May 2


KENTUCKY:

State Defends Lethal Injection Protocol


After 4 days last month, in which the legal team for 2 death rows tried to
illustrate problems with Kentucky's method of execution, the state went to
work in Franklin Circuit Court Monday to prove that the protocol is a
"painless and humane death." The inmates' lawsuit claiming the 3 drug
cocktail procedure is unconstitutional led to the Franklin Circuit Court
trial. Closing arguments are set for May 10th with a ruling from the judge
expected later this month.

"From the inmate's point of view it's no different than undergoing a
general anesthesia for surgery," Dr. Mark Dershwitz, an expert on
anesthesiology from the University of Massachusetts testified Monday. He
says the 1st drug of the 3 drugs administered does its job, by putting the
inmate to sleep.

(source: WTVQ News)






MARYLAND:

Death penalty opponent to speak


The author of "Dead Man Walking" will discuss her ongoing work in
advancing social justice through abolishing the death penalty at 7 p.m.,
Thursday, in Mount St. Mary's Knott Auditorium.

The lecuture concludes a weeklong series designed to promote public
discussion of social justice issues and is sponsored by Mount St. Mary's
University, the Mount's chapter of the Campaign to End the Death Penalty,
and Callings, a Mount program of theological exploration funded by the
Lilly Endowment.

For more information, contact Trudy Conway, chair of the Mount's
philosophy department, at 301-447-5368.

Sister Helen Prejean, a prominent voice in the national abolition
movement, is committed to bringing young people to a fuller awareness of
the Catholic Church's social teachings.

After her order assigned her to be the spiritual advisor to convicted
murderer and death row inmate Patrick Sonnier, depicted in her book and
played by Sean Penn in the movie "Dead Man Walking", she became an
advocate against the death penalty.

Since Sonnier's execution, she has spoken around the country and written 2
books, including "The Death of Innocents," which tells of the executions
of 2 innocent men.

(source: gazette.net)






PENNSYLVANIA:

Walter 1 of only 6 on death row in Pa.


Shonda Walter is 1 of only 6 women in the state and 145 in the nation on
death row.

Walter, 25, formerly of 703 Bellefonte Ave., was convicted last month of
1st-degree murder and sentenced to die by lethal injection for killing her
elderly neighbor, James Sementelli, 83, 17 N. Summit St., on March 25,
2003.

Walter is in the Clinton County Correctional Facility at McElhattan
awaiting transfer to the State Correctional Institute at Muncy, the only
state prison that houses female death row inmates.

Clinton County Sheriff Chuck Ankney said he expects to receive Walters
transfer orders this week.

At Muncy, she will join 5 other female inmates awaiting death by lethal
injection, which will take place at the State Correctional Institution at
Rockview. Many of the inmates have been housed at Muncy for several years
as their appeals snake through the courts.

The woman sitting on death row the longest is Delores Rivers. The
51-year-old Philadelphia woman was sentenced to death on March 16, 1989.

Rivers was convicted of the January 1988 fatal stabbing of Viola Burt, 74,
in Burts home in Frankford. Rivers was an in-home nurse for the ailing
Burt at the time.

Rivers was the state's 1st condemned woman since the death penalty was
reinstated in 1978.

Yaa Asantewa Amma, born Donetta Hill, has been sitting on death row since
her sentence was handed out in Philadelphia County on March 11, 1993.

Amma, 39, may be the most infamous woman on death row in the state, with
numerous organizations calling for her to be released.

One organization called her trial "farcical," stating she was appointed an
inexperienced attorney who failed to investigate her case, failed to call
important witnesses to testify on her behalf, failed to acquire DNA
testing of blood and hair samples to prove her innocence, and withheld
evidence that should have been submitted at trial to prove her innocence.

Amma, a crack-addicted prostitute from South Philadelphia, was sentenced
to death for the 1990 claw-hammer killings of 2 customers who tried to
shortchange her. The bodies of Nghia Guy Lu, 72, and Nairobe Dupont, 21,
were discovered in their homes by relatives.

Carolyn King, 39, was sentenced on Nov. 30, 1994 for joining in the
September 1993 killing of Guy Goodman, a Palmyra, Lebanon County, florist.

Michelle Sue Tharp, 36, was sentence to death in Washington County on Nov.
14, 2000, convicted of starving her 7-year-old daughter to death and
dumping the childs body in a garbage bin in 1998. Tharp later reported her
daughter missing to the police.

Beth Markman, 39, was sentenced to death on Feb. 1, 2002 in Cumberland
County. She was found guilty of kidnapping and killing Leslie Rae White, a
student at the Harrisburg Area Community College, because Markman was
jealous of her.

Markmans boyfriend, William Houseman, was also sentenced to death for
Whites slaying.

Also, Kelly ODonnell was sentenced to death in 1993 for her part in the
November 1992 bludgeoning and dismemberment of West Kensington pizza
parlor owner Eleftherios Eleftheriou. Her death sentence, however, was
reversed in 1999.

No woman has been executed in the state since Corrine Sykes in 1946. Irene
Schroader was the only other woman executed in the state in the 20th
century, put to death in 1931.

There are 216 men on death row in the state. The last man to be executed
was killer-cannibal Gary Heidnik on July 6, 1999. He had been convicted
and given 2 death sentences in July 1988 for murdering two women he had
imprisoned in his Philadelphia home.

The person on death row the longest is Leslie Beasley, 53, who was
sentenced to die in Philadelphia County Court in 1981. He was convicted
for the 1981 killing of a police officer, as well as another murder in
1980 and received 2 death sentences.

Nearly all the male death row inmates are housed at the State Correctional
Institute in Greene County.

(source: Lock Haven Express)






FLORIDA:

Florida's New "Stand Your Ground" Law: Why It's More Extreme than Other
States' Self-Defense Measures, And How It Got that Way


Last week, Governor Jeb Bush signed a bill that has become known as the
"Stand Your Ground" law. The law immunizes citizens who use deadly force
in self-defense against criminal prosecution and civil liability.

Critics of the law are afraid it will promote vigilantism. Supporters say
that it merely brings Florida into line with the majority of other states.
But the truth is the law goes beyond what other states are doing.

In this column, I'll discuss the new law, and argue that it is an example
of a simple reform that was hijacked by the NRA.

What Florida Self-Defense Law Previously Was Like

Until last week, the law in Florida concerning self-defense could be
divided into 2 parts: First, there were the rules that governed when
deadly force could be used if one was attacked in one's own home. Second,
there were the rules that governed when deadly force could be used if one
were attacked outside of one's own home.

To explain the prior Florida rules, I will use the example of Lisa, who is
attacked by Bob.

First, imagine Lisa is attacked by Bob in her own home. She could use
deadly force if she were reasonably afraid that Bob was going to inflict a
serious injury on her. Moreover, even if Bob was a burglar interested only
in her property and she had the option of running outside of her house to
safety, she could use deadly force if she were reasonably afraid that Bob
was going to inflict a serious injury on her if she did not run away. Put
simply, she is allowed to "stand her ground."

This is known as the "castle doctrine" - based on the maxim that "One's
home is one's castle" - and it governs the rules of self-defense for
criminal and tort law in almost every state.

Second, imagine, instead, that Lisa is attacked by Bob on the street in
Florida. In this instance, she cannot use deadly force if she can retreat
safely from Bob. (For instance, suppose a drunken, knife-wielding Bob
confronts Lisa in front of a bar featuring armed bouncers, into which Lisa
can safely escape.) So even if Lisa knows Bob will kill her if she "stands
her ground," she cannot kill him while still being able to retreat.

Florida's retreat doctrine reflected a certain attitude among courts which
might seem quaint today, but is easy to understand. Florida courts took
the position that life was so precious--even the lives of people like
Bob--that victims of violent attacks should not kill unless it became
absolutely necessary.

The bottom line, then, was that victims had to take advantage of a "safe"
retreat except when attacked in their own homes. But what if the victim
doesn't retreat? What consequences follow? Could she be prosecuted, sued,
or both?

In almost every state except Florida, Lisa could not be criminally
prosecuted. In a majority of states, she also cannot be sued in tort.

But some states would allow Lisa to be sued. And the Restatement (Second)
of Torts - a classic statement of tort law principles - agrees: Its
Section 65 would still allow Bob to Lisa for personal injuries if she
responded to his upturned knife with a gunshot when she could have
retreated safely.

How the New "Stand Your Ground" Law Changed the "Castle" Doctrine

Florida's new "Stand Your Ground" law changes Florida's self-defense rules
in several ways.

First, it is now very easy to invoke the "castle" doctrine in Florida.

Under the old law, a person who killed someone in their home had the
burden of proof to show that they were in fear for their safety. Now, all
a person has to do is establish that the person they killed was
"unlawfully" and "forcibly" entering their home when they shot the victim.

That is because the new creates a presumption that anyone who forcibly and
illegally enters a home is intent on threatening the lives of the people
within. And, at least according to a report written for the Judiciary
Committee of the Florida Senate, that presumption is conclusive; it cannot
be rebutted with contrary evidence.

So let's go back to Lisa and Bob. Under the old law, Lisa would have had
to prove not only that Bob was in her home, but also that she was afraid
for her life (or the lives of others in the house). In reality, that was
often easy to do--usually juries would take the word of a living homeowner
over a dead burglar (even if the burglar was unarmed). But now Lisa, in
theory, has a free hand to shoot even a plainly unarmed burglar as to whom
he or she, in fact, felt no fear at all.

Second, the new Florida law expands the definition of "castle" to include
vehicles--such as cars and boats. This expansion the castle doctrine was
clearly intended to address carjacking.

Third, in Florida, Lisa can now "stand her ground" even if she is outside
of her home. But to do so, she must "reasonably believe" that using deadly
force is necessary to prevent "imminent" use of deadly force against
herself or others.

Thus, Florida is now joining the large number of states who do not value
"life" above the right to stand unmolested wherever one wants. It's
unlikely, however, that this change will change outcomes in particular
cases.

Previously, all Lisa had to do to win her case was argue that she honestly
and reasonably believed that she could not retreat safely. Now, she has to
argue, instead - somewhat similarly - that she reasonably believed that if
she didn't use deadly force, Bob imminently would.

Under either standard, Lisa still has the burden of proof to justify her
killing. Also, under either standard, the jury may disbelieve her if there
are witnesses around to contradict her story.

It's Not True that the New Law Merely Aligns Florida with Other States

According to Rep. Dennis Baxley, R-Ocala, the new law brings Florida into
line with other states. "We're not breaking ground here. We're catching
up," Baxley said.

That is probably more or less true when it comes to the legal standard
governing use of deadly force outside the house. But it is very inaccurate
when it comes to the legal standard governing killings inside of
homes--and, especially, in vehicles, which now count as a kind of "castle"
under the "castle doctrine." Here, the new law has truly radical effects.

Why? Because the new law bulks up the old "castle" doctrine - once a
reasonable rule of law - until it is a legal monstrosity: a legal
Incredible Hulk.

Recall that now, at least according to the Senate Report, there is an
irrebuttable presumption that anyone who forcibly and illegally enters a
home - or, under the new law, a car -- is intent on threatening the lives
of the people within. That means that even in the face of overwhelming
evidence that Bob had no intent to physically harm Lisa, his estate will
not be able to sue her.

It may, in fact, be the reality, that in almost all cases in which a
citizen kills an unlawful intruder, or carjacker, it is because the
unlawful intruder, or carjacker, was capable of killing, and willing to
kill, the citizen first. (I suppose the "gentleman thief" no longer exists
in Florida.) But there is at least a chance of serious miscarriages of
justice.

Suppose that a doctor's drug addict brother breaks into his mansion to
raid the medicine cabinet. Now, the doctor can kill his brother to ensure
that he will be the sole heir to their wealthy parents' estate.

Or suppose a teacher, in a school parking lot, finds a student to whom
he's just given an "F," breaking into his SUV, so that he can deface the
interior. Though the intent was clearly vandalism, and the boy has no
record of violence, the irate teacher guns down the student. According to
Florida, this would appear to be legal.

What can proponents say when examples like these are raised? It's hard to
imagine. Perhaps they would claim that those who break the law by
violating another's "castle" deserve what they get - even if what they get
is death.

The "Stand Your Ground" Law Says Property Is More Important than Life

In this respect, Florida has taken a wrong turn that no other state should
emulate.

In effect, its law allows citizens to kill other citizens in defense of
property.

The principle holding that life is more valuable than the defense of
property is deeply embedded in our legal history. The Florida law
contravenes this simple principle. (That is does so by hiding behind a
legislative "presumption" that all burglars or car thieves are potential
killers should not obscure that fact.)

The old version of the castle doctrine told homeowners that they could
kill when they reasonably believed that their lives were in danger. Now
the law tells average citizens they can kill when they reasonably believe
that their homes or vehicles have been illegally and forcibly invaded.

That adds an additional wrinkle - and an additional way innocents can be
killed. Anyone can make a mistake in the heat of the moment, but the
margin for error in the new law is unbearably large.

What if Bob is a panhandler who approaches Sue's car and touches it
against her wishes? Perhaps it would be obvious to most observers that he
had no intention of entering the car, but what if Sue panics and thinks he
is a carjacker?

It is of no help to say that the law was not designed to permit her to use
deadly force under those circumstances: after Bob is dead and Sue is
facing criminal and civil penalties, the damage has already been done.

The only test of laws is their effect in the real world. The castle
doctrine, until it was changed by Florida, was a practical compromise
between a number of competing interests in life. It was a balance between
the state's interest in allowing citizens to protect their own lives, and
its interest in minimizing violence in the streets - ranging from
vigilantism to a too-quick trigger finger.

The new "Stand Your Ground" law is likely to produce a number of ugly
real-world side effects. Its real purpose seems to be the capital
punishment of property-criminals, regardless of whether their deaths help
protect the lives of anyone else.

Furthermore, Florida's castle doctrine has now been expanded so that the
test for self-defense covers far more circumstances and locations than
before.

All in all, the room for error is much larger. In addition, the law sends
a very confusing message to the citizens of Florida about when they can
use lethal force with impunity.

If my prediction that this law will insulate certain home- or car-owners
who kill without good reason to do so turns out to be correct, I hope the
Florida legislature will have the courage to revisit this law and fix it.
In the meantime, the NRA, flush with their victory in Florida, is lobbying
to have the "Stand Your Ground" law adopted in other states, such as New
York. Other states should reject the NRA's "help" when it comes to
revising their self-defense laws.

(source: FindLaw - Anthony J. Sebok, a FindLaw columnist, is a Professor
at Brooklyn Law School. His other columns on tort issues may be found in
the archive of his columns on this site.)



Reply via email to