Feb. 18 NORTH CAROLINA: Executions face new legal challenge 2 death row inmates have filed an unusual legal challenge to North Carolina's capital punishment system, arguing state leaders approved a rule governing executions without sufficient public input. The challenge stems from the action taken by the Council of State, a panel of the state's top elected government officials, in approving a proposed "execution protocol" that updated the state's procedures for putting an inmate to death. The council approved the new procedure after a judge halted three executions, saying the panel must sign off on any changes to the protocol. State corrections officials had modified the protocol to change the role a doctor plays in the process after the state Medical Board threatened to punish any physician who takes part in an execution. But attorney Hardy Lewis, who represents inmates Jerry W. Conner and James A. Campbell, said state law requires that such proposals be published in the North Carolina Register for review and be discussed at a public hearing. Only then can the council vote on approving the proposal, he said. "We have a lot to say about this rule and a lot to say about the way the protocol was put together," Lewis said. "There are limits on what an agency can do." Lewis said the challenge, filed through the state Office of Administrative Hearings, will be considered by an administrative law judge. Even though the council approved the new protocol, Attorney General Roy Cooper has said he would try to negotiate a compromise with the state medical board before trying to reschedule the postponed executions. Gov. Mike Easley has said the medical board's ruling has effectively placed a moratorium on the death penalty in North Carolina. (source: Associated Press) ALABAMA: SCLC, NAACP rally for woman charged with capital murder David Brown believes his stepdaughter, Shakira Thomas. He believes what she told him on a warm July day in 2005, that scared and nervous, the 19-year-old girl walked into the bathroom at her residence and gave birth to a baby girl. She told him the baby died naturally moments later, and out of fright and confusion, she put the baby in a garbage bag and placed it in the woods behind their home. District Attorney Doug Valeska believes what Thomas told investigators. After Brown found the baby and called police, Thomas was interrogated and told police she birthed the baby in the bathroom toilet and left it there around five minutes. She told police she could hear the baby crying, that it was alive. She told the police she didn't want the baby, that she picked the girl up out of the toilet and held it close to her and heard the baby cry and felt it kick until the baby stopped breathing, then put the baby in a garbage bag and placed it in the woods behind their home. A grand jury indicted Thomas for capital murder. Her trial is scheduled for later this year. Brown believes his stepdaughter, still scared and confused, told the investigators what they wanted to hear so she could go home. He believes she was coerced by police and made the story up about the baby being alive. Valeska believes Thomas made up the story about the baby dying naturally in order to avoid punishment. Brown cites an autopsy report that lists the cause of death as undetermined, and that there was no indication of external injuries. He also cites the age of the baby, believed to be between 24 and 30 weeks. He and Thomas' attorneys, Tom Brantley and Billy Joe Sheffield, believe Thomas has been overcharged. Brown said the only legitimate charge his stepdaughter should face is desecration of a corpse. "My daughter is not a murderer and the facts will speak for it," Brown said. Brown contacted the NAACP and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference for assistance. They came Friday night. A rally for Thomas - who is in the Houston County jail with no bond - was held at the chapel of Greater Beulah Baptist Church. The chapel was filled with church members who came to support Thomas. "We didnt come here to start trouble," said Rev. A.A. Scales, president of the Alabama chapter of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. "We came here to bring relief. Were not afraid to march, but now is not the time." Franklin Jones, president of the local chapter of the NAACP, said the organizations came to show support for Thomas. "We're simply asking the court to temper justice with mercy," Jones said. All present said they did not want to make a racial issue out of the case. "This case is not about race. It is about lawyering and legal issues," Brantley said. Brantley, Sheffield and Valeska are under a gag order imposed by Circuit Judge Lawson Little and are not allowed to discuss the facts of the case. When contacted Friday, Valeska said the issues of the case are about facts that should be determined by a jury in court. Thomas' statements to police as well as other testimony were offered in open court during a bond hearing in August of 2005 in which Little denied bond for Thomas. Dothan police Sgt. Tony Luker said Thomas told her the baby was alive when it was born. He said Thomas told investigators she was nervous about being a mother and felt it would be better if the baby died. He speculated the baby died either from suffocation in the toilet or suffocation in the garbage bag. But, according to Brantley, her initial statement to police was that the baby did not move when it was born. Sheffield filed a motion to dismiss the indictment earlier this week. A hearing on the matter is scheduled for the end of the month. (source: Dothan Eagle)
[Deathpenalty] death penalty news----N.C., ALA.
Rick Halperin Sun, 18 Feb 2007 15:15:41 -0600 (Central Standard Time)
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news----N.C., ALA. Rick Halperin
- [Deathpenalty] death penalty news----N.C., ALA. Rick Halperin
