April 2


TEXAS----new death sentence

Body In Suitcase Brings Death Penalty----Experts: Victim May Have Been
Alive When Left In Trash Bin


In Canyon, a jury has given the death penalty to a man convicted of
beating a pregnant woman, stuffing her in a suitcase and dumping it in a
landfill. Rosendo Rodriguez, a 28-year-old from San Antonio, was sentenced
Tuesday after the jury deliberated for 3 hours. He was convicted on 2
counts of capital murder Friday.

The body of 29-year-old Summer Baldwin, her unborn child still inside, was
found in the Lubbock landfill in 2005. The case was moved to the Panhandle
city of Canyon because of pretrial publicity.

Experts testified that Baldwin, who was a prostitute, may have been alive
when Rodriguez stuffed her in the suitcase and tossed it into a large
trash bin.

(source: Associated Press)






NORTH CAROLINA----death row inmate freed

Death Row Inmate Freed After Prosecutors Drop Murder Charges


A defense attorney says prosecutors in Catawba County have dropped murder
charges against a man who has spent 14 years on death row.

Attorney Frank Goldsmith said Glen Edward Chapman will be released
Wednesday from the state's Central Prison in Raleigh. Chapman was granted
a new trial last year after a judge found that investigators committed
misconduct.

Superior Court Judge Robert C. Ervin ruled in November that Chapman was
offered ineffective assistance by his original attorneys and that evidence
was lost, destroyed or withheld. He also said the case's lead detective
withheld evidence.

Chapman was convicted on 2 counts of 1st-degree murder in the deaths of
Betty Jean Ramseur and Tenene Yvette Conley. He was sentenced to death in
1994.

(source: Associated Press)






MISSOURI:

Bill would halt the death penalty in Missouri


Missouri would suspend executions until 2011 under a bill being pushed by
a group of House lawmakers.

Besides the freeze, the measure also would create a 10-person commission
to study a random sample of death penalty cases to judge the fairness of
the process. The panel could look at topics such as possible racial
disparities and the quality of evidence used to convict the person.

"We want to make sure that the person (on death row), regardless of their
race, is the right person," said the bill's sponsor, Rep. Bill Deeken,
R-Jefferson City.

During a hearing on the bill Tuesday, Dennis Fritz, one of the main
characters in John Grisham's nonfiction book "The Innocent Man," spoke in
favor of the bill.

Fritz, of Kansas City, and Ron Williamson were convicted of murdering
Debbie Carter in Oklahoma and later exonerated by DNA evidence. Fritz was
sentenced to life in prison, and Williamson was sentenced to death before
they were cleared.

"I spent 12 hard years in a penitentiary for something I didn't even know
about," Fritz said.

Ginger Masters of Columbia, Mo., also supported the bill. Her voice
cracking at times, she said that even though her husband, David, was
murdered 3 years ago, she is a "fence-sitter" on the death penalty.

Most of the time, she said, "I don't think this state should be in the
business of killing its citizens."

Despite the emotional testimony, Rep. Scott Lipke, R-Jackson, said the
death penalty process works.

"There's a lot of protections already built into the system," he said. "My
sense is that this bill is a vehicle to totally do away with the death
penalty."

Besides Deeken, 57 other House members are listed as co-sponsors,
including 13 Republicans.

The committee's chairman, Rep. Mark Bruns, R-Jefferson City, said he would
allow a vote on the bill if Deeken thinks he has the votes. Bruns is
listed as a co-sponsor.

Rep. Jamilah Nasheed, D-St. Louis, noted that blacks make up 40 % of those
sentenced to death.

"This is injustice at its core," she said. "Let's take this debate to the
House floor."

(source: St. Louis Post-Dispatch)






USA:

US seeks death in embassy blast case


The Pentagon yesterday brought murder and terrorism charges against a
suspect in the 1998 US embassy bombing in Tanzania, seeking that his
alleged crimes be treated as capital offences.

This is the 1st time US military prosecutors have sought the death penalty
at the Guantanamo Bay military commission for anyone other than alleged
conspirators in the attacks of September 11, 2001.

The 9 charges against Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani allege the Tanzanian, now
held at the US military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, helped plan and
prepare a truck bomb that killed 11 and wounded at least 85. A
near-simultaneous bombing in Kenya killed 213.

"6 of the 9 charges carry the maximum penalty of death and the chief
prosecutor has recommended that this case be referred as capital, thereby
seeking to bring this as a death penalty case," said Brigadier General
Thomas Hartmann, legal adviser at Guantanamo.

The action drew criticism from civil rights group and the widow of one of
the victims, who argued that Ghailani should be tried in the regular US
courts.

Ghailani last year confessed and apologised for supplying equipment used
in the Tanzania bombing, saying he did not know the supplies would be used
to attack the embassy.

During that 2007 hearing, which determined whether detainees should be
classified as "enemy combatants", Ghailani said he bought the TNT used in
the bombing and a mobile phone used by another person involved in the
attack.

US military prosecutors also accuse him of scouting the embassy, meeting
with co-conspirators in Nairobi and fleeing to Pakistan a day before the
August bombing.

Prosecutors also sought a charge of providing material support to
terrorism because, according to the US military, Ghailani continued to
work for al-Qa'ida as a document forger, trainer and bodyguard for Osama
bin Laden after the embassy bombing.

At one time he was on the FBI's 25 Most Wanted list and had a $US5 million
bounty for his capture. He was arrested in a raid on his home in Pakistan
in July 2004. Ghailani has said he was not a member of al-Qa'ida but
worked for the group.

The charges must be approved by a Pentagon appointee who oversees the war
court at the US naval base at Guantanamo before trial proceedings can
begin. If the case is referred as capital, allowing for the death penalty,
a unanimous decision from the 12-member military jury would be needed to
determine guilt and the sentence.

Susan Hirsch, a George Mason University professor who was at the embassy
when it was hit and lost her husband in the attack, said Ghailani should
be brought to justice, but not at Guantanamo Bay.

She told The Washington Post she feared part of the reason the case would
not be in a US court was that Ghailani had been held by the CIA and might
have been subjected to harsh interrogation techniques and torture.

(source: Reuters)

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

Lethal Injection and Animal Euthanasia: A Fair Comparison?


In January, the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments in the Eighth Amendment
case of Baze v. Rees. There, Ralph Baze and Robert C. Bowling challenged
their sentences of death by lethal injection as cruel and unusual
punishment.

The case is important because not only lethal injection itself, but the
particular three-drug cocktail utilized in Kentucky and challenged by Baze
and Bowling, is common to the federal government as well as to almost all
of the states that have a death penalty. As a result, any ruling about the
validity of Kentucky's execution protocols could have implications for
capital punishment throughout the United States.

Challenges to lethal injection suggest that the barbiturate - intended to
make the condemned person unconscious while the lethal chemicals take
effect - does not always (and, in fact, often does not) protect the inmate
from experiencing excruciating pain, caused primarily by the final drug
administered (potassium chloride, which stops the heart).

Though many people oppose the death penalty across the board, the argument
regarding lethal injection is more specific: It holds that this method of
killing gives rise to an unnecessary and substantial risk of inflicting
great pain and therefore violates the Constitution, even if capital
punishment is not inherently unconstitutional.

The Claim that "Even Animals" Are Treated Better

One argument that surfaces repeatedly in debates about lethal injection
revolves around a comparison with the practice of euthanizing pets.
Opponents of the 3-drug cocktail have claimed that one of the chemicals
used was deemed inhumane by the American Veterinary Medical Association
(AVMA) in connection with euthanizing animals.

This chemical, pancuronium bromide, is used in an execution to paralyze
the inmate's muscles. Pancuronium bromide is generally the 2nd of 3 drugs
administered to the condemned, following the barbiturate/anesthetic and
preceding potassium chloride, which causes cardiac arrest. A problem
arises when the inmate receives insufficient anesthesia to maintain
unconsciousness throughout the process. This problem is exacerbated by the
fact that while the prisoner suffocates and then experiences a horrific
burning sensation in his veins, his induced paralysis makes him unable to
convey, through words or even facial expressions, the horrific suffering
that he is experiencing. Instead, his face looks serene and relaxed, a
"mask" concealing his agony.

The AVMA has noted at this site that it never specifically criticized the
use of pancuronium bromide in animal euthanasia. However, it has indeed
rejected the use of a paralytic combined with a barbiturate, on the ground
that the paralytic may counteract the effects of the anesthesia if the 2
are administered simultaneously, thus bringing about terrible suffering.

There is no question that the expertise of veterinarians who regularly
carry out the humane killing of pet animals could potentially provide
information useful for the humane administration of execution by lethal
injection (though the AVMA has disputed the relevance of their findings to
the death penalty debate). Some opponents of lethal injection, however,
have made a distinct point. They have argued that euthanasia protocols
demonstrate a shocking reality - namely, that animals are treated more
humanely than human beings undergoing lethal injection.

Those who take this view express outrage at the prospect of veterinarians
exercising greater care in guarding against the suffering of mere dogs and
cats than our society exercises in protecting the human beings in our
custody. Clearly, the argument goes, we have our priorities badly
distorted if we are placing the needs of animals over those of human
beings. But is that a fair characterization of the facts?

Execution versus Euthanasia

Some lethal injection opponents appear to conceive of the primary
difference between euthanizing pets and executing condemned prisoners as
that between our treatment, respectively, of non-human animals, on the one
hand, and human beings, on the other. As a matter of rhetoric, it appears
that we are treating condemned prisoners as "sub-human," because animal
deaths are apparently more humane than theirs.

Quite apart from the species line, however, there is a salient and
overlooked distinction between putting an animal companion to sleep when
he is sick and in pain and imposing the ultimate punishment on a convicted
murderer. It should not shock anyone to learn that a person who has lived
with a pet animal for years would prioritize the animal's comfort over
that of a human being - a stranger - who has deprived another human being
of her life and whom a jury has seen fit to sentence to death.

The relevant distinction is therefore not between animals and human beings
but between companions and criminals. Considering the difference between
execution and euthanasia along these lines, it is not at all surprising
that we might treat our pets better in some respects than we do convicted
murderers.

Indeed, most people would be disturbed to learn that a family brought home
a dog or a cat from a shelter and then proceeded to treat him or her like
a violent criminal -- even a criminal sentenced to life imprisonment
rather than death. Should people restrict a pet's access to exercise,
social time, and fun or otherwise attempt to make him or her feel
"punished"? Obviously not.

Pets versus Meat

If one is truly interested in studying the officially-sanctioned treatment
of animals, there exists a far more informative contrast than any we might
draw between animal companions and convicted murderers. It is the
distinction between how we treat the animals for whom we care - our pets -
and how we treat the animals whom we utilize - farmed animals. After
considering that contrast, it becomes clear that death row inmates - human
strangers for whom we care little - do a lot better than the animals who
do not share our homes.

For pets, the animals who live with us and our families, we not only
attempt to provide a humane death but we recognize, through the force of
law, that they have legally cognizable interests that demand consideration
and respect. As one example, the law punishes people who abuse or neglect
the basic needs of their animal companions. Having a pet involves not only
property rights over an animal but responsibilities as well. Though the
obligations at issue may often be honored in the breach, the law does
codify those responsibilities.

Notwithstanding our acknowledged obligation to satisfy the basic needs of
our animal companions and to refrain from cruelty against them, there is
little in the way of cruelty that we cannot or do not visit on the animals
we use for meat and clothing. Such animals - including mammals, such as
pigs, who greatly resemble the animals we keep as companions (not to
mention ourselves) in their social nature and in their capacity for fear,
pain, and joy - live in cramped, filthy, dark, and unhealthful
surroundings and are separated from their young and suffer unregulated
surgeries (like tail croppings and castration) without any anesthesia.
These animals ultimately die a terrifying and painful death, however
well-hidden from public scrutiny. The Animal Welfare Law notably does not
even apply to animals raised for food.

It is here that we learn how we treat "mere animals" who fall outside our
circle of concern. The application of the Eighth Amendment to condemned
prisoners thus shows how much greater is our solicitude toward even the
most despised human beings in our midst than for the vast majority of
animals.

Rather than proving that people treat animals better than they do their
fellow human beings, then, the humane killing of pets represents the
exception that proves the rule. Pets are the honorary family members who
are officially exempt from the casually vicious treatment reserved for the
remainder of animal-kind. As Isaac Bashevis Singer wrote, "[a]ll other
creatures were created merely to provide him [the human being] with food,
pelts, to be tormented, exterminated. In relation to them, all people are
Nazis; for the animals it is an eternal Treblinka."

What our humane treatment of pets illustrates, then, is that we - at some
level - understand the basic entitlements of every sentient creature,
whether human or not, even as we violate these entitlements with abandon
for the overwhelming majority of living creatures. This recognition has
driven reform of the death penalty over the years, though such reform has
yet to be fully realized. For animals, however, this recognition has
yielded little progress, as the meat industry grows larger and becomes
more intensively concentrated over time.

Lessons of Euthanasia

Despite the important distinctions to be drawn between pets and condemned
murders and between pets and animals generally, the humane approach to
euthanizing pets may nonetheless be instructive to the Supreme Court as it
considers execution by lethal injection. It reminds us that it is indeed
possible to end life without causing excruciating pain, if we are so
inclined. To the extent that the death penalty is lawful only so long as
it is humane, that possibility becomes crucial. If alternatives exist to
the current protocol, as we know they do, then the pain inflicted by the
3-drug cocktail should rightly be seen as gratuitous and unlawful. Surely,
a routinely painful form of execution is unnecessarily cruel if it can
easily be replaced with a method that is painless.

Ultimately, then, the humane euthanasia of suffering pets teaches us that
we can do better by our death row population, even if we are not yet
prepared to abolish capital punishment. At the same time, it should teach
us that we can do far better by the domesticated animals on whom we
blithely and unnecessarily inflict suffering and death in the cause of
satisfying our appetite for flesh. The planned death of a beloved pet
helps show us just how far we have to travel to make the truly humane
treatment of animals a reality.

(source: Findlaw: Sherry F. Colb, a FindLaw columnist, is currently a
Visiting Professor at Columbia Law School and will be joining the Cornell
Law School faculty in the fall)




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