FORWARDED MESSAGES
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From: Michael Novick
Sent: Saturday, September 30, 2000 8:27 PM
Sep 29, 2000
Death sentence overturned due to testimony
HOUSTON, Sept. 29 (UPI) -- A fourth Texas death sentence has been
overturned because of a psychologist's testimony that the defendant's race
indicated he had a propensity for violence.
U.S. District Judge Kenneth M. Hoyt Thursday overturned the sentence of
Carl Blue, a 35-year-old black man, because of the testimony of Walter
Quijano of Conroe. Quijano's testimony has had far-reaching effects in a
number of Texas criminal cases.
In addition to the four overturned death sentences, Quijano's testimony has
been raised in three more capital cases on appeal. Quijano has said that he
testified in more than 100 capital cases.
Overturning the death sentence, however, doesn't mean that the convicted
killer will escape a possible lethal injection for the crime.
Brazos County District Attorney William Turner said he intends to seek the
death penalty a second time against Blue for the 1994 murder of Carmen
Richards-Sanders at College Station.
Turner told the Houston Chronicle that he was amazed that Blue's sentence
was overturned due to Quijano's testimony because he was a defense witness
in the case.
"For the victim's family to go through all this again is just unfortunate,"
he said.
Quijano often testified that a defendant's race was one of the factors he
considered in determining whether the accused was a potential future threat
to society. He said he considered race because blacks and Hispanics are
over-represented in violent crime statistics.
-- Copyright 2000 by United Press International.
All rights reserved.
--
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===============================>
From: Pan-African News Wire
Sent: Monday, October 02, 2000 4:46 PM
IN AMERICA
New York Times
10/02/2000
The Death Factory
By BOB HERBERT
By the end of the year Texas will likely have set a record for executing people.
The number of inmates marched into the death chamber in Texas this year is
expected to reach 40 by New Year's Eve. That would be the highest number of
prisoners put to death by one state since officials began compiling death
penalty statistics from across the country some 70 years ago.
The current record is also held by Texas, which executed 37 people in 1997.
Since the Supreme Court lifted the ban on capital punishment in 1982, Texas has
executed 231 inmates. No other state has come close to that figure.
And few, if any, states could match the consistently unjust and unquestionably
inhumane manner in which Texas sends its prisoners to their doom. Peruse the
death penalty cases in Texas and you will find repeated instances of hapless
prisoners condemned to death at the hands of overzealous prosecutors, biased and
incompetent judges, and defense lawyers who slept through the trials, who were
addicted to alcohol or drugs, who knew nothing about trying capital cases and
who did virtually nothing on behalf of their clients.
The death penalty, as applied in Texas, is often little more than a legal
lynching.
Robert McGlasson is a competent attorney who is handling the appeal of a
condemned prisoner named Calvin Burdine. The court-appointed lawyer who
represented Mr. Burdine at his trial was Joe Frank Cannon. Mr. Cannon, who is
now deceased, slept through significant portions of the trial.
That might have been a problem elsewhere but not in Texas. Despite the sleeping
attorney, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals upheld the conviction and the
death sentence. A saner perspective came from a federal judge who reviewed the
case and concluded that "sleeping counsel is equivalent to no counsel at all."
This did not sit well with Texas officials and they are appealing the federal
ruling.
Mr. McGlasson told me last week that when he asked Mr. Cannon, the sleepy trial
lawyer, for his file on the case, Mr. Cannon turned over a mere five pages of
handwritten notes. The notes contained a total of 269 words. That meager
collection of words — about one-third the length of this column — constituted
the entire trial file for a death penalty case.
The defendant in this case, Mr. Burdine, is gay. Perhaps Mr. Cannon was asleep
when the prosecutor, urging the jury to condemn Mr. Burdine to death, argued
that "sending a homosexual to the penitentiary certainly isn't a very bad
punishment for a homosexual." In any event, Mr. Cannon didn't object to that
line of reasoning.
But he was most certainly awake when, at a post-trial evidentiary hearing, he
used derogatory terms to refer to his client and other homosexual men, the
mildest of which were "queers" and "fairies."
This is what passes for justice in Texas.
In an article in the Texas Law Review, Stephen Bright, director of the Southern
Center for Human Rights in Atlanta, said, "The Texas judiciary has responded to
the clamor for executions by processing capital cases in assembly-line fashion
with little or no regard for the fairness or integrity of the process."
But Gov. George W. Bush, on whose watch 144 prisoners have been executed, has
insisted that every person put to death in Texas had "full access to the courts"
and "full access to a fair trial."
Not only is that not true, it is often impossible to tell from the hideously
unfair ways in which accused prisoners in Texas are prosecuted, convicted and
executed whether they were in fact guilty or innocent.
Governor Bush may well believe that everybody executed in Texas was guilty, but
he has only faith — not the facts — to guide him.
Much of the process is a crapshoot. Mr. Bright cited a case in which "a Texas
lawyer, later suspended from practice, presented no evidence about his client at
the penalty phase of the trial and then made no closing argument, instead
saying: "You are an extremely intelligent jury. You've got that man's life in
your hands. You can take it or not. That's all I have to say."
As the body count continues to mount, the death penalty system in Texas reveals
itself ever more clearly as a cruel caricature, a mockery of the very idea of
fairness and due process. It's not a quest for justice. It's an exercise in
evil.
Stop the execution! New trial for Mumia!
Youth & Students for Mumia
http://www.mumia2000.org