Texas judge on trial for refusing to hear death row inmate’s appeal
By Hiram Lee
22 August 2009

Judge Sharon Keller is currently on trial facing five counts of
judicial misconduct in the state of Texas. Keller is the presiding
judge on the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals and a well-known figure
to opponents of capital punishment.

The charges faced by Keller in the current trial originate with events
surrounding the 2007 execution of Michael Wayne Richard. On September
25, the day of Richard’s execution, his attorneys sought to file a
last-minute appeal with Keller’s office. Computer troubles had delayed
completion of an appeal, and they called Keller’s office to inform
them of the problem and asked if the office would remain open to
receive the appeal upon its completion.

Keller had left her office earlier in the day in order to meet a
repairman who had been scheduled to arrive at her home. At
approximately 4:45 p.m., she received a phone call from general
counsel Ed Marty, who had been informed of the situation by the
office, telling her of their request. She responded, “We close at
five.” Richard was executed three hours later.

The level of contempt exhibited by Keller’s behavior, both for human
life and the system of appeals over which she presides, is truly
appalling. The very fact that Keller had chosen to leave her office
early is itself troubling considering the US Supreme Court had, that
very morning, consented to hear an argument on the constitutionality
of lethal injection, making an appeal from Richard’s attorneys all but
guaranteed.

Keller’s conduct has drawn protests from anti-death penalty advocates,
who have dubbed the judge “Sharon Killer,” as well as her own
colleagues in the Texas criminal justice system. Judge Cheryl Johnson
testified at Keller’s trial this week, telling the court she believed
Keller had violated procedure. Johnson was on call the night of
Richard’s execution, meaning she was available to hear appeals from
his attorneys if necessary, but maintains she was not informed by
Keller or her office about any attempt to appeal until four days after
the execution had taken place. “[I] would have told them they could
file,” she told the courtroom, “It’s an execution. They might be valid
pleadings. I have no other way of knowing.”

As Keller’s trial has proceeded, she has continually denied any
wrongdoing. She told the court on Wednesday that, given the
opportunity to do things over, she would not change anything. Telling
the court that the “no” she gave Ed Marty by phone was ultimately of
no consequence, Keller stated, “the clerk’s office closed at five,
regardless of what I said.” This testimony ignores statute 658.005 of
Texas Government Code, which gives administrators of state agencies,
in this case Keller, authorization to keep their agency operating
after closing hours if necessary.

If Keller is found guilty of misconduct, the State Commission on
Judicial Conduct has the option to either censure the judge or remove
her from the bench altogether.

The case of Michael Richard is yet another nightmare scenario in the
long history of capital punishment in the United States, and in Texas
in particular. The US has carried out 1,173 executions since the
reinstatement of the death penalty in 1976. Texas has presided over
439 of these, making it the leading state in executions. At the time
of his death in 2007, Michael Richard was the 405th prisoner to be
executed in that state.

At least nine inmates with mental retardation have been executed in
Texas, all of them since 1990. No less than 13 inmates have been
executed in Texas for crimes committed when they were juveniles. The
capital punishment system in Texas, to say nothing of the system as a
whole, has been shown time and again to be used disproportionately
against African-American and Latino offenders. Victims of the death
penalty are overwhelmingly poor and working class. Foreign nationals
are routinely denied their consular rights and sent to their deaths.

For many, Sharon Keller has come to personify the ugliness of this
barbaric practice, a practice defended by both Republicans and
Democrats, including President Barack Obama

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
For options & help see http://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum

* Visit our other community at http://www.PoliticalForum.com/  
* It's active and moderated. Register and vote in our polls. 
* Read the latest breaking news, and more.
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to