Feb. 1


CALIFORNIA:

Death sentence stands, court rules


The state Supreme Court on Monday upheld an Oakland man's death sentence
for three drug-related murders in 1989.

Robert Young was 20 when he fatally shot Terry Rivers, Glen Frazier and
Sylvester Davis in separate incidents over a 3-week period in January and
February 1989. He also shot and wounded 2 others and later beat up a man
in jail who had talked to police about him, the court said.

The court said Rivers had been shot as he tried to run away after Young
had stolen drugs from another man; Frazier was shot while on his knees
pleading with Young for his life; and Davis was shot as he jumped out a
window from a house that Young had robbed.

A psychologist said Young had an IQ of 75 and possible mental problems.
But the court ruled unanimously that he had been competent to stand trial.
The justices also rejected a defense claim of racial bias in the
dismissals of three black female jurors and a claim that the prosecutor
had committed misconduct by describing Young as a gangster who could seek
forgiveness from his victims on Judgment Day.

The case is People vs. Young, S018909.

(source: San Francisco Chronicle)






OHIO:

Briton Saved from Death Row Overcome by Son's Photo


Briton Kenny Richey broke down and sobbed as he saw a photo of the son he
has never known after spending 18 years on death row in America.

Mr Richey, whose murder conviction was overturned by an Ohio appeal court
last week, said he had often tried to imagine what Sean, now 19, might
look like.

In an interview to be screened tomorrow the 40-year-old Scot can not
contain his emotion as he is shown the photograph for the 1st time.
"Christ, he looks like me," he laughs. "He's got his mothers eyes though."

Mr Richey has always denied murdering his former girlfriend's 2-year-old
daughter, Cynthia Collins, in a 1986 arson attack.

"You will never meet a more bitter or angry individual than me. Hate and
rage seethe through my blood," he says in the exclusive interview,
screened on GMTV tomorrow.

"They took from me what can't be given back."

The US authorities have been given 90 days to order a re-trial or set him
free, but Mr Richey, who is being held in jail in Ohio is prepared for the
worst.

"I know they'll appeal it. They want their money's worth and they want to
get a lot more blood from the stone," he says.

"They'll try to drag this out as long as they can."

But with release in sight, Mr Richey is dreaming of his freedom.

"I want to lay on the grass and watch the stars," he says. "Just being
able to walk out of my front door and go where the hell I want to,
whenever I want to. Without some guard telling me I can't, or some steel
door, or bars stopping me."

British MPs and top human rights campaigners have fought on Mr Richey's
behalf for years, pleading a "compelling" case of innocence.

In a message to the legal authorities, he says: "I suggest you set me free
now and stop prolonging this. Don't carry it on any longer.

"I'm an innocent man. They know it. There's no need to tell them that,
they know I'm innocent."


source: The Scotsman)






CONNECTICUT:

Conn. execution highlights 'syndrome'


Shortly after his third suicide attempt, serial killer Michael Ross wrote
that life on death row was increasingly unbearable. He described the
isolation of sitting in his cell 23 hours a day for years amid the endless
slamming of metal and dark thoughts of his own horrific crimes and his
impending execution.

"I've been doing this for 19 years now - 16 on death row - and it gets
harder every year," Ross wrote in 2003, according to court papers. "I
honestly don't think I can do much more of this. I now understand why 12
percent of the men executed in this country were men who gave up their
appeals and 'volunteered' for execution."

Ross, who has been seeking his own death and hired a lawyer to forgo his
appeals, was supposed to die by injection Monday in New England's first
execution in 45 years.

But Ross' fate is now in question after his lawyer filed papers requesting
a hearing to examine whether Ross suffers from what some experts call
"death row syndrome" - that is, he has become unhinged from being on death
row and is no longer mentally competent to decide his fate.

Death row syndrome, sometimes called death row phenomenon, refers to the
psychological effects of living under a death sentence. The concept dates
back to at least 1989, when the European Court of Human Rights deplored
"death row phenomenon" in an extradition case involving a man charged with
murder in Virginia.

No death sentence has been overturned in the United States because of
death row syndrome, according to Richard Dieter, executive director of the
Death Penalty Information Center. But a few Supreme Court justices have
said they want to look at the effects of prolonged stays on death row,
Dieter said.

Last year, 16 % of the 59 people executed in the United States had waived
appeals, up from an average of about 11 %, according to the Death Penalty
Information Center.

"It keeps going up and up," said David Elliot, spokesman for the National
Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty. "The desolate conditions of death
row lend themselves to both mental illness and a sense of hopelessness and
despair."

Ross, a 45-year-old Cornell University graduate, has confessed to 8
murders in Connecticut and New York in the early 1980s.

A state psychiatrist, Dr. Michael Norko, previously declared Ross
competent to decide to die. But Norko now believes that he may have come
to a different conclusion had he had access to Ross' writings.

Attorneys for Ross' father said they also have evidence of his
incompetence, including letters from a retired deputy warden at Northern
Correctional Institution and a prisoner who knew Ross.

"I can best describe Northern as living in a submarine or a cave," wrote
John Tokarz, the former deputy warden. "On many occasions it was suggested
that department staff assigned to Northern should be rotated every two
years because of the effect the conditions of Northern could have on their
mental health."

The prisoner, Ramon Lopez, said he believes state mental health workers
may have coerced Ross to drop his appeals.

T. R. Paulding Jr., Ross' attorney, sought the delay after U.S. District
Judge Robert Chatigny warned him on Friday to take the new evidence
seriously.

State officials reject the death row syndrome claims. Other judges have
found Ross competent.

"Certainly, we would very vigorously contest that there is a death row
syndrome or a segregated housing syndrome that affects all death row
prisoners and makes them incompetent to voluntarily, knowingly,
intelligently, waive their rights," said Attorney General Richard
Blumenthal.

Dr. Stuart Grassian, an expert in death row inmates, said in court papers
filed by Ross' public defenders, that inmates often "volunteer" for
execution.

"The conditions of confinement are so oppressive, the helplessness endured
in the roller coaster of hope and despair so wrenching and exhausting,
that ultimately the inmate can no longer bear it, and then it is only in
dropping his appeals that he has any sense of control over his fate,"
Grassian wrote.

Ross says he tried three times to commit suicide behind bars, most
recently in 2003, by trying to overdose on Tylenol, Sudafed and Motrin.
Another time, he tried to kill himself by putting a bag over his head, one
of his attorneys said.

During hearings in December, Ross testified that he wants to speed his
execution to spare the families of his victims further pain. But he has
written that there are other motives.

"The truth is I was driven more by a desire to end my own pain than out of
a noble cause," Ross wrote in 1998. "However, I knew that I couldn't say
that publicly, so I denied my own desire to leave this world and played on
the noble cause of protecting the families of my victims."

(source: Associated Press)



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