape malfunctioned and could
not be used in court.

But Burkett stands by the evidence presented at the crime. Photographs
show the visible scrape marks on Williams' legs, which were used as proof
that Williams sustained injury when jumping out of the small bathroom
window of the Knippers' home. Dr. George McCormick, a forensics
pathologist, matched the scrape marks to the brick ledge.

"And a small piece of black pigmented skin found on that brick was
consistent with the gouge on Williams' leg," Burkett said, adding there
were also scrapes on his torso. "He was placed in the vicinity of the
crime at the time of the crime by someone who knew him and saw him there."

Prejean's book questions that evidence. She includes a critique of an
expert, Stuart Jones, who relied upon crime scene photos, trial testimony
and court records to reach his opinions 14 years after the crime, said
Williams could not have entered and exited through the small window that
measured 11 inches high and 1 foot, 8 inches wide.

James also is critical of the blood stain found on the bathroom window's
curtain. It became critical when Williams' execution was stalled to allow
for further analysis.

Burkett selected the independent Dallas lab GeneScreen to do the analysis.
Prejean criticized Burkett for not allowing Williams' defense team to do
its own study in a timely manner. When the defense finally got its hands
on the raw test data, it sent it to two DNA experts who questioned the
validity of the results and asked for more testing, which was denied.

GeneScreen concluded that the blood stain was a "one in almost 4 billion
match" to Williams, Burkett said. "You can't get past the blood in that
bathroom. The only reason his blood was there was because he was in
there."

For Burkett, one of the more blatant errors in Prejean's book is her claim
that Williams was mentally retarded. Though Prejean doesn't dwell on it,
she states he had an IQ of 65, "well below the score of 70 that indicates
mental retardation. ... His low IQ forces him to play catch-up during most
conversations, especially if he is in a group."

An IQ score is important since less than 2 years after his execution, the
Supreme Court ruled that it is unconstitutional to kill a mentally
disabled person.

Burkett said Prejean relies on the results of only one of the many
intelligence tests that were administered to Williams over several years.
"The one she is using says he is retarded ... but the bottom line is that
test is only an estimate. She doesn't mention the other tests that were
much more comprehensive that says he was of borderline intelligence, but
not retarded."

Williams scored an IQ of 65 on a Slosson Intelligence Test, a 10 to 20
minute test that serves as a quick estimate of general verbal ability. A
60 to 90 minute Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-Revised Test,
administered to Williams by the same doctor who did the Slosson test,
indicates that Williams had a verbal IQ of 79, a performance IQ of 75 and
a full scale IQ of 76. He had a reading and spelling level in excess of
the 12th grade and a math level in the 6th grade.

"All of these scores are in the borderline range of intelligence," wrote
Mark Zinnerman, clinical psychologist, in report that was part of
Williams' post conviction hearing in August 1988.

Williams' case takes up the 1st chapter of the Prejean's book. Another
centers on O'Dell. Other chapters deal with court rulings and
constitutional arguments related to the death penalty.

Prejean calls the book the "beginning of a dialogue" that she hopes will
engage the public in a discussion about the practice.

"I invite you to join me in the struggle to end the death penalty in the
United States and around the world. Its practice demeans us all," Prejean
writes.

(source: Shreveport Times)






GEORGIA:

Jones to face death penalty


A man accused of a quadruple murder last year in Gordon County will face
the death penalty, the prosecutor said.

The decision was announced this morning during a pre-trial hearing.

Jerry Jones is accused of killing former girlfriend Melissa Peelers
mother, stepfather and sister at their home in Ranger, as well as his
infant daughter with Peeler.

Authorites believe the murder spree was committed in a jealous rage on
January 7, 2004, shortly after Peeler had left him. Police believe he then
took off with Peelers 3 surviving young children - 2 of them his own - and
fled just over the border to East Ridge, Tenn., where he was caught after
a car chase the following evening.

(source: Associated Press)






WYOMING:

Death penalty sought in prison murder


Prosecutors will seek the death penalty in the case of an inmate accused
of killing a nurse.

Floyd DeWayne Grady, 28, of Cheyenne, is charged in the murder April 15 of
Wyoming Honor Farm nurse Tammy Sue Watts.

Watts, 39, of Hudson, died of head trauma and strangulation.

A motion was filed Monday informing the court of the state's intention to
seek capital punishment, said Deputy County Attorney Marcia Bean, who is
handling the case.

"We feel it is absolutely appropriate in this case," she said.

Grady is charged with 2 counts of 1st-degree murder, 1 count of attempted
sexual assault and 1 count of kidnapping.

1 count of murder charges him with killing Watts while attempting sexual
assault; the other charges that Grady killed the woman with premeditated
malice.

He pleaded not guilty to all counts in December.

Grady had been an inmate at the minimum-security Honor Farm in Riverton
since November 2002. He originally was sent to the Wyoming State
Penitentiary in Rawlins in May 1995 for 10 to 30 years after being
convicted of 1st-degree sexual assault.

He was moved to the Honor Farm after passing through the Corrections
Department's screening and qualification process.

Shortly after Watts' death, Grady was returned to the maximum-security
penitentiary.

The trial is to begin Oct. 31.

(source: Associated Press)






CALIFORNIA:

Executions: Legal but Morally Wrong


Re "California Executes Confessed Murderer," Jan. 19: Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger's refusal to grant clemency to Donald Beardslee killed a
human being. Unlike the cop-killing robot in the first "Terminator" movie,
the terminators Schwarzenegger played in sequels avoided killing humans.
It is morally wrong to kill a human being who is not threatening you.

Schwarzenegger missed a golden opportunity to limit his killing to the
movies, and to remind people that killings depicted in movies do not
justify and should not incite killing in real life. A real-life action
hero would have exerted moral leadership and calmed the bloodthirsty mob.
Now's he another pandering politician.

David A. Holtzman----West Los Angeles

*

Teresa is a remarkable woman whose only son was killed at 18 years old.
The prosecutor in the case asked if she would help him get the death
penalty for her son's killer. Without a moment's hesitation, she said,
"And break another mother's heart. There is no way I will help you do
that." Anytime "justice" includes killing someone, we will just continue
creating more victims while giving lip service to our concern for victims.

Father George Horan----Co-Director, Office of Restorative
Justice----Catholic Archdiocese of L.A.

(source: Letters to the Editor, Los Angeles, Times, Jan. 21)



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