Aug. 8



USA:

AG Concedes Death Penalty Could Be Changed----Attorney General Vows To
Change Capital Punishment System


President Bush's top law enforcement officer seems to be softening his
hard line on capital punishment.

Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez, who was Bush's legal advisor during
dozens of executions when Bush was Governor of Texas, conceded in Chicago
on Monday, that the system can stand some improving.

The U.S. Attorney General, the man often rumored to be the president's
next choice for the U.S. Supreme Court, spoke Monday to the American Bar
Association and later took issue with its stand against capital
punishment.

"I believe in the death penalty," Gonzalez said.

Just hours before, the nation's lawyers had heard a scathing indictment of
the death penalty from a member of the United States Supreme Court.

Justice John Paul Stevens told the ABA that he is disturbed by what he
called "serious flaws" in the system, and by what he called the
"substantial numbers of death sentences that have been imposed
erroneously."

Questioned by reporters, Attorney General Gonzalez would not agree that
the system is flawed, or as former Illinois Governor George Ryan once
described it, "broken," but Gonzalez said he and President Bush think it
can be changed.

"We ought to take advantage of changing technology such as DNA to ensure
the fact that only the guilty are punished," Gonzalez said.

A professor of criminal law at George Washington University said Bush and
Gonzalez should see to that.

"The federal government can provide adequate resources to the states so
there can be competent representation, so there can be experts, so there
can be scientific evidence," said law professor Stephen Saltzburg.

Gonzalez, who has been a hardliner on the death penalty, conceded Monday
that it can be applied only if there is confidence that the system
punishes the guilty, not the innocent.

He also said the accused in capital cases should be guaranteed competent
legal help.

(source: WBBM (Chicago) TV News)






TEXAS----impending execution

Execution set for man convicted in Corsicana


A 16-year trek through the U.S. legal system, beginning in Navarro County
district court in 1989 and winding through the Supreme Court last month,
ends Wednesday.

Barring an 11th-hour intervention, Gary Sterling, 38, will die by lethal
injection in the death chamber at Huntsville's notorious Walls Unit.

Sterling was convicted in Corsicana of the 1988 robbery and murder of
72-year-old John Wesley Carty, according to legal records.

He was first apprehended in connection with the murders of 2 elderly
brothers in Hill County, three days after the Carty murder. Sterling
admitted that Leroy and William M. Porter, 70 and 72 years old, had been
repeatedly struck with "a wrecking bar."

A Frost resident reported seeing Sterling and his brother, Randy Sterling,
in possession of a silver Chevrolet Caprice matching the description of
one stolen from the Porter brothers.

Randy Sterling was later apprehended, and Gary Sterling fled from the
scene, as the pair were removing the motor from the vehicle.

Sterling would then admit to the slaying of Carty, directing Hill and
Navarro county law enforcement officers to the body in an area near the
Brushie Prairie community. It was later determined that Carty had been
beaten to death with an automotive bumper jack.

Also found at the scene was the remains of Deloris June Smith. Both were
reportedly abducted from Carty's home.

(source: Athens Daily Review)



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