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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TigerPaw who wrote (363855)2/26/2003 2:02:32 PM
From: SecularBull  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
Bush did not have Karla Faye Tucker "killed". The criminal justice system found her guilty and sentenced her to death. Your statement is about as idiotic as they come, and I think is indicative of the real issue you have with Iraq. You're ignoring Iraq, because you hate Bush so much.

We may have disliked Clinton, but that dislike did not stand in the way of Clinton taking appropriate stands (i.e. bombing Iraq in '98) no matter how half-hearted they were.

~SB~



To: TigerPaw who wrote (363855)2/26/2003 2:04:05 PM
From: SecularBull  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
If you're going to read a liberal newspaper, read the New York Times. The Houston Barnicle is a rag, and is the poster child for newspaper euthanasia.

~SB~



To: TigerPaw who wrote (363855)2/26/2003 2:16:57 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 769670
 
COMMENTARY
Texas Justice Is Blind -- to Fairness
The Lone Star State's death penalty system is fatally flawed. But its politicians benefit
from the status quo.

By Michael King, Michael King is the news editor of the Austin
Chronicle.

If Texas maintains its current pace of executions
throughout 2003, the state could easily exceed its
record of 40, set in 1999. Of the 12 executions
nationwide so far this year, Texas conducted eight, and
it has nine more scheduled through April.

Last year, of the 71 people executed nationwide, 33
were in Texas. No other state comes close to
executing as many people.

The situation in the Lone Star State is all the more
striking in light of the recent decision by former Illinois
Gov. George Ryan to pardon four death row inmates
outright and commute the sentences of 167 to life in
prison. Ryan, a Republican who left office in January,
described the Illinois capital punishment system as
"arbitrary and capricious and therefore immoral."

Texas Gov. Rick Perry, also a Republican, denounced
Ryan's decision as "inappropriate" and lacking in
leadership. "If he has a problem in his state -- which
obviously he does -- you do it case by case," Perry
said. "You don't just walk in, because there are some
victims of crime that you spit in the eye of."

In fact, Ryan did not "just walk in." An independent
commission did do a review, case by case. It discovered arbitrary or biased
prosecutions; inadequate or incompetent defense; mentally ill or retarded
defendants; reckless use of jailhouse or accomplice informants; coerced
confessions; and four confirmed innocents.

And despite Perry's protestations, the Texas situation is much the same as
Illinois'. There has never been any attempt at a systematic review of the cases of
the more than 450 inmates currently on Texas' death row, but pro bono defense
teams -- which have been able to review only a handful of capital cases -- have
demonstrated that the system is riddled with problems.

John "Jackie" Elliott, executed Feb. 4, is the most recent case in point. Elliott was
convicted in 1987 of the rape and murder of an Austin woman. In December, a
team of volunteers reviewed his case and discovered, among other things:
exculpatory evidence, including 40 witness statements, never provided to the
original defense; blood evidence, potentially implicating the prosecution's primary
witness, that had never been DNA-tested; and representation by a series of
inadequate or incompetent court- appointed attorneys. The team even polled the
12 original jurors, who joined in requesting that the execution be stayed and
DNA evidence be provided for testing.

We would be aware of none of this if outside attorneys had not volunteered to
review the case.

Elliot's case is all too representative of the quality of justice in Texas, where the
Legislature finally agreed in 2001 to fund a state system for indigent defense for
the first time. This month, however, to help balance the state budget, the
presiding judge of the Court of Criminal Appeals recommended returning those
funds unspent.

In 2001, a bill that would have outlawed the execution of the mentally retarded
was vetoed by Perry. Another that would have enabled juries to impose life
without parole was derailed by prosecutors who feared, reasonably enough, that
juries so empowered would impose fewer death sentences. Those bills and
several others, including calls for a moratorium and review, have been proposed
again this year, but there is little reason for optimism.

Why is Texas so far ahead in executions? Are Texans bloodthirsty or devoted to
"frontier justice"? Not really; a majority of Texans support capital punishment,
but not in a percentage radically greater than those in other states.

When it comes to the death penalty, Texas is in fact more Southern than
Western: The Southern states (primarily the old Confederacy) have accounted
for about 80% of the 832 executions nationwide since 1976. Because a greatly
disproportionate number of the condemned are black or brown and poor, it
doesn't take a great leap of imagination to comprehend the historical
circumstances that have led the Deep South states down this path. The current
national rush to vengeance cannot be blamed on Judge Roy Bean.

When Texans are offered the certain alternative of life without parole, or asked
whether they support the execution of juveniles or the mentally incapacitated, like
other Americans their support for the death penalty diminishes to a minority. That
is why they are not offered such choices, either on juries or in the voting booth.

Judges as well as prosecutors are elected in Texas, and they devote much of
their campaigns to declaring their willingness to impose the death penalty in order
to not appear "soft on crime."

In the end, capital punishment is not about justice. It's about politics. The Texas
capital punishment system still performs its primary function quite well: It helps
elect prosecutors, judges and state politicians.

CC



To: TigerPaw who wrote (363855)2/27/2003 10:55:24 AM
From: SecularBull  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Here's a great article on the bias of the Houston Chronicle:

houstonreview.com

~SB~