Thanks for the articles.
I read both of them in their entirety. Neither one mentions anyting about a retarded inmate, the dessert story, or Rickey Ray Rector.
I can't say I blame the guy for wanting it renamed. I would not want my name on it either.
Thanks again. Always appreciative of someone backing me up.
Here is the Full article of the first (7/14) story. (the 7/21 story has nothing to add)
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Uneasy about death row, Terrell wants name off unit - Prison expected to be renamed
Writer: Ed Timms Published: 07-14-2001 Page Number: 1A
Dallas insurance executive Charles Terrell was honored when a new state prison was named for him in 1993.
But it just wasn't the same after that unit later became the new home for death-row inmates. He wanted his name off, and the state's prison board may accommodate him next week.
"We name prisons after a lot of people, and if I'm just another name ... that's fine," the former chairman of the Texas Board of Criminal Justice said Friday. "There's a lot of difference between having your name on a regular prison, and on death row."
Next week, the prison board is expected to approve a new name for the Charles T. Terrell Unit in East Texas, where 446 men sentenced to death are incarcerated. Mr. Terrell asked for the change - an unprecedented request, according to prison officials - several months ago.
Another prison, the Ramsey III unit in Brazoria County, probably will be renamed for Mr. Terrell. The board is scheduled to meet in a regular session on Friday. "Renaming of the Terrell Unit and the Ramsey III Unit" is on the agenda.
Another former prison board chairman, San Antonio lawyer Allan B. Polunsky, is expected to have his name on the Terrell Unit.
Prison Board member Mary Bacon, a retired Harris County district judge, said Mr. Polunsky was called and asked if would be willing to have the unit named for him. "Apparently, he agreed," she said.
Larry Todd, a prison spokesman, said that honoring former board chairmen and members by naming units for them is a long-standing tradition.
At first glance, Mr. Terrell might seem an unlikely person to have qualms about having his name associated with a facility that is often the last address for Texas' condemned. He acquired a reputation for being tough on crime. In addition to his service on the prison board, Mr. Terrell also served as the chairman of the Greater Dallas Crime Commission and the Texas Criminal Justice Task Force.
Over the years, he's become increasingly uneasy with how the death penalty is administered. But those concerns, he said Friday, were not his primary reason for wanting a name change for the Terrell Unit.
"Every time something happens on death row, it's the 'Terrell Unit' - and it's just really something I don't want to read about," Mr. Terrell said.
Some family members, too, weren't too happy. "It upset my mother," he said.
When the Terrell Unit was first built and named, condemned men were kept at the Ellis Unit, northeast of Huntsville. An escape attempt in 1998 by seven condemned inmates was a factor in the prison system's decision to move death row to the newer Terrell Unit in 1999.
Mr. Terrell, who stepped down as chairman of the state prison board in 1990, said Friday that ambivalence best describes his attitude toward the death penalty.
Deterrence, he said, is the only justification for the death penalty, and he questions whether it serves that purpose.
"If I thought it was truly the deterrent that I felt the electric chair was, maybe I wouldn't be so ambivalent," he said, adding that he didn't think that lethal injection "put the fear of God in anybody like the thought of the electric chair did."
He also has some concerns about how the death penalty is applied, but he praised the Texas Legislature for addressing some issues, such as making DNA testing available to convicts and trying to ensure that defendants have competent lawers.
Bill Robinson, an ex-offender and board chairman of Corrections Concepts Inc., a nonprofit organization that helps inmates and their families, knew Mr. Terrell when he was on the prison board and has worked with him since.
Mr. Robinson said that the death penalty is an issue that Mr. Terrell takes very seriously and has given a great deal of thought.
"Everybody ... wants you to take an all or nothing position, and if you don't, they accuse you of waffling," Mr. Robinson said.
While he does have issues with the death penalty, Mr. Terrell said, his main concerns are prison staffing and security.
"We're willing to build all that brick and mortar and then shove all the bad guys in there - and not adequately pay or train the people who are supposed to keep watch over them," he said. "That's the big issue." Mr. Terrell said he is happy that his name will be on another prison unit. |