Jan. 12 SOUTH CAROLINA----3 new execution dates set Execution Rush 3 IN A ROW: The state has scheduled executions for 3 death-row inmates in as many weeks. Officials said the timing is a coincidence because execution dates are set when appeals in cases have been exhausted. WHO WILL DIE: Marcus Reymond Robinson is scheduled to be executed Jan. 26, James Edward Thomas will follow Feb. 2, and James Adoph Campbell will be put to death Feb. 9. Clemency hearings have been scheduled for all 3. TOO MUCH RUSH: Death penalty opponents plan to keep pushing for a moratorium on executions. They said three deaths in a row may at least help raise awareness about flaws in the state's judicial system. (source: Associated Press) WASHINTON (state): Supreme Court agrees to consider death penalty for man in 1991 slaying of Holly Washa The U.S. Supreme Court agreed today to consider reinstating the death sentence of Cal Coburn Brown, who was convicted in a 1991 carjacking, rape and murder in SeaTac. The justices without comment accepted the state of Washington's appeal of a lower court ruling that overturned Brown's sentence. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said a potential juror was improperly excluded over his willingness to impose the death penalty. Brown carjacked Holly Washa, 21, and drove her to a hotel near Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. He held her at the motel before leaving her to die. Brown, 47, turned himself in after he raped and tried to kill another woman in Palm Springs, Calif. He admitted to both crimes. In 1993, a King County jury convicted him and sentenced him to die. A three-judge appeals court panel set aside the death sentence in December 2005. The juror in question was challenged by prosecutors because he indicated he would impose the death penalty only if the defendant were in the position to kill again. Jurors' options were limited: they could sentence Brown to death or life in prison with no parole. Defense lawyers did not object at trial. When the issue was raised on appeal, Washington state courts and a federal judge affirmed the conviction. But the federal appeals panel said the juror should not have been excused because he said he would consider the death penalty in an appropriate case. The state argued to the Supreme Court that the appeals court should have deferred to state courts in this case under a 1996 federal law that was designed to make the legal system more efficient in capital cases. (source: Associated Press) NEW YORK: Death penalty dominates the docket at a federal courthouse in NYC Martin Aguilar "Sassy" robbed drug dealers, shot at couples parked in cars for kicks and once killed a man by stabbing him with a screwdriver. In short, prosecutors argue, he was a one-man crime wave worthy of execution - and he's not alone. At the same federal courthouse in Brooklyn, 2 other men - a cop killer and a notorious druglord - are fighting for their lives in an unusual confluence of 3 death penalty trials. A 4th capital trial involving a triple-murder defendant has opened in Manhattan federal court as well. "It's totally unprecedented to have2, let alone 4 cases going on at one time in one city," said Kevin McNally, a death penalty expert. Aguilar, 33, was spared Friday when a jury said it could not reach the required unanimous verdict on whether he should be executed, meaning he'll automatically receive a sentence of life in prison without parole. But the death penalty docket in Brooklyn is far from done: 2 more capital trials are scheduled to begin in the spring. Previously, only three capital cases had been tried in Brooklyn since 1994, when Congress dramatically broadened the federal death penalty statute. Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Roslynn Mauskopf declined through a spokesman to discuss the cluster of cases. U.S. Department of Justice spokesman Erik Ablin would say only that the department has a vigorous, closed-door review process designed to apply the federal death penalty "fairly across the country." Death penalty opponents have complained that starting with the tenure of former Attorney General John Ashcroft, officials in Washington began rubber-stamping death penalty cases, particularly in states with no capital punishment of their own. In New York, the state's highest court declared the state death penalty law unconstitutional in 2004. While the volume of state death penalty cases has decreased in recent years, federal cases have multiplied, said Richard Dieter, executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center. One result: There are now 46 inmates on the federal death row - more than double the total in 2000; 3, including Timothy McVeigh, have been put to death since 2001. Defense attorneys say a blatant example of the federal government's hunger for a death sentence in New York was seen last March, when prosecutors announced they were pursuing capital cases against 5 defendants - including a mother accused of being a lookout in a murder - in the case against a notorious crack kingpin, Kenneth "Supreme" McGriff. Less than 2 weeks later, the prosecutors reversed themselves without explanation, saying McGriff alone would face death. McGriff's lawyer, David Ruhnke, called the maneuvering "simply absurd." Today, McGriff sits in a courtroom on the 10th floor of the Brooklyn courthouse, accused of paying $50,000 to have 2 rivals gunned down in 2001 - an alleged encore to a criminal career that made him a legend in the same Queens neighborhood that produced rap stars like Ja Rule and 50 Cent. McGriff, 46, emerged from prison in the 1990s and sought to turn his life around by producing music and movies with the help of Irv "Gotti" Lorenzo, a neighborhood friend who headed the successful Murder Inc. record label, his lawyer said. But prosecutors allege the deal allowed the defendant to launder more than $1 million in drug money through the label. If a jury convicts McGriff of murder conspiracy and other charges, the same panel would be asked to decide whether he should receive death. Another jury will begin the penalty phase next week in the trial of Ronell Wilson, 23, convicted last month in the execution-style slaying of 2 police officers during an undercover weapons buy gone awry. A third jury convicted Aguilar, a drug-dealing member of the Latin Kings street gang, last month of shooting a man in the head to pay off a debt to a cocaine supplier. A gravedigger testified that he helped the defendant dump the body down a cemetery storm drain - "We heard a splash" - where it was found rotting a year later. It was the crowning crime of a lifetime of violence that continued as he awaited trial in federal lockup, said prosecutor Todd Harrison. Aguilar, he said, stabbed a fellow inmate before going to court for jury selection. "He's committed virtually every kind of crime known to our society," Harrison said. Aguilar's lawyers sought to persuade jurors to spare his life with testimony by his mother about his rough upbringing. His mother testified that his father slaughtered his pet rabbit to discourage him from becoming a veterinarian and complained that his "Sassy" nickname was "too girly." The defendant "has a kernel of good in him and if his life is spared, that kernel will grow," defense attorney Lou Freeman said before the jury vote. Aguilar and the other defendants could take some solace in the fact that New York juries are reluctant to impose death. The last time a federal death sentence was imposed in the city was for a bank robber who killed an FBI agent - in 1954. In the Aguilar case, the anonymous jurors deliberated for six hours before voting 10-2 against death. "As for taking a taking a life, we don't have that right," a woman on the jury said afterward outside court. "God put us here and God should take us." (source: Associated Press) MONTANA: Former MSU athletes may face death penalty In Bozeman, prosecutors will be allowed to seek the death penalty for 2 former Montana State University athletes if the men are convicted of killing a suspected drug dealer, a judge has ruled. However, Gallatin County Attorney Marty Lambert has not decided whether he will seek death sentences in the case. Former Bobcat basketball player Branden Miller and former redshirt football player John Lebrum are charged with murder, kidnapping and evidence tampering in the June 23 shooting of Jason Wright, 26. Defense attorneys had argued that Lambert should not be allowed to seek the death penalty because he failed to notify the court, in writing and within 60 days of arraignment, that he planned to do so. The purpose of filing the notice is to inform the defendants of their potential punishment and help them prepare for trial. District Judge Mike Salvagni ruled this week that Lambert's failure to file the paperwork within 60 days did not prejudice the defendants' cases, nor did it violate their rights to due process. Lambert included death as a possible punishment when he filed the charges against Lebrum and Miller, Salvagni said in his order. The defendants were informed when they appeared in both Justice Court and District Court that they could be sentenced to death, the judge said. He also said that in court briefs, attorneys on both sides have referred to Wright's death as a capital case. ''From the record, it is evident that the defendant was aware of the possible imposition of the death penalty at the inception of this case,'' Salvagni wrote. Lambert said Thursday he has filed the death-penalty paperwork but can withdraw it later. He said he will make the decision after he has all the evidence and has had a chance to discuss the matter with Wright's family. Defense attorneys said they will continue pressing to get the death penalty off the table. They may challenge Salvagni's ruling, said Al Avignone, Lebrum's attorney. (source: Associated Press) OREGON: Death row drama opens dialogue on capital punishment----AHS students perform Dead Man Walking To some people, Matthew Poncelet's role in the rape and murder of a teenage couple parked at a Louisiana lovers' lane after a high school football game painted him as a cold-blooded murderer deserving the worst possible punishment. But to his three younger brothers, he was a man, not a monster. Did Poncelet deserve to die? Astoria High School students this month have swung the spotlight on the issue of capital punishment - or the death penalty - as they prepare for a February stage production of "Dead Man Walking." With a script written by Tim Robbins, who directed the 1995 film of the same name, the story is based on the experiences detailed in a novel by Sister Helen Prejean. Poncelet's character is actually an amalgam of 2 convicts the nun counseled on death row. The story walks a fine line on a divisive issue, its foundation rooted in religious, moral, logical and emotional views. Critics say capital punishment lowers government to a criminal's level, that it violates human rights, that it costs more than lifelong incarceration, that it could lead to the deaths of people wrongly convicted. Proponents argue the practice deters crime, that it prevents repeat offenders, that it's cheaper than long-term high-security imprisonment and that the victims of crimes lost their rights, too. AHS students hope comprehensive research can help them portray all sides of the controversial issue. Cast members have each spent 8 to 12 hours so far reading about laws, personal experiences and the death penalty's history. "We're having to do a lot of research, but I think it's going to build everyone's characters more," said Christina Tweed, 18, who plays a prison worker. "People are really going to be able to connect and form their own opinions." And it's important for people her age to explore sensitive topics, she said. "It's helping me look past Astoria," said Tweed. "I'm going to go to college soon, and I'm going to be exposed to a lot of different things and different opinions. This just helps me figure out where I stand on everything before I'm thrown into all that." That's the goal of Jenni Newton, the school's drama director. She said theater offers a perfect opportunity to probe challenging subject matter. "I believe theater is an art that helps equip students to make their own decisions," Newton said. "That's an invaluable thing to teach this age group." The process has led her to examine her own opinions as well, although she refuses to share them with her cast until the last curtain falls. "When it started, I wasn't even sure where I stood," she said. "Good theater makes you think." To use the script, the high school had to agree to a few requirements. In 2004, rather than having the stage version of "Dead Man Walking" produced professionally, Tim Robbins offered the play to a group of schools, mostly Catholic. Their success led to the creation of the Dead Man Walking School Theatre Project, which allows schools to use the play on several conditions: They must provide feedback; multiple academic departments must be involved in a larger study of capital punishment; and script changes must be minimal and pre-approved under the project. Astoria's production has involved speech and debate, yearbook, drama and other students. On Wednesday, several classes met with Aba Gayle, of Silverton, whose 19-year-old daughter was stabbed to death in 1980. Her murderer was sentenced to die, a punishment Gayle does not support. Since forgiving the man more than a decade ago, she has traveled internationally to speak against the death penalty. Next week, the school will hear from Clatsop County District Attorney Josh Marquis and abolitionist Magdaleno Rose-Avila, director of the Northwest Immigrant Rights Project in Seattle, at an evening forum that opens the debate up to the public. In addition, students have examined their own opinions and connections to the death penalty. They have spoken with counselors about rape and other violent crimes, and they have studied the personal accounts of death row inmates, victims' anguished families, inmates' bereaved families, prison workers, attorneys and others in the judicial system. "There are a lot of repercussions to the death penalty other than the person being put to death," Aba Gayle told the "Dead Man Walking" cast. Student Meredith Boullie, 17, agreed. "It affects more people than it seems at first," she said, noting an inmate's family members can also become victims. Vice Principal Gary Sunderland said he hasn't found a consistent stance on the issue, "but there's such a thing as justice." "If someone is going to choose to be a monster, maybe their life should be ended," he said. The death penalty is sanctioned by 38 of the country's 50 states, each with its own definition of capital crimes and chosen method of execution. More than 30 inmates sit on Oregon's death row. Most of them are white. Their average age is 44. If executed, they will die by a lethal chemical injection. But it's unclear whether that will actually happen to many of the prisoners. Oregon has a tumultuous history with the law, abolishing it and reinstating it multiple times in the past century. Only two people have been executed since 1976, both in the 1990s. Both also gave up their rights to appeal - essentially, said D.A. Marquis, they chose to die. "It's something that's rarely sought and rarely imposed," he said. "I think that's a good thing." Marquis has requested a death sentence in only one case - the 1998 murder of a woman in Warrenton - but it was not granted. It's something he reserves for only the worst cases. "We don't execute people to avenge victims," said Marquis. "We execute people in the United States because there are some crimes that are so awful they deserve it." A murder is not comparable to a state-sanctioned death, he said. With the play's character Poncelet: "Although he's being put to death, he's able to say his good-byes." "This is something I feel strongly about as someone who tries murder cases," said Marquis. "It's state killing, not state murder." But the play aims to show all points of view. Marquis feels the film, and likely the stage version, largely fulfill that goal. "It is very easy when you are passionately opposed to the death penalty for moral or religious reasons to identify with the killer" when they're chained "and often contrite," he said. "They're not the vicious predator that they were 10 or 20 years ago when they committed what got them on death row. "One of the things 'Dead Man Walking' does that is laudable is it frames the debate in a way that is not emotionally one-sided." Astoria will be one of the first public high schools to perform "Dead Man Walking," and just the 2nd high school in Oregon to try it. The only other is Portland private school Jesuit High, which staged the play in spring 2005. For teachers Jeff Hall and Elaine Kloser, who managed the play there, the benefits they've seen for students have been endless. "From the educational standpoint, kids got to really see all sides of a complicated issue," said Hall. "From a theatrical standpoint, kids saw in a really tangible way how theater could be a catalyst for dialogue." That dialogue has continued through today. A group of Jesuit students now meets regularly to discuss current issues involving the death penalty. "Drama is not self-serving; it's service to a community, to a story and to each other," said Kloser. "The play did exactly what Sister Helen (Prejean) wanted it to. It started discourse that is continuing today." Astoria High School's production of "Dead Man Walking" opens Feb. 16. (source: The Daily Astorian) ALABAMA: Appeals court orders new hearing for death row inmate In Montgomery, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals has ordered a new sentencing hearing for Brandon Washington, sentenced to death by lethal injection for the execution-style shooting death of a store clerk at a Birmingham Radio Shack store. The appeals court upheld Washington's conviction, but ruled that the trial court in Jefferson County erred when it did not consider a pre-sentencing report at Washington's sentencing. Washington was convicted in the Jan. 16, 2005 shooting death of Walter Justin Campbell, a clerk at a Radio Shack store in Birmingham's Huffman neighborhood. Washington, a student at Miles College at the time, had been fired from the store days earlier for failing to show up for work. The appeals court rejected Washington's arguments that the testimony of two key witnesses should not have been considered because police learned of the witnesses from statements made by Washington before he was read his Miranda rights. The appeals court said Washington should have another sentencing hearing, so he can question the findings of the pre-sentencing report. (source: Associated Press)
[Deathpenalty] death penalty news---S.C., WASH., N.Y., MONT., ORE., ALA.
Rick Halperin Fri, 12 Jan 2007 18:33:10 -0600 (Central Standard Time)
