David A. Love's Blog

David A. Love

David A. Love
Location
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Birthday
June 18
Bio
David A. Love is a human rights advocate and journalist based in Philadelphia. He is a member of the editorial board of BlackCommentator.com, where his Color of Law column appears weekly. He is a contributor to the Huffington Post, the Progressive Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune News Service, theGrio, News One, In These Times and Philadelphia Independent Media Center. He contributed to the book, States of Confinement: Policing, Detention and Prisons (St. Martin's Press, 2000), and is a former producer of the radio news magazine Democracy Now! Love is also a former spokesperson for the Amnesty International UK National Speakers Tour, and organized the first national police brutality conference as a staff member with the New York-based Center for Constitutional Rights. He served as a law clerk to two Black federal judges. Love is a graduate of Harvard College and the University of Pennsylvania Law School. He also attended Harvard Business School, and completed the Joint Programme in International Human Rights Law at the University of Oxford.

OCTOBER 23, 2009 12:37PM

Rick Perry And His Texas Death Machine Are In Big Trouble

Rate: 14 Flag

Rick Perry

When criminals are about to be caught, they try to hide their wrongdoing. When drug dealers hear the police sirens, they dump the stash in the alley or flush it down the toilet. When the Nazi officers in the concentration camps heard the allied forces approaching, they destroyed—and in many cases murdered—the evidence. There’s something about the light of day when it shines its truth upon you.

And when a Texas state commission started looking into a report that a faulty arson investigation apparently put an innocent man to death, Gov. Rick Perry replaced the commission and called the dead man a monster.

Because that’s what Southern hick town justice is all about.

Cameron Todd Willingham is now a free man, but unfortunately it took death to release him from the confines of his prison bars. He was executed on February 17, 2004 for the 1991 arson deaths of his three children. Gov. Perry refused to grant him a 30-day stay, despite questions about his guilt. According to a bogus forensics report, Willingham’s house was intentionally burned down.

In 2005, Texas instituted a forensic science commission to investigate mistakes and wrongdoing by forensic scientists. Baltimore fire expert Craig Beyler, who was hired by this commission to look into the Willingham case, concluded that there were no scientific grounds to characterize the fire as an act of arson. As The New Yorker reported, Beyler said the approach of the arson investigator in the case denied rational reasoning, was based on "folklore and mysticism rather than science," and violated "not only the standards of today but even of the time period." This, in a state whose fire investigators typically had a high school diploma, and unlike other states, no requisite experience and no specialized training or qualifications.

So, the Texas commission was reviewing Beyler’s report, and Gov. Perry, running for reelection, eliminated the members of the commission before they could issue their findings. Pure politics. After all, we don’t want people going around and talking about the execution of innocent people.

Meanwhile, Judge Sharon Keller, presiding judge of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, that state’s highest criminal court, could find herself in deep trouble. The State Commission on Judicial Conduct initiated impeachment proceedings against Keller for incompetence, violating her duties as a judge and casting public discredit on the court. For a state such as Texas— with such abysmal standards of integrity in its criminal "justice" system—you must wonder what she did to stand out among the crowd.

Keller refused to keep the court open after 5pm when she knew Michael Richard, a death row inmate, sought a last-minute appeal challenging the constitutionality of his punishment of lethal injection. The inmate was unable to file an appeal and was executed. Also, Keller rejected a new trial for Roy Criner, a mentally retarded man convicted of rape and murder, even though DNA evidence showed that he did not rape the victim. "We can’t give new trials to everyone who establishes, after conviction, that they might be innocent," Judge Keller said. "We would have no finality in the criminal justice system, and finality is important. When witnesses testify, and when jurors return a verdict, they need to know that they can’t come back later and change their minds."

Keller was unrepentant, and Perry said the execution of Willingham was appropriate based on the "totality of the issues". Ex-governor Mark White suggests that Texas might have to do away with the death penalty altogether, given that it does not deter crime and is unfairly administered, with a risk of executing the innocent. Bad habits are hard to break, and with 423 executions since 1974, including 152 under Gov. George W. Bush, Texas has the most voracious appetite for capital punishment. But perhaps the Willingham case is what is needed to end the barbaric practice.

My take on this subject is that the death penalty never was intended to be fair, as it is a holdover from Jim Crow lynching. Capital punishment was an effort to transplant lynchmob justice into the courtroom and make lynching official, if not respectable. A broken system that was designed to be broken—just clean it up and no one will notice, they thought. Guilt or innocence is of little concern here, as finality reigns supreme. And Judge Keller essentially said as much. It is no accident that the states of the former Confederacy— the states with the most violent racial history, a deep legacy of extrajudicial terror and killings— have been among the most enthusiastic executioners. Interestingly, those states also seem to have the lowest educational and health standards. Typically, the inmates on death row are people of color, and poor white folk like Mr. Willingham, those who lack resources and are unable to afford the best justice money can buy. We will never know how many people have been wrongfully executed. But Cameron Todd Willingham certainly would not have been the first. And perhaps we will never know how many opportunistic individuals have built their political careers on the corpses of the executed, whether guilty or innocent.

Rick Perry and Sharon Keller now have ethical clouds hanging over their heads. They utilized death as a political tool, but now, ironically, the death machine that helped bolster their careers could be their undoing. Yet, both are appropriate spokespersons for the death penalty. They have helped perpetuate an inherently unjust, incompetent and capricious system that legalized the lynchmob.  

Cross-posted from BlackCommentator.com.

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Thanks for posting this! I intended to, but I've ragged on my home state so much I thought I'd let someone talk about Texas.

It used to be this only happened to blacks and people with mental retardation - back in the good ol' days when George Bush was governor!

Never thought I'd see the day they started killing innocent white folks in Texas. Can't imagine this poor man's suffering, having lost his children, then to lose his own life because of sloppy forensics.

This governor should be tarred and feathered and run out of the state. When I first heard this story, I couldn't believe someone would put another human being to death for political reasons.

Guess that's why I'm opposed to the death penalty, just in case that one out of a hundred convicted of murder is actually innocent. Rated
Thanks FrogTown Diva. Interesting that Gov. Perry now calls Willingham a monster. Perhaps he was no angel, but the fact is that he did not commit murder.
Good post, David. You are doing a real service by bringing our attention to this issue. Texans often brag about being first in this or that, but I would think being first in executions would be an "honor" any state would prefer not to have. Apparently I am wrong.

Monte
This is the crux of the matter:

"It is no accident that the states of the former Confederacy— the states with the most violent racial history, a deep legacy of extrajudicial terror and killings— have been among the most enthusiastic executioners. Interestingly, those states also seem to have the lowest educational and health standards. Typically, the inmates on death row are people of color, and poor white folk like Mr. Willingham, those who lack resources and are unable to afford the best justice money can buy."

There's your brass tacks. Perry can't be worried about things like "justice" when there's so many secession fires that need stoking.

Rated.
Thanks for writing this.
Despite your argument to the contrary David, we still need the death penalty for certain crimes. Having said that, the ability for the state to kill someone needs to be conditional via legislation that states that if it is determined an innocent man was executed and the conviction was based on negligence or withheld information that could have exhonorated the deceased, then the negligent party is subject to execution as well. Then, I think you would see that the i's were dotted and the t's were crossed.
David, your work should receive the attention of all who spend time here... Most of us know of justice, many practice it, you live it... Society has some real issues, thanks for pointing this one out! Maybe succession and Texas wouldn't be a bad thing, if only oil...RRR
"I have always found that mercy bears richer fruits than strict justice." -Lincoln. Amen.
For anyone who thinks forensic science is infallible, I would recommend "Death and Justice: the Oklahoma Death Machine" by--wait for it--Mark Fuhrman. This book happens to be about corruption. Other critiques include the fact that forensic science is in fact, largely not science. There are even studies that show a feedback loop between forensic examiners and eye witnesses. Eye witnesses are more likely to remember seeing a guy if they are told his fingerprints or DNA were found, and I forensic examiners are more likely to interpret evidence against a suspect when other evidence tends to condemn that person.

The more you know about the whole industry of forensic science, the more you realize that it's just another human endeavor, prone to mistake, suggestion and corruption. It seems like so many things that get sold today--a product that hits the market before the testing is complete. Only this product gets people killed.
I've read this story before and I hope this brings both of them down. Texas' appetite for express lane executions is sickening. What a crooked corrupt political machine they run down over there.
I lived there for 10 years (and being born and raised in New England, it was difficult!) and I hated their rapid and frequent executions more than anything. However, I met the love of my life there, and I also met Ann Richards, Molly Ivans, and Sarah Weddington. I worked with PP and TARAL and I can attest to the fact that there are many liberal Texans. As much as I hated living there, I cannot let the broad brush be painted. The minority is vocal and the best we can do is encourage and support them. The demise of the likes of Rick Perry and Sharom Kellar can be hastened by the blogosphere, so thank you very much for putting this out there to be heard.
This is such an important story. The sheer numbers of the executed are horrifying in and of themselves. I have always opposed the death penalty for ANYONE, but this is inexcusable. There is no doubt that innocent people are put to death, and that should never be acceptable to any of us.

We should always err on the side of caution when it comes to applying these horrendous penalties. I understand that on the whole, Texans are still pro-death penalty. I hope this case changes that so that at the very least the innocent haven't died in vain.
Grrrrr Molly Ivins of course. Gosh I miss her and Ann so much. My M-I-L is of their ilk too.
Some one please explain Texas to me. I dont even understand the place or people!