Wednesday, October 3, 2007

Has TX Begun to Rethink the Death Penalty?



It is no secret that Texas is a state that willingly carries out the death penalty when and if it is the chosen punishment. However, in a recent article, it seems that the death penalty ruling could come to a halt while judges debate a recent appeal for Heliberto Chi. Chi was scheduled to be given the lethal injection tonight, October 3rd, 2007, for killing an Arlington store manager in 2001. Though the death penalty is not permanently gone, "It seems clear, based on the actions (by the two courts), that executions will be on hold for the next several months," said Andrea Keilen. According to the article, the recent halt in the executions are due to emerging details from another death penalty case. Apparently the Texas Courts refused to stay open past 5 p.m. on September 25th, so Michael Richard's lawyers, (another death row inmate, who did take the lethal injection later that night), could file an appeal on Richard's behalf. The Judge residing over the case, Cheryl Johnson, did not learn about the request until she read it in an American Statesman story. "It was revealed Tuesday that the decision was made by Presiding Judge Sharon Keller without consulting any of the court's eight other judges or later informing them about the decision ."



I personally have always been against the death pentalty because I believe the decision of choosing who gets to live based on how "grotesque" and horrible their crime is, even if it is the same crime, is arbitrary and contradicts the principle of equality our country was founded on. Not to mention, there is no guarentee of justice, because everyone has their own definition of what justice really is. Just because a victim's life was taken, killing the person responsible will not bring them back. The American Society should not view the death penalty as a form of justice but rather as a barbaric compromise to the confidence we have placed in our judicial system. Due to the lack of better judgement on a Texas Judge's behalf, our supposed equal distribution of punishment is broken. A man who committed the same haneous crime of murder as another man, was given lethal injection while the other may get his sentence changed to life in prison because of a bad judgement call. I am not saying these murders should not be punished, quite the opposite. I am just curious where we should draw the line between cruel / unusal punishment and justice. When it comes down to it, we're committing the same crime. If a citizen kills somebody, it's called murder; yet if the government takes a life, it is considered justice. I find this much disturbing, and I do believe there are other alternatives than the death penalty. It doesn't really solve anything in the long run; it is just more killing and an easy way out instead of dealing with the real issues. In response to this article, I hope this will bring greater attention to the flaws of our system and people will rethink their stand on what justice really is.





ORIGINAL ARTICLE

http://www.statesman.com/news/content/region/legislature/stories/10/03/1003court.html

2 comments:

wunksta said...

yes i agree. it is something to think about, considering how many people are regularly put on death row to be later found innocent. its a sad state of affairs when a free and democratic society kills innocent people because of failures in our justice system. something does need to be done with violent criminals, but untill we can come to a consensus of what is best and a better way to determine if a crime was actually committed by the individual, maybe we should deliberate on it more.
thanks for sharing.

Hooman Hedayati said...

Texas Court of Criminal Appeals Presiding Judge Sharon Keller closed the
court's office at 5 PM on an execution day without consulting any of the
other judges on the court. As a result, a man was executed without being
able to have the merits of his last appeal considered by the justice
system. To close at 5 PM and refuse to accept an appeal by a person about
to be executed is a violation of judicial responsibility. When a person is
about to be executed, our state's highest criminal court needs to remain
open for business. Keller should resign or be impeached and removed from
office for her unethical conduct. This is not the first time that Keller
has behaved like a buffoon. According to Tom Price, one of the other
conservative judges on the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, as far back as
2001 she made Texas' highest criminal appeals court "a national
laughingstock." As long as Keller is in office, the people of Texas can
not be sure that justice is being done with integrity.

Any concerned Texan can file a complaint with the State Commission on
Judicial Conduct by going to: www.scjc.state.tx.us

More info:
http://www.sharonkiller.com