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Politics : Impeach George W. Bush -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 11:36:17 AM
From: sea_biscuit  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 93284
 
Any info on whether Jesus Christ will attend this execution, holding a placard saying, "Kill him!" ?



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 2:49:42 PM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
Another Execution Nears -- Where Are the Protesters? - Clarence Ray Allen
New America Media ^ | Dec 29, 2005 | Jasmyne Cannick

Editor's Note: African-Americans who rallied for clemency for Stanley "Tookie" Williams must do the same for Clarence Ray Allen, a non-black, 76-year-old blind man just weeks away from execution, the writer says.

LOS ANGELES--In the wee hours of the morning on Jan. 17, another man will be put to death by lethal injection in the State of California. This comes exactly 36 days after the execution of Stanley Tookie Williams. But where are the protesters?

With less than a month to go before the scheduled execution of a 76-year-old blind, deaf and wheelchair-confined man, there has been no public outcry of support for clemency for Clarence Ray Allen, a non-black. There's been no planned protests and celebrity read-ins in support of saving an old man's life. Community activists and civil rights leaders aren't organizing statewide tours to bring attention to Allen's execution. There hasn't even been one "Kill Clarence Ray Allen Hour" from KFI-AM'S "John and Ken Show."

Which raises the question: Was the community cry for clemency for Williams because he was a black man, or was it because the death penalty is immoral, inhumane and cruel?

Granted, Allen hasn't written any children's books, been nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize, or had a Hollywood actor play him in a film, but that doesn't mean his life isn't worth saving.

The fight for clemency should not have died with Stanley Tookie Williams. With two more executions scheduled in the New Year, including Michael Morales, who was convicted at the age of 21 for the rape and murder of a 17-year-old female, now is not the time for all of Williams' supporters to retreat back to their separate corners of the world. In fact, it's time for the opposite. We need to get back into action and show the world that the fight for clemency for Williams was not solely based on the fact that he was a black man but rather that he was a man who did not deserve to have his life prematurely taken from him, no matter how heinous were the crimes that he was accused of committing.

Californians are very close to establishing a moratorium on the death penalty. Although the vote didn't come soon enough to save Williams' life, our work today and through the 10th of January, when an assembly committee plans to consider the legislation, could aid in saving the lives of many condemned prisoners, including blacks, while a state panel reviews the system.

Black Californians who supported clemency for Williams need to re-examine their reasons for wanting Williams to live. Was it because he was a black man? Was it because he co-founded the Crips? Was it because of his anti-gang and anti-drug work? Or was it because we abhor the death penalty?

Allen poses no significant risk. Blind, deaf and wheelchair-bound, it's very unlikely that he will be ordering the killing of anyone if left to live his remaining days on death row.

Many of the black leaders who supported clemency for Williams vehemently denied they were racists when challenged by a pair conservative radio DJs in Los Angeles who sponsored the repulsive "Kill Tookie Hour." Accusing the black leadership of getting involved in the fight to save Williams only because he was black, the shock jocks noted that these same activists were going to be nowhere to be found when the next execution of a non-black person came up.

If all of the protests around clemency for Williams were not just for show, it should be no problem for the black community to reassemble for the fight to save Clarence Ray Allen. He may not have been our homeboy from back in the day, or demonstrated to the world that he is a redeemed man. He may not even be likeable, but his life is worth trying to save even if he's not black. What kind of message does it send if we sit back and do nothing while another person was systematically put to death on our watch?

PNS contributor Jasmyne Cannick, 28, is a Los Angeles-based writer of political and social commentary and a member of the National Association of Black Journalists. She can be reached via her Web site, www.jasmynecannick.com.

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TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events; Click to Add Topic
KEYWORDS: CLARENCERAYALLEN; EXECUTION; JOHNANDKEN; TOOKIE; Click to Add Keyword
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Where are they indeed. Of course I asked the question, where are the Hollywood folks and did not delve into the race issue, perhaps I should have.

The radio show that pushed that Tookie be put to death should also be discussing this case as well. To at least honor the victims. If you are going to do it for one, frankly you should do it for all of them.

Tookie's fan club are fair weather death penalty foes?



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 2:52:24 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
Tookie's fan club are fair weather death penalty foes?
01/05/2006 |

freerepublic.com

Stop the presses, the Hollywood elite have just become the new death penalty advocates.

As executions approach, it never surprises me that some will come out of the wood work to challenge the death penalty, fighting for the filth who haunt death row for basically doing the worst that can be done to our fellow Americans.

So, the "Tookie Award Ceremony" took things to new heights. They rallied against the death penalty. That it was inhumane, that it was wrong, that it does nothing to stop the murderers. I listened, carefully to their arguments. They feel that each person on death row should be condemned to a life in prison. Frankly, I think they would even give them parole but I will, for argument's sake, say they want their sentence reduced to life without parole. Farrell, Asner, Snoop and Alda are passionate about their cause. Not one person should be on death row. Their lives are worth saving. You have to admire their dedication to saving all those sentenced to death. Tookie should have been honored. This is what our noble entertainers do in their spare time. Saving those condemned. I say bravo to their sincerity, to their dedication, to their heavy hearts for these felons.

Wait! Did you notice, Clarence Ray Allen, 75, "convicted of ordering the murder of his son's girlfriend, Sue Kitts, in 1974. Allen was convicted of ordering three more killings from behind bars....", is going it alone? Where are his dedicated Hollywood anti-death penalty advocates?

"Lovable" Mr. Allen could be one of their grandfathers, and is about to be put to death. He could have played Santa at their grandchildren's Christmas pageants.
But, life dealt him a raw deal leading him to be forced to order the execution of 3 people. Goodness, he is a victim. He is now suffering, needing new organs. He has trouble seeing and cannot get around without his taxpayer-provided wheel chair. He is a grandpa. The Hollywood elite are not preventing the execution of grandpa? How can they allow this? Not one word from them. Not a sit in. Not an editorial. No rants on Larry King.

So, the left has become what they worst fear: The executioner. They have decided which life is worth saving and which isn't. They are playing God.

Hollywood hypocrites have put themselves in the role of deciding who should die and they have decided to condemn grandpa by their silence.

Of course they'll never admit or even recognize that their complicity in choosing to ignore one convicted criminal's plight and not another's actually justifies the death penalty. If the death sentence were unjust, it would be just as unjust for Grandpa Allen without the spotlights and microphones as it is for Tookie Williams with them.



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 2:56:06 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
Good gravy. What a title by the lefty AP. Isn't this the guy who killed one person and ordered the deaths, from behind bars, of three other people? Why doesn't the Associated Press title say something about the court refusing to block the execution of a cold-blooded killer? Jeez louise, talk about bias.
______________________________________________________________

Calif. Court Won't Block Senior Citizen's Execution - Clarence Ray Allen
ASSOCIATED PRESS ^ | January 10, 2006 | AP

SAN FRANCISCO -- The California Supreme Court refused to block the Jan. 17 execution of a wheelchair-bound 75-year-old man who is nearly deaf and blind.

Clarence Ray Allen is the oldest man on California's death row. His attorney said the next move is to ask the federal courts to intervene.

Allen has also requested clemency from Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, whose decision is pending.

Allen's attorneys maintain his execution would be inconsistent with "civilized behavior," given his health. But prosecutors said Allen deserves to die for his "monstrous crimes."

While serving time for murder in 1980, he was convicted of hiring a hit man who killed three people. Allen apparently feared their testimony would hurt his chances of being freed on appeal.

The convicted hit man also is on death row.



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:00:29 PM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
I am still waiting for the Hollywood elite to come to his rescue at the 11th hour. Yes, Jessie will blow into town, saying how wrong this is. Oops wait, this guy is white, never mind, he is not good enough to live in Jessie's book, nor the left's book.



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:01:44 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
The Hollywood Left are deaf, dumb, and blind where Allen's concerned because he's the wrong color.



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:03:16 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
Name: Clarence Ray Allen CDC#: B-91240

Sex: M

Alias: Clarence Ray, Jr., Junebug

Race White

Date Received: 12/02/1982

DOB: 01/16/1930

Education: 8th Grade

Location: San Quentin-East Block

Married: No

Sentence: Three counts of first-degree murder with special circumstances and one count of conspiracy
County of Trial: Glenn (change of venue from Fresno County)

County of Residence: Unknown

Offense Date: 09/05/1980

Court Date: 12/31/1986

Sentence Date: 11/22/1980

County of Offense: Fresno

Court Action: Affirmed

Case #: 18240

Victims:

Bryon Schletewitz (male)
Douglas Scott White (male)
Josephine Linda Rocha (female)

Summary:

In 1974, Clarence Ray Allen planned a burglary of Fran’s Market in Fresno, California and solicited the involvement of two men who worked for him at his security guard business. Allen also arranged the help of a young woman to get the keys to the store and its burglar alarm from Bryon Schletewitz, son of the market owner.

Following the burglary and after stolen money orders were cashed, the young woman told Schletewitz it was Allen who had robbed the market. Schletewitz confronted Allen’s son, who denied it, and Allen himself also denied it. Allen said that something would have to be done to the young woman and he arranged her death. Allen was arrested. He was convicted of burglary, first-degree murder and conspiracy and sent to prison to serve a life sentence on March 16, 1978.
He was incarcerated at Folsom State Prison and knew Billie Ray Hamilton in prison. While in prison, Allen plotted to kill the people who had informed on him and gotten him prison time.

Three days after Hamilton was paroled, he was picked up by Allen’s son at the bus station where he also asked for weapons to carry out the crimes.

On Sept. 4, 1980, Hamilton and his girlfriend, Connie Barbow, went to Fran’s Market and purchased some meat from Joe Rias. Rias went into the storeroom with Douglas White. Since it was after the market’s closing time, the front door was locked. Bryon Schletewitz and Josephine Rocha came into the storeroom followed by Hamilton who was holding a sawed-off shotgun. Barbow followed behind. Hamilton ordered them to lie down. They all sat down. He asked Schletewitz for the keys to the safe, ordered him out, and told Barbow to watch the others. She pulled out a handgun. They went to the safe. Schletewitz told Hamilton he would give him all the money. Rias later testified that when Schletewitz and Hamilton went to the safe area, he heard shuffling and a bang. It was later learned that Hamilton shot Schletewitz at close range with the shotgun.

Hamilton went back to the room and asked Douglas White where the safes were kept; White did not know and Hamilton shot him at close range in the chest and stomach.
Another shot was heard and it was later learned that a shotgun blast at close range killed Josephine Rocha.
Hamilton attempted to kill Rias, but Rias covered his face with his left arm. The blast hit his arm, blowing off most of the tissue and shattering his elbow. Hamilton and Barbow checked on the other three victims to make sure they were dead.

Hamilton was later arrested as a suspect in a Modesto robbery and assault with a deadly weapon. Among his possessions was an address book with the name of Clarence Ray Allen. Because of the listing of Fran’s Market and the names of some of the victims, investigators believed there was a connection with the murders and the Fran’s Market burglary for which Allen had been convicted. The investigation of this matter led to the arrest of inmate Clarence Ray Allen. Allen was convicted of three counts of first-degree murder with special circumstances and was received onto California’s death row at San Quentin State Prison on December 2, 1982.



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:05:15 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
So now a cold-blooded murderer is a "senior citizen."



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:07:00 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
STATE LAWYERS URGE NO MERCY FOR 75-YEAR-OLD INMATE - Clarence Ray Allen
CBS Broadcasting ^ | 12/21/05 |

State prosecutors urged Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger today to deny clemency to a 75-year-old condemned inmate, saying that the prisoner was a cold-blooded killer and his advanced age is no reason for mercy.

Clarence Ray Allen is scheduled to be executed at San Quentin State Prison on Jan. 17 for masterminding the murders of three people at a Fresno market in 1980 while he was in prison for another murder.

The execution date is the day after Allen's 76th birthday.

In a clemency petition submitted to Schwarzenegger last week, his lawyers asked the governor to commute the death penalty to life in prison without parole on grounds of Allen's age and ill health and alleged unfairness in his 1982 trial.

But lawyers from the state attorney general's office said in opposition papers that Allen's victims never had a chance to age and he survived for the past quarter-century only because he used a lengthy appeal process to delay his execution.

State attorneys wrote, "The fact that Allen has been able to live his life after depriving so many innocent people of theirs is no reason to show him mercy now."

Allen, a former security company owner, was given the death penalty for hiring a hit man to carry out the murders at Fran's Market in Fresno while he was in Folsom State Prison for the 1974 murder of his son's girlfriend. The girlfriend, Mary Sue Kitts, 17, had revealed Allen's role in a previous robbery of the market.

The victims of the 1980 murders were Bryon Schletewitz, 27, who had testified against Allen in the earlier murder case, and two store employees, Josephine Rocha, 17, and Douglas White, 18.

The state attorneys also contended that Allen remains a threat to the outside world because his record has shown he can manipulate events outside of prison.

The attorneys wrote, "Given that Allen had successfully conspired to commit murder while already serving a life sentence for murder, death was and is the only appropriate penalty."

The prosecutors said the evidence of Allen's guilt is "overwhelming" and his claims of an unfair trial have been rejected by state and federal courts.

If executed as scheduled, Allen would be the second-oldest person put to death in the United States since the 1950s.

The oldest inmate was 77-year-old John Nixon, a contract killer executed in Mississippi on Dec. 14, according to the attorney general's papers.

Allen's lawyers said in his clemency petition that he suffers from diabetes and heart disease and is nearly blind and unable to walk.

His lawyers wrote, "The prospect of state officials wheeling a blind, lame and enfeebled 76-year-old man into the execution chamber would chill even grim supporters of capital punishment and would subject California to embarrassment in the national and international communities."

Allen's lawyers have until Dec. 27 to submit a reply to the opposition papers.



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:07:53 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
Allen's lawyers said in his clemency petition that he suffers from diabetes and heart disease and is nearly blind and unable to walk.

I thought the Libs were all for mercy killing? Maybe the Governator can change Mr Allen's name to Terri Schiavo.



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:09:20 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
I thought the Libs were all for mercy killing? Maybe the Governator can change Mr Allen's name to Terri Schiavo.

Allen's lawyers said in his clemency petition that he suffers from diabetes and heart disease and is nearly blind and unable to walk.



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:10:20 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
This turd's hook for the leftist media is that he's allegedly Choctaw Indian. This will be pitched as the white man (Ahnold) is killing the red man.



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:10:53 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
I guess we won't be hearing from Snoop Dogg, Mike Farrell, Je$$e Jackson, or Tony Robbins anytime soon.



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:11:45 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
I busted a gut laughing when I heard Tony Robbins was up to his neck in the "Save Tookie" fiasco. If there ever was a poster child for scam artists, he's it.



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:12:42 PM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
No protests with this one, He is WHITE. People only have sympathy for minority death row inmates...



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:13:05 PM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
" guess we won't be hearing from Snoop Dogg, Mike Farrell, Je$$e Jackson, or Tony Robbins anytime soon."

Nope.
Snoop is producing more perverted pornography.
Farrell is rereading Marx.
Jesse is "shaking down" another hi tech company.
I don't know what Robbins is doing......and don't care.



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:14:32 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
No doubt a relative of Ward Churchill.
"This turd's hook for the leftist media is that he's allegedly Choctaw Indian. "



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:15:38 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
Lefties don't seem to have any problem dismembering innocent babies, sticking scissors in their brains, or starving a disabled woman to death.



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:17:04 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
Lefties don't seem to have any problem starving a disabled woman to death.

But they think is wrong kill murderers like their beloved Tookie.



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:17:54 PM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
The SOB should have taken a dirt nap 26 years ago.



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:20:55 PM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
LOS ANGELES -- Celebrities from hip-hop star Snoop Dogg to motivational speaker Tony Robbins lamented the execution of Stanley Tookie Williams at a funeral yesterday that drew hundreds to the violence-wracked area where Williams founded the murderous Crips gang three decades ago.

ij.com.sg

motivational speaker Tony Robbins



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:22:17 PM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
The old bastard should have gotten of his ass and written a few children's books...



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:23:31 PM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 93284
 
HERE IS A PHOTO OF OUR HERO CLARENCE RAY

img236.imageshack.us



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:25:12 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
Nice tatoo on his forehead, huh? PHOTO OF CLARENCE RAY ALLEN

img236.imageshack.us



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:32:15 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
As execution draws near, families grieve for 3 killed at store in 1980
Stacy Finz, San Francisco Chronicle Staff Writer
Friday, January 13, 2006

sfgate.com

It was 1980, and Bryon Schletewitz was planning to take over his family's general store in Fresno so his parents could retire. Josephine Rocha was looking forward to being a high school senior and had taken a part-time job at the market to pay for her new car. Douglas White worked at the shop while going to college and hoped to start a real estate business with his mother someday.
But on a warm evening that year, the three were shot to death as part of a revenge plot cooked up in a Folsom Prison cafeteria. The scheme's architect, Clarence Ray Allen, is scheduled to be executed Tuesday morning for the murders.
For the victims' families, Allen's punishment will be an epilogue to a terrible event whose effects linger to this day.
Some plan to watch as Allen is given a lethal injection in San Quentin State Prison's death chamber.
"It will close a chapter for me," said Schletewitz's sister, Patricia Pendergrass, who is the last surviving member of her family. "But the pain will never go away. It's lasted for 25 years."
Others say there wouldn't be much point in watching Allen die.
"I'd rather spend the time with my family, remembering my sister," said Robert Rocha, Josephine Rocha's younger brother.
"Let's face it -- he'll be put to sleep," Rocha said of Allen. "He's not going to feel one ounce of the pain we've endured since that day."
________________________________________
Sept. 5, 1980, started out ordinary enough. Bryon Schletewitz persuaded his dad, Raymond, to go home early and let him close up Fran's Market, an old-fashioned country store on the east edge of Fresno.
Schletewitz, 27, loved working in his family's shop, which carried fine meat cuts for the weekend ranchers down from the city, an assortment of Mexican specialty items for local farmworkers, animal feed, clothing and sundry items.
"That store sparkled," Pendergrass said. "My mother made sure of that."
Pendergrass and Schletewitz grew up in the market, which their father had named after their mother, Frances. Schletewitz worked there while attending Clovis High School, where he played trumpet in the band and made friends easily.
After graduating, Schletewitz enrolled at a local junior college, where he considered becoming a paramedic. But in the end, he decided that working at the market was what he loved best.
"He was a people person," Pendergrass said. "He had this joyful spirit that was catchy. He loved joking and laughing with the customers, and they in return liked and looked for him."
Raymond Schletewitz agreed to leave closing up to his son that evening, a decision he would regret for the rest of his life.
Bryon Schletewitz joshed with his three employees as they swept up. He had three engagements that night and was probably wondering how he was going to make it to all of them, his sister said. He'd begun dating a pretty brunette. It wasn't serious, but Pendergrass said her brother had made a promise to marry when he was 27 -- just like their father did.
________________________________________
Josephine Rocha hadn't been employed at the store for long. But working at Fran's Market seemed like it was becoming a tradition in the 17-year-old's family. Her older sister Teresa had worked there while she attended high school, and she helped Rocha get a job.
Their Portuguese parents raised all seven of their children with a strong work ethic, Robert Rocha said. Josephine, whom the family called "Phina," was earning money to pay off her car and for auto insurance. Rocha said he remembered her washing that blue Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme while listening to music by the Cars.
Of all the kids in the family, she was Daddy's little girl, he said.
The father's name was Joseph, and "when she was born fourth of all girls, my dad began to worry that he would never have a namesake," Robert Rocha said. "So they named my sister Josephine."
She was the only member of the family to have blond hair and blue eyes. "My mother thought God sent her an angel," he said.
By 17, Josephine Rocha had already won awards for her artwork. When she wasn't drawing, she was working in the garden with her father. Her family is sure that, had she lived, she would have become either an artist or a horticulturist. Robert Rocha said she loved children and caring for people and might have chosen a profession in teaching or medicine.
________________________________________
Before leaving for work at Fran's, 18-year-old Douglas White insisted that his mother see a doctor about her injured foot. She had been putting it off, so he got on the phone and made the appointment himself. As he walked out the door, he teased his mom, a real estate agent, that maybe he should show houses to her clients that day.
White was a 6-foot-6 teenager with the manners of a prince. The Schletewitzes noticed right off how polite he was with the store customers.
"It was 'yes ma'am' and 'no sir,' " Pendergrass remembered. His mother, Nadine, used to call him her "big, gentle teddy bear."
At Clovis High School, he sang with the choir and helped the director plan activities.
"Douglas was a very caring young man," his mother wrote in a 1997 court declaration. "Many other families considered him a virtual member of their families. As a personal favor to his choir director's family, he drove to Madera to do their yard work."
After high school, White attended Reedley Community College. He wanted to study law and architecture and join his mother in her real estate business.
________________________________________
While Schletewitz, Rocha and White began their routine of closing up the market for the night, Clarence Ray Allen, then 50, waited in his Folsom Prison cell to see if his plan of vengeance had been carried out.
He didn't know Rocha or White, but he wanted Bryon Schletewitz, Raymond Schletewitz and six others dead for testifying against him during his 1977 trial for the murder of Mary Sue Kitts, his son's 17-year-old girlfriend, authorities said.
Allen believed Kitts had gone to the Schletewitzes three years earlier and told them that he and a group of accomplices were responsible for a burglary at Fran's Market that year. Allen owned a security outfit, but he also plotted robberies and couldn't abide "rats," prosecutors said.
He ordered a hit on Kitts. The teen was strangled and thrown into the Friant-Kern Canal. Her body was never found.
Allen, who was sentenced to life in prison, planned to eliminate the prosecution witnesses so they wouldn't be around for his appeal. He contracted with inmate Billy Ray Hamilton, who worked with him in the prison's cafeteria and was soon to be paroled, to kill the eight people on his list.
So that September night, Hamilton and his girlfriend, Connie Barbo, lingered in Fran's Market until they were the last customers. Joe Rios, a teenager also working at the store that day, became suspicious of the two as he cleaned up the aisles. But it was too late.
Hamilton pulled out a sawed-off shotgun, and Barbo drew a .32-caliber revolver. They herded all the employees toward the stockroom and ordered them to lie on the floor.
Schletewitz volunteered to give the couple all the money they wanted, according to court records. He then led Hamilton into the stockroom. Once inside, Hamilton pointed the shotgun at Schletewitz's forehead and shot him from less than a foot away.
Hamilton came out of the room and turned to White, the records say. "OK, big boy, where's the safe?" Hamilton demanded. White responded, "Honest, there's no safe." Hamilton shot him in the neck and chest at point-blank range, according to court documents.
Rocha began crying. Hamilton shot her two or three times from about five feet away. The shots pierced her heart, lung and stomach.
Rios had managed to escape to the bathroom. Hamilton pushed his way in, stood three feet away and fired, according to the documents. Rios raised his arm just in time, and the shot entered his elbow, saving his life.
Jack Abbott, who lived next to the market, grabbed his gun and came outside when he heard the shots. He and Hamilton exchanged fire, and Hamilton fled after being shot in the foot. Police arrived and found Barbo hiding in the market.
Hamilton was arrested a week later after trying to rob a Modesto liquor store and now is on Death Row with Allen. A hit list containing names and addresses of the eight trial witnesses was found on him when he was arrested. It's what linked him to Allen, who has always denied ordering the killings.
________________________________________
Robert Rocha and his sister Teresa were at home watching television when a brief story about the robbery flashed on the news. They heard there had been a lone survivor and prayed that it was Josephine. Teresa Rocha and her mother raced to every hospital in the area.
Nadine White got the news during a phone call. At about the same time, her son George drove by the store and saw the commotion. He came home screaming that something horrible had happened.
"We went to Fran's Market," Nadine White wrote in 1977. "At first, we were led to believe that Douglas had survived. However, that hope was destroyed when Ray Schletewitz himself told us that Douglas was inside the store with his dead son, Bryon."
Pendergrass said her parents never opened the store after that day.
Rocha's father told his family that he wished he could have taken the bullets for his daughter.
White had to close her real estate business because she couldn't function after her son's death.
She wrote, "Douglas' death destroyed our world."

E-mail Stacy Finz at sfinz@sfchronicle.com.
Page A - 1



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:33:42 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
The disgusting leftwingers will never read this
..............................................................

As execution draws near, families grieve for 3 killed at store in 1980
Stacy Finz, San Francisco Chronicle Staff Writer
Friday, January 13, 2006

sfgate.com

It was 1980, and Bryon Schletewitz was planning to take over his family's general store in Fresno so his parents could retire. Josephine Rocha was looking forward to being a high school senior and had taken a part-time job at the market to pay for her new car. Douglas White worked at the shop while going to college and hoped to start a real estate business with his mother someday.
But on a warm evening that year, the three were shot to death as part of a revenge plot cooked up in a Folsom Prison cafeteria. The scheme's architect, Clarence Ray Allen, is scheduled to be executed Tuesday morning for the murders.
For the victims' families, Allen's punishment will be an epilogue to a terrible event whose effects linger to this day.
Some plan to watch as Allen is given a lethal injection in San Quentin State Prison's death chamber.
"It will close a chapter for me," said Schletewitz's sister, Patricia Pendergrass, who is the last surviving member of her family. "But the pain will never go away. It's lasted for 25 years."
Others say there wouldn't be much point in watching Allen die.
"I'd rather spend the time with my family, remembering my sister," said Robert Rocha, Josephine Rocha's younger brother.
"Let's face it -- he'll be put to sleep," Rocha said of Allen. "He's not going to feel one ounce of the pain we've endured since that day."
________________________________________
Sept. 5, 1980, started out ordinary enough. Bryon Schletewitz persuaded his dad, Raymond, to go home early and let him close up Fran's Market, an old-fashioned country store on the east edge of Fresno.
Schletewitz, 27, loved working in his family's shop, which carried fine meat cuts for the weekend ranchers down from the city, an assortment of Mexican specialty items for local farmworkers, animal feed, clothing and sundry items.
"That store sparkled," Pendergrass said. "My mother made sure of that."
Pendergrass and Schletewitz grew up in the market, which their father had named after their mother, Frances. Schletewitz worked there while attending Clovis High School, where he played trumpet in the band and made friends easily.
After graduating, Schletewitz enrolled at a local junior college, where he considered becoming a paramedic. But in the end, he decided that working at the market was what he loved best.
"He was a people person," Pendergrass said. "He had this joyful spirit that was catchy. He loved joking and laughing with the customers, and they in return liked and looked for him."
Raymond Schletewitz agreed to leave closing up to his son that evening, a decision he would regret for the rest of his life.
Bryon Schletewitz joshed with his three employees as they swept up. He had three engagements that night and was probably wondering how he was going to make it to all of them, his sister said. He'd begun dating a pretty brunette. It wasn't serious, but Pendergrass said her brother had made a promise to marry when he was 27 -- just like their father did.
________________________________________
Josephine Rocha hadn't been employed at the store for long. But working at Fran's Market seemed like it was becoming a tradition in the 17-year-old's family. Her older sister Teresa had worked there while she attended high school, and she helped Rocha get a job.
Their Portuguese parents raised all seven of their children with a strong work ethic, Robert Rocha said. Josephine, whom the family called "Phina," was earning money to pay off her car and for auto insurance. Rocha said he remembered her washing that blue Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme while listening to music by the Cars.
Of all the kids in the family, she was Daddy's little girl, he said.
The father's name was Joseph, and "when she was born fourth of all girls, my dad began to worry that he would never have a namesake," Robert Rocha said. "So they named my sister Josephine."
She was the only member of the family to have blond hair and blue eyes. "My mother thought God sent her an angel," he said.
By 17, Josephine Rocha had already won awards for her artwork. When she wasn't drawing, she was working in the garden with her father. Her family is sure that, had she lived, she would have become either an artist or a horticulturist. Robert Rocha said she loved children and caring for people and might have chosen a profession in teaching or medicine.
________________________________________
Before leaving for work at Fran's, 18-year-old Douglas White insisted that his mother see a doctor about her injured foot. She had been putting it off, so he got on the phone and made the appointment himself. As he walked out the door, he teased his mom, a real estate agent, that maybe he should show houses to her clients that day.
White was a 6-foot-6 teenager with the manners of a prince. The Schletewitzes noticed right off how polite he was with the store customers.
"It was 'yes ma'am' and 'no sir,' " Pendergrass remembered. His mother, Nadine, used to call him her "big, gentle teddy bear."
At Clovis High School, he sang with the choir and helped the director plan activities.
"Douglas was a very caring young man," his mother wrote in a 1997 court declaration. "Many other families considered him a virtual member of their families. As a personal favor to his choir director's family, he drove to Madera to do their yard work."
After high school, White attended Reedley Community College. He wanted to study law and architecture and join his mother in her real estate business.
________________________________________
While Schletewitz, Rocha and White began their routine of closing up the market for the night, Clarence Ray Allen, then 50, waited in his Folsom Prison cell to see if his plan of vengeance had been carried out.
He didn't know Rocha or White, but he wanted Bryon Schletewitz, Raymond Schletewitz and six others dead for testifying against him during his 1977 trial for the murder of Mary Sue Kitts, his son's 17-year-old girlfriend, authorities said.
Allen believed Kitts had gone to the Schletewitzes three years earlier and told them that he and a group of accomplices were responsible for a burglary at Fran's Market that year. Allen owned a security outfit, but he also plotted robberies and couldn't abide "rats," prosecutors said.
He ordered a hit on Kitts. The teen was strangled and thrown into the Friant-Kern Canal. Her body was never found.
Allen, who was sentenced to life in prison, planned to eliminate the prosecution witnesses so they wouldn't be around for his appeal. He contracted with inmate Billy Ray Hamilton, who worked with him in the prison's cafeteria and was soon to be paroled, to kill the eight people on his list.
So that September night, Hamilton and his girlfriend, Connie Barbo, lingered in Fran's Market until they were the last customers. Joe Rios, a teenager also working at the store that day, became suspicious of the two as he cleaned up the aisles. But it was too late.
Hamilton pulled out a sawed-off shotgun, and Barbo drew a .32-caliber revolver. They herded all the employees toward the stockroom and ordered them to lie on the floor.
Schletewitz volunteered to give the couple all the money they wanted, according to court records. He then led Hamilton into the stockroom. Once inside, Hamilton pointed the shotgun at Schletewitz's forehead and shot him from less than a foot away.
Hamilton came out of the room and turned to White, the records say. "OK, big boy, where's the safe?" Hamilton demanded. White responded, "Honest, there's no safe." Hamilton shot him in the neck and chest at point-blank range, according to court documents.
Rocha began crying. Hamilton shot her two or three times from about five feet away. The shots pierced her heart, lung and stomach.
Rios had managed to escape to the bathroom. Hamilton pushed his way in, stood three feet away and fired, according to the documents. Rios raised his arm just in time, and the shot entered his elbow, saving his life.
Jack Abbott, who lived next to the market, grabbed his gun and came outside when he heard the shots. He and Hamilton exchanged fire, and Hamilton fled after being shot in the foot. Police arrived and found Barbo hiding in the market.
Hamilton was arrested a week later after trying to rob a Modesto liquor store and now is on Death Row with Allen. A hit list containing names and addresses of the eight trial witnesses was found on him when he was arrested. It's what linked him to Allen, who has always denied ordering the killings.
________________________________________
Robert Rocha and his sister Teresa were at home watching television when a brief story about the robbery flashed on the news. They heard there had been a lone survivor and prayed that it was Josephine. Teresa Rocha and her mother raced to every hospital in the area.
Nadine White got the news during a phone call. At about the same time, her son George drove by the store and saw the commotion. He came home screaming that something horrible had happened.
"We went to Fran's Market," Nadine White wrote in 1977. "At first, we were led to believe that Douglas had survived. However, that hope was destroyed when Ray Schletewitz himself told us that Douglas was inside the store with his dead son, Bryon."
Pendergrass said her parents never opened the store after that day.
Rocha's father told his family that he wished he could have taken the bullets for his daughter.
White had to close her real estate business because she couldn't function after her son's death.
She wrote, "Douglas' death destroyed our world."

E-mail Stacy Finz at sfinz@sfchronicle.com.
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To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:38:04 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
Do not execute Clarence Ray Allen, says Secretary General of the Council of Europe (OUTRAGEOUS)
Council of Europe ^ | January 4, 2006 | Council of Europe

“The death penalty is a brutal and vindictive travesty of justice” said Terry Davis, Secretary General of the Council of Europe, in a statement issued today.

“Following the Christmas break, executions in the United States are expected to resume on 17 January 2006, when Clarence Ray Allen is scheduled to be put to death in the state of California. He is 75 years old. Mr Allen is not an innocent man. He was found guilty of a particularly gruesome crime, but in executing him at his advanced age and decades after the crime had been committed, the authorities are coming close to win the contest in cruelty and vengeance.

The death penalty is aberrant and inhuman in all circumstances, but even more so when it is applied in the cases of children, elderly or mentally ill people. In all member states of the Council of Europe, the death penalty was abolished because it is futile and wrong. The death penalty is not justice. It is a pathetic attempt to satisfy a primitive craving for spectacle and revenge. I therefore call on the Governor of California to spare the life of Clarence Ray Allen and on the US authorities to join virtually all other civilised and democratic countries in the world and abolish the death penalty once and for all. This is not just about the life or death of an old man - what is at stake is the respect for human dignity in American society as a whole” Terry Davis said.

The Council of Europe is the oldest European political organisation, established in 1949 to promote democracy and protect human rights and the rule of law in Europe. It has 46 member states. Abolition of the death penalty is a legal obligation on the basis of Protocol 6 to the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms. The United States of America, together with Japan, are the only observer states to the Council of Europe to continue executing people.

Press Contact Council of Europe Press Division Tel. +33 3 88 41 25 60 - Fax. +33 3 88 41 39 11 E-mail: PressUnit@coe.int



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:40:00 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
Has the Council of Europe come out against honor killings or executions done regularly by muslims?

Of course not.



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:41:35 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
Memories of horrible night linger as death nears for aging inmate - victims of Clarence Ray Allen
Associated Press ^ | Jan 14, 2006 | DON THOMPSON

Dusk had just fallen on the night of Sept. 5, 1980, when Jack Abbott heard gunshots at the general store next to his home.

He grabbed his double-barreled shotgun and vaulted the concrete wall separating his backyard from Fran's Market, owned by his longtime friends, Raymond and Frances Schletewitz.

"I could see them in there, someone with a gun in their hand. I could see somebody lying on the floor," Abbott recalled during a recent interview at his home.

He fired a warning as a store clerk, 19-year-old Joseph Rios, sprinted past him, his arm shredded by a shotgun blast. Inside, he stepped over the bloody bodies of two other clerks, Douglas Scott White, 18, and Josephine Rocha, 17. The Schletewitz's son, Bryon, 27, was dead in the stockroom.

As he turned to call for help, Abbott was shot in the back but still managed to shoot the intruder in the foot as he fled to a nearby car.

"He couldn't believe he didn't kill me," Abbott said. "If I had one more shot, I would have gotten him through the windshield."

The murders inside the rural grocery outside Fresno that night put two men on death row: a 32-year-old newly paroled convict named Billy Ray Hamilton, and Clarence Ray Allen, the man who ordered the killings from prison.

Barring a last-minute reprieve, Allen will be the oldest inmate put to death in California when he is scheduled to be executed at 12:01 a.m. Tuesday, just after his 76th birthday. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger denied clemency on Friday.

Allen already was serving life in prison for murder when he gave Hamilton a hit list of seven people who had testified against him. He wanted them dead so they couldn't testify during his appeals.

It was the culmination of a violent history between Allen and the market, well-regarded in the community for its friendly service to farmers and their migrant workers.

Soon after Allen moved to the San Joaquin Valley, he rented a house from the Schletewitzes for $75 a month.

He soon found a measure of wealth, founding a private security firm. One photograph from those days shows him brandishing a machine gun, which he used to threaten workers during grape strikes organized by Cesar Chavez.

He owned his own airplane, luxury cars and horse stables - a lifestyle authorities have said was supported largely through criminal activity by his family and employees.

He was born in Blair, Okla., in 1930, the youngest of five children, and grew up during the Dust Bowl era in a poor, religious family - turning to preaching as a young man.

"From my earliest childhood memories, Clarence Ray Allen imparted the most loving, giving and generous grandfatherly spirit," Paula Allen of Fresno wrote in a statement, remembering her grandfather in happier times.

"He was always selfless with his time and devoted his undivided attention to me and my siblings through special occasions, his many gifts and our family outings. His gifts of humor and spontaneous frivolity could turn my dreariest days into the brightest at the drop of a hat."

Prosecutors say the image of Allen drawn by his granddaughter does not match the one of the man who arranged a burglary of Fran's Market in 1974.

When his son's girlfriend, 17-year-old Mary Sue Kitts, told Bryon Schletewitz what had happened, Allen had her strangled, her weighted body dumped in a canal.

Ray and Bryon Schletewitz testified at Allen's trial and were Hamilton's targets on that night in 1980. Ray had already gone home, and the three young clerks "were just in the wrong place at the wrong time," Deputy Attorney General Ward Campbell said.

The victims' survivors say the murders haunt them still.

White, the youngest of three brothers, was starting junior college and hoped to join his mother's real estate business, said his uncle, Larry Vannatta.

Bryon Schletewitz planned to take over the family store. His parents sold it immediately after the murders, said his sister, Patricia Pendergrass.

She intends to witness the execution to represent her late parents, who had hoped to live long enough to see Allen die: "They never saw justice served."

Allen, who uses a wheelchair, has since gone blind and deaf. His heart stopped in September, but doctors revived him to be returned to death row. His attorneys say executing him now would be an international embarrassment. In his denial of clemency, the governor said Allen's age and health didn't matter.

"He's too old to die? Josephine was too young to die," said her brother, Robert Rocha.

The girl who liked plants and helped disabled children would have turned 42 next Wednesday.

Allen and his family declined interviews for this story. But in a poem read to jurors during his trial, Allen bragged of his exploits.

"Ray and his sons are known as the Allen Gang. Sometimes you have often read how we rob and steal, and for those who squeal are usually found dying or dead.

"... Someday it will be over and they will bury us side by side. To some it will be grief, but to us it's relief, knowing we finally found a safe place to hide."



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:44:01 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
he was able to kill 3 more people after he got life-in-prison.

The murders inside the rural grocery outside Fresno that night put two men on death row: a 32-year-old newly paroled convict named Billy Ray Hamilton, and Clarence Ray Allen, the man who ordered the killings from prison.

But I was told life in prison is as good as the death penalty. But he was able to kill 3 more people after he got life-in-prison.



To: jim-thompson who wrote (51503)1/15/2006 3:46:40 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 93284
 
It is a curiosity of the Left that they give the guilty every benefit of mercy, but have no mercy whatsoever for Terri Schiavo, a disabled woman, being starved to death.