Interesting news regarding the Death Penalty today....

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Jul 10, 2002
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Here's a couple of articles really on opposite ends...


New Jersey lawmakers approve moratorium on capital punishment
By ANGELA DELLI SANTI
Associated Press Writer

January 9, 2006, 9:05 PM EST

TRENTON, N.J. -- New Jersey lawmakers voted Monday to suspend executions while a task force studies the fairness and costs of imposing the death penalty.

The measure now heads to Gov. Richard J. Codey, who has indicated he will sign it before leaving office on Jan. 17.

Under the measure, a 13-member commission would have until November to report on whether the death penalty is fairly imposed and whether alternatives would ensure public safety and address the needs of victims' families.

New Jersey would become the third state behind Illinois and Maryland to suspend executions, but the first to do so through legislation. The others were done by executive order. Maryland has since lifted its suspension.

There are 10 prisoners on New Jersey's death row. While capital punishment was reinstated in the state in 1982, the last execution took place in 1963.

The Assembly passed the measure Monday, 55-21, with two abstentions. The Senate approved it 30-6 last month.

"By its action today, the Assembly joins the Senate in signaling deep concern that the state's death penalty system isn't working," said Celeste Fitzgerald, director of New Jerseyans for Alternatives to the Death Penalty. She said capital punishment is meted out unfairly and risks executing the innocent.

Sharon Hazard Johnson, whose parents were murdered in their home, accused lawmakers of "slowly murdering me and my siblings." She said capital punishment is justified "when it fits the crime."

The bill had bipartisan legislative support.

Joseph Roberts, a Democrat who is set to become Assembly speaker on Tuesday, said the legislation is overdue.

"The injustice of the current system, and the steep price tag of it as well, means we ought to take a look at it," Roberts said.

"In New Jersey, there has been a sea change in how people view the death penalty," said Sen. Diane Allen, a Republican who voted for the moratorium.

"We've heard about people who have been put to death and were then found to be innocent. We've looked at the cost, which is enormously more for someone on death row than for a person who's imprisoned for life without parole," Allen said.
New Jersey lawmakers are not alone in considering a study of executions. Concerned about wrongful convictions and whether the poor and minorities are more likely to receive the death penalty, at least 12 other states have appointed study commissions. Thirty-eight states allow people to be sentenced to death.
 
Jul 10, 2002
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The state of California plans to execute Clarence Ray Allen at 12:01 am on January 17th, 2006, one day after his 76th birthday, and one day after the commemoration of the birthday of Martin Luther King Jr.

Allen is in extremely poor health, blind, and confined to a wheelchair. He recently suffered a heart attack, flatlined, and was revived by prison officials in order to enable his execution. If he is executed on the 17th, prison guards will have to carry him into the death chamber. For these reasons, even former San Quentin Prison Warden Danny Vazquez has come out against the execution, stating that "Allen's execution now would be a shameful act. Given his age, his infirmities, the punishment of the many years he has already spent on Death Row, his excellent behavior during that time and the very little natural life he has remaining, sparing Allen from execution would be an act of decency, compassion and justice."

Allen was convicted in 1982 for ordering the murders of three individuals while serving a life sentence at Folsom State Prison for the murder of a young woman in 1974. Billy Hamilton, the man who actually perpetrated the three murders, also received a death sentence.

As in virtually all death penalty cases in state of California, Allen's conviction and sentencing were contingent on racism, ineffective counsel, and jailhouse informants. Allen is Native American, all of the victims were white, and his case was tried in a rural, predominantly white county. California has a higher proportion of Native Americans on death row than any other state, and Native Americans nationwide are more likely to receive a death sentence than any other group.

In reviewing the quality of Allen's legal defense, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals reported that Allen's "[t]rial counsel…failed sufficiently to investigate and adequately present available mitigating evidence" and that it is "overwhelmingly plain" that trial counsel's performance "fell below an objective standard of reasonableness."

The chief witnesses against Allen at trial were admitted participants in the crimes that he was charged with. The prosecutor secured their testimony by giving them benefits, including the promise that they would not be charged with the murders themselves. These witnesses had obvious reasons to lie, shifting blame and responsibility to Allen in order to protect themselves. At different times since the trial, each of these witnesses has admitted to lying at trial.

The California Commission on the Fair Administration of Justice has been established to study exactly these kinds of flaws in California's system of capital punishment. The Justice Commission must report its recommendations to the Governor and Legislature by Dec. 31, 2007. No one should be executed while the Justice Commission is conducting this in-depth study.
 
Oct 28, 2005
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The man is White. I am sorry.
http://www.corr.ca.gov/CommunicationsOffice/CapitalPunishment/PDF/ClarenceAllen.pdf


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Choctaw

Bret Favre claims Choctaw too. Lol.



AND WAIT A MINUTE....LOL.

Search for "Clarence Ray Allen White" on Google and a result pops up at democracyinaction.org:

NCADP: National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty
Clarence Ray Allen, a white man, faces execution in California on Jan. 17, 2005
for three counts of murder and conspiracy in Fresno County. Allen is said to ...
www.democracyinaction.org/dia/organizations/ ncadp/campaign.jsp?campaign_KEY=1735 - 31k - Cached - Similar pages

Click the link, and it changes to "Choctaw Indian". This is what the link currently shows, today, January 10th.


But if you click the CACHED link, Dated Dec 30th....it magically changes back to White. Talk about some fucking shady and shifty shit going on. In the last week or so, they've changed it--and didn't have the guts to leave "White" in there with a strikethrough.

Holy fuck...seriously. I just took a quick look, and it looks like EVERY SINGLE WORD in the article is the SAME.....EXCPEPT FOR changing his race from White to Choctaw Indian. What a bunch of fucking cowards and liars.



So what happened here, Anti-Death Penalty Libtards? Did his race suddenly change in the last 2 weeks? Or is this what we all know it is--a pathetic last-ditch offensive to smear and discredit his would-be executioners with the racist card (AGAIN)?