Feb. 7


GEORGIA:

Georgia's King Tribute Rings Hollow


With flags flying at half-staff across Georgia, thousands of mourners
streamed into the Capitol Rotunda in Atlanta Saturday to pay their
respects to Coretta Scott King. Public officials offered statements of
praise and admiration, and Governor Sonny Perdue, who opened the Capitol
for the viewing, hailed the late civil rights and human rights hero as a
national icon. Through its display of reverence, the state drew a sharp
contrast between 2006 and 1968, when Governor Lester Maddox, an avid
segregationist, refused to close the state government for the funeral of
Martin Luther King Jr. But with regard to one of Coretta's signature
issues--capital punishment--the Georgia of today looks all too similar to
the Georgia of decades past.

In a speech to the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty in
1981, Coretta delivered one of the world's most famous statements against
capital punishment. "As one whose husband and mother-in-law have died the
victims of murder and assassination, I stand firmly and unequivocally
opposed to the death penalty for those convicted of capital offenses," she
said. "An evil deed is not redeemed by an evil deed of retaliation.
Justice is never advanced in the taking of a human life. Morality is never
upheld by a legalized murder." Despite having spent the past week
memorializing this death penalty abolitionist, Georgia remains one of the
nation's leaders in executions, ranking 4th all-time among US states and
7th since the reinstatement of capital punishment in 1976. Moreover, four
decades after the height of the civil rights movement, racial
discrimination--one of the principal factors in the rise of the death
penalty in the United States in the 1920s and '30s--continues to plague
Georgia's capital punishment process.

In fact, the day Coretta Scott King died, the American Bar Association
released a Death Penalty Assessment Report for Georgia, which notes that
the state is not in compliance with ABA recommendations in a majority of
categories concerning the treatment of racial and ethnic minorities.
Specifically, the report suggests that Georgia continues to ignore
patterns of racial discrimination and has failed to adopt legislation
explicitly stating that no person should be put to death in accordance
with a sentence sought or imposed as a result of the race of the defendant
or victim. Though the ABA's conclusions are hardly the first of their
kind, Atlanta's political heavyweights have consistently dismissed calls
for a moratorium on executions and ignored the prospect of abolition.

As for the past, Georgia is in large part responsible for the modern death
penalty--not just within its own borders but throughout the entire United
States. In 1968, the year Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated, capital
punishment in America was a practice in decline. But Georgia, having
executed more people than any other state from 1930 to 1967, joined with
Texas in defending the death penalty at all costs, eventually before the
US Supreme Court in 1972. In Furman v. Georgia, the Court declared the 2
states' death penalty statutes unconstitutional and suspended capital
punishment nationwide. Undeterred, Georgia quickly revised its statute and
re-ignited its death penalty machine. In the 1976 case Gregg v. Georgia,
the Court upheld the new statute, effectively launching the modern era of
capital punishment.

Since Georgia prevailed in Gregg, 1,009 individuals have been executed in
the United States, and the 1,010th execution is scheduled on the day of
Coretta's funeral. This uninterrupted use of capital punishment throughout
the nation suggests that while political leaders in Georgia and beyond
seem well aware of the significance of the past week's events, they have
thus far failed to grasp the spirit of humanity underlying that
significance.

"Coretta Scott King taught us the power of forgiveness," says David
Elliot, communications director of the National Coalition to Abolish the
Death Penalty. "And with the power of forgiveness she reminded us of the
possibility of human redemption."

Though the official events honoring Coretta Scott King conclude today, the
state of Georgia--with more than 100 inmates on its death row and a
history of dictating the nation's course on capital punishment--has an
opportunity to honor her legacy for much longer by recognizing that
possibility.

(source: Patrick Mulvaney, The Nation)






USA:

Far from the shores of the U.S. and a little more than a month after his
execution at the hands of the state of California, the life and
contributions of Stanley Tookie Williams fueled a discussion about the
death penalty at a workshop held as part of the World Social Forum in
Caracas, Venezuela.

The panel of experts, Barbara Becnel, the executive director of
Neighborhood House in Richmond, California, a close friend of Williams and
consultant on the film about his life, "Redemption," Alice Kim, national
coordinator of the Campaign to End the Death Penalty, Loretta Capeheart,
Ph.D., assistant professor of criminal justice at Northeastern Illinois
University, and Hctor Reyes, co-editor of Obrero Socialista, shocked
participants with statistics that caused many to wonder what is wrong with
those in charge of the penal system in America.

Kim told the group assembled in a small classroom at the Universidad
Central de Venezuela that in 2006, 30 years after the reinstatement of the
death penalty in the United States: "The Campaign to End the Death Penalty
is launching a new campaign called '30 Years is Enough.' Since the death
penalty has been reinstated, 1,000 men and women have been executed, but
only 126 people have been freed (from death rows) across America. It is an
indictment of our criminal justice system that innocent people have
probably been executed."

In 1996, the Supreme Court found proof that a death row inmate named
Herrera was innocent, but he was executed anyway, Kim explained, because
his lawyer missed a filing deadline. Kim took umbrage at U.S. Supreme
Court Justice John Robertss response to a reporters question, "Do you
allow the execution of an innocent person if there is a question about his
or her guilt?" Roberts said the question is: "Will you allow someone to
challenge a sentence 6 or 7 times?"

When asked if the death penalty could lead to the execution of an innocent
person, Kim quoted Justice Antonin Scalia as saying, "Of course it will.
That's the risk inherent in having the death penalty."

"If the innocent don't matter, who does?" Kim asked.

Today, more than half of the people in America's prisons on death row are
either Black or Latino, and 2 million are in prison.

Kim told the audience: "In 1980, there was an explicit agenda by
politicians to house African Americans and Latinos in prison. They created
the '3 strikes you're out' rule, where you can go to prison for stealing a
slice of pizza."

The coordinator said Chicago prosecutors in the 1980s were so racist that
they played a game called, "Nigger by the Pound." They would weigh each
person they got a conviction on, and the prosecutor who scored a total of
4,000 pounds first won the game.

"When pressed about the game, a Cook County judge admitted the title of
the game was offensive but the game was just gallows humor,'" Kim
explained, adding that at the same time, white police officers were
torturing African-American men. One officer named John Birch, a Vietnam
veteran, used a makeshift black box to electrocute African American men.

"He would attach electrodes to their ears, testicles and elbows. He
suffocated them, held one to a radiator, beat them, played Russian
Roulette with them. It wasnt until the community organized that John Birch
got fired. But he was involved in 12 cases of men who landed on death
row," she continued.

Former President Clinton left the campaign trail to preside over the
execution of Ricky Ray Radnor, Kim added.

However, not all Americans support this type of injustice, Kim affirmed,
adding, "Beginning in 2000, Gov. Ryan enacted the 1st moratorium on the
death penalty in Chicago. He commuted the sentences of 167 death row
inmates and pardoned 4 others. In Illinois, we learned an important
lesson. If we organize, we can defeat the death penalty."

"In December, we lost a fighter from death row - Stan Tookie Williams.
Stan's legacy is that he rejuvenated the campaign to end the death penalty
like we haven't seen in a decade."

"On Dec. 13, 2005, the state of California killed and murdered Stanley
Tookie Williams. A politician asked me not to use those words, but I will
always call it what it was - murder," said Barbara Becnel.

"Before they killed him, they enacted one last act of cruel and unusual
punishment. They pretended they couldn't find the vein and caused him to
writhe in pain. This went on for 25 minutes," said Becnel, who witnessed
Williams execution along with 4 others. "And it took 10 minutes to kill
him. A reporter called me the next day and said she had never seen such a
barbaric scene."

Becnel said that she and the other witnesses were told that they would be
kicked out if they spoke out or sobbed too loudly. "Once he was dead and
we were waiting to leave, I whispered to another friend, 'Let's say the
State of California just killed an innocent man. When we got to the last
step, we shouted it out."

Williams' friend of 13 years said the warden used "racist and brutal"
tactics to kill Tookie Williams. "They moved him to a part of town where
only 1 % of the population was African-American. There were 3 Black jurors
selected, but they kicked all 3 off," she continued.

Becnel said the prosecutor used racist language to describe Stanley Tookie
Williams. "He told jurors that they should consider themselves visiting
the San Francisco Zoo when they visited Stanley Tookie Williams. He called
him an animal. He went on to say that South Central L.A. is comparable to
the natural habitat of wild animals in the jungle."

She said that Stanley Tookie Williams was framed by witnesses who said
Williams volunteered a confession to them. "All charges were dropped
against them," Becnel added.

Prior to Williams' execution, Becnel paid a private investigator to gather
evidence in support of his innocence. "People in jail have come forward
and started giving affidavits. Arnold Schwarzenegger didn't care that we
had started the process of getting evidence. He killed him anyway."

Becnel said the investigators report will prove Williams' innocence. And
she is determined that his death not be in vain.

"We will make a proposal to the World Social Forum for support in
declaring Dec. 13, 2006, the 1st International Conference Against the
Death Penalty."P> Before playing a taped message from Williams, Becnel
confirmed that in the last few hours he rejected everything from the
state. "They wanted to give him a fine meal, a pill to calm his nerves and
they wanted him to write his last words so that people who hated him could
read it in the death penalty chamber."

Williams confirmed Becnels testimony of his last hours, in a letter he
gave her. He wrote that if he was indeed executed he wanted no last meal,
no special religious person, no pills to calm his nerves and no warden to
read his last words.

In the letter, Williams also forgave those who sent him to his death.

"Still my redemption allows me to understand those who want to end my
life. Many of them are ignorant, and so I forgive them, for they know not
what they do. I spent the last 13 years working to help youth, and that
has brought me peace and happiness. My redemption and faith in God
sustains me and continues to sustain me. My nine children's books, my
memoir, 'Blue Rage, Black Redemption, sustain me. I am no longer a man of
war. I die a man of peace."

Then Williams calm, clear voice came through the audio recording.

"I have been on San Quentin's death row for 24 years. On Easter Sunday
2004, a 2-hour movie aired about my life, "Redemption." I helped created
the 1st youth gang in L.A. 34 years ago. My detractors argued that I did
not apologize. I will never apologize for capital crimes I did not commit,
not even to save my life. And I did not commit the crimes for which I was
convicted and remain on death row.

"In 1988, redemption was an alien concept to me, but I embarked on an
additional path toward redemption."

Becnel said Williams' own attorneys tried to get him to confess to the
crimes. "Then they tried to get me to convince him to do it. I wouldn't
and he wouldn't - and he's dead. And Arnold Schwarzenegger used that
against him to justify his execution. But Stan proved that the most
wretched of our society can be redeemed."

Not even a month had passed by after Stanley Tookie Williams' execution
that a blind, crippled, Native American was killed. "There are 2 sides in
America regarding the death penalty: the pro-death racists and supporters
of the campaign to end the death penalty," Kim concluded.

When the floor was opened for questions, a young social worker, Charlene
Smythe from Bayview Hunters Point, said: "Black and brown men from my
neighborhood, who are often unemployed, are stopped, beaten, picked up and
brought to the police station. Here in Venezuela you're proud of your
national color - red. But in my neighborhood, young men can be picked up
for wearing the wrong color. Red, blue and black are gang-related colors.

"America is the biggest violator of human rights in the world. The police
in our country think they have a right to beat and torture without
question. They can make up crimes and charge you with them, whether you
did it or not. When you go to the police to file a complaint, you never
hear back from them. This is the same police department that got caught
making a video with insulting comments about Blacks, gays, Latinos and
others," she said.

CC Campbell-Rock, a native New Orleanian, veteran journalist and Katrina
evacuee, is the new editor of the Bay View.

(source: ThugLifeArmy.com)






CALIFORNIA:

Judge Sends Cop Killer To Death Row----Officer Was Killed During Traffic
Stop In 2003


A judge in North County has given the maximum sentence to a man who killed
an Oceanside police officer in 2003, NBC 7/39 reported.

It has been 2 months since a jury found Adrian Camacho guilty of killing
Officer Tony Zeppetella during a traffic stop. That jury later recommended
that Camacho receive the death penalty, and on Tuesday, Superior Court
Judge Joan Weber endorsed that recommendation in a Vista courthouse.

Camacho, 30, was convicted Nov. 14 of killing Zeppetella in the parking
lot of the Navy Federal Credit Union in Oceanside, about 35 miles north of
San Diego.

"It was cut and dried, the brutality of it, the slow process in which this
officer died," juror John Fortune told reporters at the time of Camacho's
conviction. "It was torture for him."

During closing arguments in November, prosecutor David Rubin described
Zeppetella, 27, as an adoring husband who left behind a young wife and an
18-month-old boy, Jakob, because Camacho, a convicted felon and small-time
drug dealer, wanted to avoid returning to prison.

"His desire to stay out trumped [Zeppetella's] getting to go home and
having another nap with Jakob," Rubin told the jury.

Deputy Public Defender Kathleen Cannon argued that executions should be
reserved for only the worst criminals such as terrorists and men who
snatch little girls from their bedrooms in the middle of the night.

Camacho's attorneys did not deny that their client was the gunman, but
they said mental illness stemming from years of heroin abuse prevented him
from premeditating the killing.

Witnesses testified that Zeppetella followed Camacho into the parking lot
in what seemed like a routine traffic stop, then heard a series of
gunshots. Some said they saw Camacho beat Zeppetella on the back of the
head with a gun, then fire 4 times before fleeing in the officer's car.

A detective testified that Camacho was arrested about 4 hours after the
shooting at his in-laws' house, where authorities found 2 guns, including
the slain officer's.

Camacho has been imprisoned 4 times for weapons possession, drug
possession, possession of stolen property and felony evading, according to
court records. He has been deported twice for being in the United States
illegally.

(source: SanDiegoChannel)



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