Feb. 10



TEXAS----new execution date

New death date for inmate spared from execution this week


A Texas death row inmate whose execution date scheduled for this week was halted because of a legal technicality has received a new execution date.

Texas Department of Criminal Justice spokesman Jason Clark says the prison agency has received court documents setting 37-year-old prisoner Tilon Carter's lethal injection for May 16.

Carter had been set to die Tuesday for smothering an 89-year-old man during a robbery at the man's Fort Worth home. But the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals issued an order last Friday halting the punishment because a state office that represents death row inmates was notified of the scheduled punishment a half-day late, a violation of state law.

Carter was condemned for the 2004 robbery and slaying of James Tomlin, a retired Bell Helicopter worker.

(source: Associated Press)

********************

Executions under Greg Abbott, Jan. 21, 2015-present----22

Executions in Texas: Dec. 7, 1982----present-----540

Abbott#--------scheduled execution date-----name------------Tx. #

23---------March 7------------------Rolando Ruiz----------541

24---------March 14-----------------James Bigby-----------542

25---------April 12-----------------Paul Storey-----------543

26---------May 16-------------------Tilon Carter----------544

27---------June 28------------------Steven Long-----------545

28---------July 19-----------------Kosoul Chanthakoummane---546

(sources: TDCJ & Rick Halperin)






FLORIDA:

Florida Supreme Court Upholds Sentence for Killing Guard


The Florida Supreme Court is upholding the conviction and death sentence for a man who killed a Daytona Beach corrections officer.

The court on Thursday rejected arguments by Enoch Hall that his attorney mishandled his case. The court also noted that his sentence should remain in place because a jury unanimously recommended the death penalty.

Hall was serving life sentences in the sexual battery and kidnapping of a 66-year-old woman when he killed a corrections officer. Hall stabbed 50-year-old Donna Fitzgerald 22 times with sheet metal in 2008.

Fitzgerald was alone while supervising Hall and others in an inmate work program. An investigation determined Hall may not have been eligible for the program, and Fitzgerald should've had a radio or body alarm to summon help.

(source: WTXL news)

**************************

Death sentence tossed out in Florida drive-by shooting case


The Florida Supreme Court is throwing out the death sentence of a Jacksonville man convicted in a drive-by shooting that killed a young girl watching television at her grandma's house.

The high court on Thursday upheld Rasheem Dubose's conviction for the crime, but ordered a new sentencing hearing because a jury did not unanimously agree to impose the death penalty. The court in a split decision recently ruled that death sentences require a unanimous jury recommendation if the sentence was imposed after a 2002 key ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court.

DreShawna Washington-Davis, 8, was killed when 29 shots were fired into her house in July 2006. Authorities said the shooting was a retaliatory strike against the child's uncle.

Dubose's brothers, Terrell Dubose and Tajuane Dubose, were sentenced to life in prison for their role in the crime.

(source for both: Associated Press)






ALABAMA:

Former Alabama death row inmates to share their stories of confinement, freedom

Racism, poverty, freedom and confinement will be the focus of speeches delivered by 2 former Alabama death row inmates, sharing their stories at the University of North Alabama later this month.

Anthony Ray Hinton, who spent 30 years on death row, and Gary Drinkard, who was released after 5 years, will share their stories of exoneration and wrongful conviction during a conference at UNA Feb. 23-24. The events are open to the public.

Hinton walked free in April 2015 at age 52. He'd been on death row for 30 years for the 1985 murders of 2 Birmingham fast food restaurant managers. Hinton and his attorneys asked prosecutors for years to retest the gun that linked him to the crime.

On April 3, Anthony Ray Hinton walked free, prosecutors dropping the charges - the U.S. Supreme Court had ordered a retrial - that he'd killed 2 men in a Birmingham area fast food managers in 1985. The bullets didn't match up beyond a doubt, the state said.

Shortly before his release, new tests ultimately ruled that the bullets found at the crime scenes couldn't be conclusively linked to the gun or to each other.

Hinton's conviction, he has said, is rooted in racism, poverty and failures of the criminal justice system.

"We want to help people think critically about the crimes and evidence that warrant sentencing someone to death," said Stephanie Renee Adair, one of several English graduate students helping plan the conference at UNA.

Incarceration has been a focus of Alabama politics recently, particularly with Gov. Robert Bentley's plans of spending millions on new prisons to house the state's inmates, who currently are being held in overcrowded facilities.

Bentley will propose a plan similar to the one he proposed last year, borrowing $800 million to build 4 new prisons, while closing most of the existing prisons.

"Mass incarceration is a crisis, but we're not really answering why," said Katie Owens-Murphy, an assistant professor of English at UNA. "Maybe the problem isn't with space but rather with the way the criminal justice system itself operates. Anthony Ray Hinton and Gary Drinkard show how it becomes possible to convict and sentence innocent people, even to death."

Gary Drinkard spent 5 years on death row for the Morgan County murder of Dalton Pace, a junkyard dealer. But, he was released in 2000 after getting a new trial. Drinkard said his lawyers weren't up to the task of defending him in a death penalty case the 1st time around, and the Alabama Supreme Court threw out his 1st conviction.

7 men have been released from death row in Alabama since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976. One man who has been there shares his experience.

The 2 are speaking at the Alabama Regional Graduate Conference because its focus this year is on confinement. Graduate students have studied prison literature as part of their focus on American literature.

Anthony Ray Hinton and Gary Drinkard show how it becomes possible to convict and sentence innocent people, even to death.

Rather than having only academic research and scholarship tell the story of the criminal justice system, Adair said the conference will offer a real-life testimony of the system's failures.

"We're putting on human face on how the system can go wrong," Adair said.

Hinton will speak Feb. 23 at 6 p.m. in UNA's Guillot University Center. Drinkard will speak at 4 p.m. the next day.

(source: al.com)






MISSISSIPPI:

Mississippi's Death Penalty Bill Would DESTROY What Makes Us Human


We are the ones who will be hurt by this.

While commuting home last night with my boyfriend, he asked me a very interesting question. Well, interesting and alarming. "Do you think that there will start being real fist fights in Congress?"

I wanted to say no, that our country was civilized and humane, that we solved things with words.

But then I really thought about the simmering resentment and anger that's been brewing since before the election, and I had to think differently: America is coming dangerously close to losing what makes us special - our civility.

Of the 33 states in this country that have the death penalty, lethal injection is the primary method in which executions are carried out. This continues to be true, even in the face of mass shortages of the drugs used to put convicted felons to death.

In Oklahoma and Utah, death by firing squad is still technically legal, by it's more of a legal holdover than anything else.

The last time a man was killed by firing squad was in 2010. Convicted murderer Ronnie Lee Gardner requested the firing squad because he felt it was more in keeping with Mormon beliefs.

Even though the choice of death was his own, it caused tremendous controversy at the time for obvious reasons chief among them the fact that we as a people believe ourselves more civilized than that manner of execution would make us seem.

The 8 other states that have alternative means of execution, such as hanging or the gas chamber, don't use them as their primary method of execution. That's because their continued existence is more of a legal oversight than anything else (like how in Carmel, New York it is still technically illegal to eat ice cream on the sidewalk).

That's what makes the new law introduced in Mississippi so disgusting.

Under House Bill 636, firing squad, electrocution and gas chambers will be added as modes of execution in cases where lethal injection may be blocked.

The thinking here: The lack of the right drugs for lethal injection is causing delays that leave prisoners on death row for decades.

Now, I'm all for efficiency, but as a taxpayer, I have zero problem continuing to pay for a prisoner's upkeep if the alternative is something as cruel and senseless as the violent modes of death being introduced by this bill.

We're living in a scary time, one of serious upheaval.

Our president is frequently compared to Adolf Hitler, who famously perpetrated a genocide of the Jewish people using gas chambers to help hurry things along.

Does overcrowding in Mississippi prisons really merit the gassing of human beings?

I understand that the death penalty itself is a complicated and controversial issue.

Even as I write this, I can hear someone saying "if we???re going to be killing them anyway how does the way we kill them matter?"

I understand that, to one degree or another, but I do think there's a humane way to do it that doesn't reduce us from human beings to animals.

We've so long prided ourselves in this country of being civilized, in doing the right thing whenever possible. For some (like me) the election of Donald Trump began the very real erosion of that belief.

Lest we forget, one of Trump's favorite general, James Mattis, had no problem sharing that "it's fun to shoot some people."

While people like that exist, I think they are the exception and not the rule.

I think we can be better than that, that we SHOULD be better than that.

Maybe instead of passing this bill, Mississippi legislators should be examining what's causing shortages of the drugs used for humane executions instead of reconciling themselves to losing part of what makes them human.

(source: Rebecca Jane Stokes, yourtango.com)






OHIO:

Court filing: Ohio asked 7 states in vain for lethal drug


Ohio asked 7 other states for a lethal injection drug in an unsuccessful attempt to continue putting inmates to death, according to a court filing.

The prisons agency also tried in vain to obtain the active ingredient in the drug, pentobarbital, in hopes of having a compounded version made, the filing said.

State attorneys cited the information in a Feb. 3 motion with a Cincinnati appeals court to explain why reverting to pentobarbital is not an option.

The filing says Ohio asked Alabama, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Missouri, Texas and Virginia for the drug.

"None of those states agreed to provide pentobarbital to Ohio," according to the filing, which summarized a sealed deposition by Stephen Gray, the prison agency's in-house lawyer.

The filing doesn't say when Ohio made those requests. Of the 7 states, only Georgia, Missouri and Texas have current supplies of pentobarbital. Those states won't reveal the source.

Executions have been on hold since January 2014 when Ohio used a never-tried 2-drug combo that it then abandoned.

Ohio is appealing a federal judge's ruling last month rejecting the state's latest proposed 3-drug execution method, which hasn't been used in Ohio.

As part of that ruling, Magistrate Judge Michael Merz said the possibility exists that Ohio could obtain pentobarbital.

Merz also said Ohio didn't prove that the first drug in its current 3-drug process, the sedative midazolam, doesn't present a substantial risk of harm.

The prison system says the opposite is true and that a U.S. Supreme Court ruling last year permitted midazolam's use.

"Ohio has the capability to perform constitutional executions now. It should be permitted to do so," Thomas Madden, an assistant attorney general, said in Ohio's appeal.

The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati has scheduled arguments for Feb. 21.

The prisons system changed its execution process because it can't find pentobarbital, said Gary Mohr, the agency's director, who said the agency is "comfortable" with its position before the appeals court.

"This is a serious responsibility, and we work hard to carry out executions in a humane manner, with the utmost respect for the law, for victims, and for justice," Mohr said in a statement provided to The Associated Press. "That commitment is unwavering."

The state also said in its filing:

-- Ohio can't import pentobarbital or its active ingredient from a foreign manufacturer because the state's application to add pentobarbital to its current federal importer registration hasn't been acted on in four months.

-- Even if Ohio had a license to import the drug, it hasn't identified any company that would provide it.

(source: The Republic)

*******************************

Lawmaker proposes death penalty for murder of first responders, military personnel


A Northeast Ohio lawmaker's 1st bill in the General Assembly would expand the state's aggravated murder laws to allow the death penalty when the victim is a first responder or military member.

A statehouse bill introduced by Rep. Dave Greenspan, a Republican from Westlake, would also expand penalties for felonious assault when the victim of the crime is a police officer, first responder, federal officer or military member.

"The intent is to really provide a strong deterrent," Greenspan said.

The bill, HB 38, is Greenspan's 1st as a legislator. 14 other lawmakers, including 4 from Northeast Ohio, signed on as co-sponsors.

Where did the idea come from?

The legislation grew from an idea Greenspan developed over the last few years as police, fire and military personnel were victims in attacks across the country.

Most recently was an ambush attack in December on firefighters in Youngstown when they responded to a call. One firefighter was wounded in the leg and another narrowly escaped injury when a bullet passed through his turnout coat but didn't hit him. The shooter was waiting across the street from the burning house when firefighters arrived.

What would the bill do?

Greenspan proposes amending Ohio's criminal laws dealing with aggravated murder and felonious assault.

Under current law, if the murder victim is a police officer, the defendant could face the death penalty if convicted. Greenspan's proposal would add first responders (firefighters and EMS personnel), military personnel (including ROTC, reserve forces and National Guard) and federal law enforcement officers to that section of law.

It would apply to current and former members of those groups.

In addition, it would add that group to laws applying to felonious assault, upping the crime to a 1st-degree felony and requiring that any sentences handed down are served consecutively, rather than concurrently.

How does it work?

The law requires that the victim either be engaged in their duty - such as a police officer on patrol - or that the offender specifically is looking to kill someone who is in the protected group.

So, for example, if an attacker strikes out against people in a VFW hall or veterans marching in a parade, it should be apparent, Greenspan said, that they are striking out against former military personnel.

What happens next?

The bill was assigned to the House Criminal Justice Committee.

It is scheduled to get its 1st hearing, along with testimony from Greenspan, on Feb. 21.

(source: cleveland.)

*********************

Justices hear Donna Roberts case for 3rd time


The assistant Trumbull County prosecutor who has faced the Ohio Supreme Court 3 times over the same death row case says she expects the high court to come back with a decision within a year.

"I have been through this 3 times, so there is not a whole lot new to say on this," LuWayne Annos said Wednesday after returning from Columbus where she presented oral arguments for the state in the Donna Roberts case.

For about 45 minutes Tuesday morning, the Ohio Supreme Court heard for a 3rd time arguments about whether Roberts belongs on Ohio's death row. Roberts, who is the only female facing execution in the state, appealed her case after a second Trumbull County judge gave her a death sentence in 2014.

Defense attorney David Doughten told the court Tuesday Roberts deserves a life sentence because the Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution bars a judge who didn't preside over trial, mitigation phase or allocution from sentencing someone to death.

In October 2013, the Ohio Supreme Court sent the case of Roberts, convicted for the 2001 planned murder of her ex-husband, Robert Fingerhut, in Howland, back to Trumbull County Common Pleas Court for re-sentencing. It was the 2nd time the high court vacated Roberts' death sentence. In the spring of 2014, Judge Ronald J. Rice, who was appointed to the case after the 2013 retirement and subsequent death of Judge John Stuard, resentenced Roberts to death.

Doughten argued Rice's action was improper, according to the Sixth and Eighth Amendments, as well as a U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in Hurst vs. Florida. In Hurst, the court in an 8-1 ruling held that the Sixth Amendment requires a jury to find the aggravating factors necessary for imposing the death penalty.

Doughten argued that Rice did not hear from Roberts in an allocution - the phase where the defendant can give a last plea for leniency before the judge pronounces sentence. Doughten said Rice only reviewed a transcript of Roberts' statements before Stuard.

In the 2nd appeal, the Ohio Supreme Court remanded the case because Stuard failed to state in his written opinion that he considered Roberts' spoken remarks.

"The judge (Rice) did not hear from Donna in person which could affect his decision on her demeanor and attitude," Doughten said. "He had to rule from a bare bones sheet of paper."

Doughten argued Rice merely did an independent review of the case, "something that this court is doing now."

In arguing for the state, Annos said Rice thoroughly reviewed 29 transcripts, including Roberts' 20-page allocution made before Stuard.

"(Judge Rice) took that allocution apart, sentence by sentence, and he took everything at face value," Annos argued, noting that Rice only questioned Roberts' credibility about allegations over whether she was beaten by Fingerhut. "And twice on the record, Donna Roberts said she made up those allegations."

Annos also took exception to the Hurst argument, saying Florida and Ohio have different systems when determining the death penalty.

"Hurst doesn't control Ohio death penalty statutes," Annos said.

After persisting with points about Hurst, Doughten was admonished by Justice Terrence O'Donnell who said, "Hurst isn't being argued here."

After both sides presented their arguments, Chief Justice Maureen O'Connor said the court would take their arguments under advisement.

The case arose from the December 2001 murder of Fingerhut, who operated Greyhound bus terminals in the Mahoning Valley. Roberts lived with her former husband in an Avalon Drive home in Howland. At some point , Roberts had an affair with Nathaniel Jackson, who was sent to prison in 2001. During his incarceration, Jackson and Roberts exchanged letters and phone calls. Prison authorities monitored this communication that revealed a murder plot, which served as key evidence during the trial.

When Jackson was released from prison, Roberts picked him up. 2 days after Jackson's release, Fingerhut, 57, was shot to death at his home.

Jackson was convicted of murder and also sentenced to death.

(source: Tribune Chronicle)



INDIANA:

New Bill Would Exempt Mentally Ill From Death Penalty----Exemption would only apply to defendants with 1 of 6 Serious Mental Illnesses


A trio of state lawmakers want to make a big change to the way Indiana imposes the death penalty.

A new bill (SB-155) from Republican Senators Jim Merritt, John Ruckelshaus and Eric Bassler would exempt people with a specific type of serious mental illness from the death penalty and grant them the same legal protective status already granted to juveniles and people with intellectual disabilities.

Under the new legislation, capital punishment would be removed as a penalty for individuals suffering from one or more of the following conditions:

--Schizophrenia

--Bipolar Disorder

--Major Depressive Disorder

--Delusional Disorder

--Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

--Traumatic Brain Injury

"In these cases...when a person has been professionally diagnosed and judged to have a serious mental illness, I'm convinced that this exemption should apply. No person with impaired judgment due to mental illness should be executed," says Sen. Merritt, who supports the use of capital punishment.

What the legislation is not designed to do, however, is give mentally ill defendants a "free pass" to circumvent the criminal justice system.

"The defendant can still be found guilty and held accountable for crimes. This is not an insanity defense. It does not preclude a life-without-parole sentence or absolve any responsibility for the crime," says Matthew Ellis, Project Director of the Hoosier Alliance for Serious Mental Illness Exemption.

The Senate Judiciary Committee is expected to hear SB-155 within the next 3 weeks.

(source: WIBC news)

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