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Kenneth Foster's Fate: Death Penalty Craziness In Texas
In less than three weeks Kenneth Foster, an African American man sentenced to death in 1997 for the murder of Michael LaHood, is scheduled to be executed in Texas.
LaHood's actual killer, Mauriceo Brown, was executed in 2006. Foster, who was in a car about 100 yards from the crime when it was committed, was convicted under the controversial Texas state "law of parties", under which the distinction between principal actor and accomplice in a crime is abolished. The law can impose the death penalty on anybody involved in a crime where a murder occurred. In Foster's case he was driving a car with three passengers, one of whom, Brown, left the car, got into an altercation and shot LaHood dead. Texas is the only state that applies this statute in capital cases, making it the only place in the United States where a person can be factually innocent of murder and still face the death penalty.
Foster maintains that he did not know that Brown would either rob or kill LaHood. According to an Amnesty International investigation, there is evidence not heard at trial that the murder was an unplanned act committed by Brown, as the latter himself claimed before his execution.
In 2005, a federal district judge found a "fundamental constitutional defect in Foster's sentence" and ruled that Foster's jury had not been asked to determine if he had any intent to kill LaHood, and that this failure represented a misapplication of the law. However, the state of Texas appealed to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, which overturned the decision.
The crazy thing about this case is that no one argues that Foster killed the victim. As the Fort Worth Star-Telegram's award-winning columnist Bob Ray Sanders wrote, the case "is further proof of how cruel, capricious, unjust and utterly insane our death penalty laws have become....Because of this tainted system, whether you believe in capital punishment or not, a man who did not plan or commit a murder will die August 30 unless somebody -- a judge, the Board of Pardons and Paroles and/or the governor-- has the heart and the guts to stop it."
You can help these folks get up the guts at freekenneth.com. Find updates on the case and urge members of the Texas legislature to stay Foster's execution and ask for a re-trial based on new evidence.


14 Comments so far
Show AllCan we please let the Confederacy LEAVE
(I posted this on the other article dealing with this sad reflection on the present state of "tejas", so I thought I'd go ahead and put it here also - Ken)
It seems to me that the state of texas takes a sickening unique pride in killing. It is no coincidence that the current white house occupier calls this state home. How sad in a way since the name texas (I prefer to refer to it as "tejas") derives from "taysha" a word in the Caddoan language of the Hasinai, which means "friends" or "allies". If you look at the history starting around 1830 or so, "friends" and "allies" didn't mean much but unbridled ambition and big guns sure did.
In my personal opinion, this country would be much better off letting the "lone star" state be by its lonesome. What a gesture it would be.
I hope & pray that someone of conscience who can make a difference will intervene on behalf of Kenneth Foster.
Peace,
Ken Hausle
As a Texan who has participated in numerous anti-death penalty rallies at the Capitol, I have experienced the rabid public support for state killing of even innocent people. As a former coworker once said when I brought up the subject, "Well, that's just God's will being acted out in man's world." And there are a lot of Texans with just about that level of ethical insight.
As someone once said to me, "I wouldn't have a problem with an asteroid the size of Texas hitting the planet, as long as it actually hits Texas."
"...Five out of seven board members must recommend clemency before Governor Rick Perry will consider it... Foster's supporters, who are spearheading a letter-writing campaign to the board and governor..."
---------------
Please call or fax the Texas Gov (Rick Perry) AND the seven members of the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles & tell them that Eecuting this guy would be murder. Please take a few mins to try to stop it. You might also want to express your view on the death penalty too.
--------------------------------
Texas Gov Rick Perry
http://www.governor.state.tx.us/contact
Citizen's Assistance Hotline: (800) 843-5789
[for Texas callers]
Office of the Governor Main Switchboard: (512) 463-2000
Fax: (512) 463-1849
Mailing Address
Office of the Governor
P.O. Box 12428
Austin, Texas 78711-2428
======================================
Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles
Rissie Owens, Presiding Officer
Huntsville Board Office
1300 11th St., Suite 520
P.O. Box 599
Huntsville, TX 77342-0599
936-291-2161
936-291-8367 Fax
----------------------------
Linda Garcia, Board Member
Angleton Board Office
1212 N. Velasco, Suite 201
Angleton, TX 77515
979-849-3031
979-849-8741 Fax
----------------------------------
Juanita Gonzalez, Board Member
Gatesville Board Office
3408 S. State Hwy. 36
Gatesville, TX 76528
254-865-8870
254-865-2629 Fax
------------------------------
Jackie DeNoyelles, Board Member
Palestine Board Office
207 E. Reagan
Palestine, TX 75801
903-723-1068
903-723-1441 Fax
---------------------------------------------
Jose L. Aliseda, Board Member
San Antonio Board Office
2902 N.E. Loop 410, Suite #206
San Antonio, TX 78218
210-564-3721
210-564-3726 Fax
-------------------------------
Charles Aycock, Board Member
Amarillo Board Office
5809 S. Western, Suite 237
Amarillo, TX 79110
806-359-7656
806-358-6455 Fax
----------------------
Conrith Davis, Board Member
Huntsville Board Office
1300 11th St., Suite 520
P.O. Box 599
Huntsville, TX 77342-0599
936-291-2161
936-291-8367 Fax
======================
======================
Source:
http://www.tdcj.state.tx.us/bpp/brd_members/brd_members.html
As a native Texan, I think it is instructive to call to mind the old mini-series "Lonesome Dove". One of the good friends of Captains Call and MacRae had formerly been a lawman himself, but he fell in with a bad group of guys while trying to get through Indian country alive. The bad guys killed some innocent "sodbusters" and burned them in a hideous act of senseless violence. And they forced the former lawman to participate in the crime against his will. And when Captains Call and MacRae caught up with the gang, they took them into custody and hanged them. Their old buddy did not particularly want to get hanged, and he said he did not intend to help murder the victims, and Captain Gus MacRae of the Texas Rangers told him:
"You know the rules; you ride with an outlaw and you die with an outlaw."
Old West values were not so bad and they are not so bad today, either. Kenneth Foster was on a crime spree and did not take his leave of the crime team and he will pay for his mistake with his life. Maybe in his next life he will do better. I know I will not lose a moment of sleep worrying about his sorry life. The world will be a little bit better place without him.
great, now apply that to every service person involved in the illegal killing spree in iraq- do we start with the decider or the trigger people? does it go so far as "vote for an outlaw die with an outlaw?"
i do not actually want anyone killed for being an outlaw, i am rather drawing out the scale of the application of this pre-christian law to make my point. what are consequences which teach and support deveolping healthy pro-social people and what decisions do we as a society make which slide us towards becoming a healthy peaceful society. scapegoat slaughtering seems to blunt a mallet to retime the complex clockworks of an individuals life let alone a society. what about restorative justice for those capable of growth, and safe supervision for those who have no conscience? can this person learn and grow, did they intend or realize the impact of what they were doing, did they have any inkling a life would be taken?
rehabilitation is often the wrong word in a case like this, perhaps habilitation would fit better. I worry that our consumerist mind set sets this up in our society. if something doesnt work right we dispose of it and get a new one rather than trying to find out how it works and take the time to get it running successfully.
Hawkman is already halfway down the slippery slope. I won't try to readjust someone who takes his object lessons from bad TV. For those who already approve state killing this is just the next step. Lord knows what comes next.
This whole anti-death penalty mindset is what is truly bizarre. The truth is that these anti-death advocates really do not care about justice or quality of life for anyone inside or outside prison. They just do not want people to die, as if fear of death itself governs their lives. Even the most sordid murders should never be put to death for their crimes, according to this mindset, which is the slipperiest slope of all. As a consequence, the penal system itself can never be reformed, which is sorely needed, because all the effort is spent trying to keep people incarcerated and not executed, as if incarceration itself in inhumane conditions really is no big deal. And there surely is no impetus to deal with the meta-issues such as distribution of wealth within society, because what is REALLY important is saving criminal lives in order to redeem the evil acts while still keeping these people incarcerated in hellish conditions. What a slippery slope that one is!
What we need is a lot of reform, including the dramatically EXPANDED use of capital punishment.
Injustice within the criminal justice system, as in the case of judges who refuse to allow pertinent evidence at trial in capital cases, should be punished by death. Attorneys and prosecutors who deliberately or knowingly withhold exculpatory evidence should themselves be subject to the death penalty. Police who fabricate or plant evidence should face the electric chair. Government officials who promote genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes should go straight to death row, along with all those bureucrats who lay the legal framework for such actions, such as the Yoos and the Gonzales' of the world.
If the Fosters deserve death, and they do, then so do the premeditated murders. I don't give a damn if Dick Cheney can be rehabilitated and turn to doing good while in prison, I want the man punished just like Kenneth Foster.
When we get this scum cleared out of society, then we can go about redistributing wealth so that all get equal access to resources that make all lives potentially productive. Prisons should be places of rehabilitation for offenders in non-capital cases, and should not be overfilled to the point where prison crowding itself is punishment for crimes. The punishment of incarceration should be loss of personal freedom, not torture in inhumane conditions. If society sees fit to incarcerate people, it should warehouse them humanely and prison administrative personnel and guards who brutalize prisoners should be incarcerated among those they brutalized just to allow them to experience the full realization of the error of their ways.
We do not need to save every life on this planet. The planet is extremely unhealthy because of far too much human life and judicious use of capital punishment could help regain needed balance.
And what nut says Lonesome Dove was bad tv! Remember the scene where Captain Call caught the army colonel trying to steal Newt's horse -- and beat the holy shit out of the man with a blacksmith's tongs. Then Captain Call said, "I hate rude behavior ... in a man. I won't tolerate it." Punish! Punish! Punish! Kill! Kill! Kill! Let's restore the balance by ridding ourselves of the murderous dregs of society whether in Death Row or Washington DC and get some fairness, some equitable distribution of wealth and resources, and some civility in our nation and world.
Kenneth, get ready to say hello to Tookie.
ponder-ur: If Foster had been involved in murdering an Iraqi, he would have gotten a reduction in sentence because the prosecution would have been unable to prove the innocence of the man that was murdered. Then he could get clemency later.
http://www.localnewswatch.com/skyvalley/stories/index.php?action=fullnews&id=145585
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2003831685_hamdania11.html
Isn't it wonderful to live in a nation of laws?
Hawkman: What is it with you guys that want everybody else to burn or die for their crimes when you yourself aren't perfect. So this man should die because he gave some jerk a ride. That's justice in your book? I'm all for the death penalty. In the appropriate cases. I wish Charles Manson would have fried. He got lucky for now but I also believe in divine justice. But by your comments about not losing sleep over his death show me and all of us that you lack a soul. Like Bush you've lost that sense of compassion that causes people to care. I feel sorry for you and anyone who gets you as a juror in their trial.
It may be that the way to break through the Texan mindset is to toss a wedge into a very, very, critical spot. Namely, the tug between feelings of justice/retribution, and freedom/trust. So the question we would pose to them is whether they believe that government should have a monopoly on capital punishment, or whether there are circumstances were vigilantism is justified.
Certainly one would not toss that like Rovian turd blossom out there to advocate for vigilantism, but for a more nefarious purpose: it would make both sides squirm at one another, and that may be what is desparately needed here...
Racism is always in the background. I want to share a racist email I got. I posted on usenet a story about this entitled, "Unknowing Driver to be Executed due to Benighted Texas Law "
*************beginning of quote of racist email I received**********
From: pinko.express@spambob.org
References:
Organization: Michael (MLK) King was promoted by Pinko Jew$ and KGB funding!
User-Agent: Xnews/5.03.24
To: econdemocracy@gmail.com
A deadly DEAD NIGGER is a GOOD NIGGER!
Foster was an informed conspirator; case closed.
You pinkos may kiss his filthy nigger anus goodbye, of course.
LoL!
----------
http://www.martinlutherking.org/
[Know the man, reject the myth [be free at last]!]
*******************end of quote of racist email I received**********
As you can see this coward uses not only anonymous but
(didn't even know this existed) an un-reply-able to email address this "Spambob" Why am I sharing this? The world NEEDS to see the
ugly truth that while racism isn't the entire
reason for pro-death penalty, it is a subset, in the background
it is part of why (part of the population) supports it. Including
the ones who have "racism, Lite (TM)" rather than the extreme
neo-nazi type (notice "The Jews!" etc in the header of his email,
too) posters.
-ED (EconomicDemocracy.org)
Yet another reason why I moved to a civilized country (Canada).
People, "hawkman" is a troll -- probably a shill, getting paid per-post by some neo-fascist think tank who then gathers "statistics" from blogs "proving" popular support for their twisted perspective.
Please ask yourself before responding to these trolls: "With this attitude, what is he doing reading Common Dreams?" You'll know the answer before you ask the question. And then silently ignore the trolls. Or fight fire with fire and quit Common Dreams and start posting on Fox Snooze blogs.
Texas is my least favorite state in the USA. Naturally, people who grew up in Texas believe they are Texans first and Americans second - they should secede from the USA for that reason alone. They are greedy and not very friendly. In fact, the citizens of Texas will benefit the most from the Iraq invasion/occupation - and most members of the White House are from Texas. It was Texans who decided to "escalate" Vietnam (Lyndon Baines Johnson) and Iraq (George W. Bush) with support from their state. I think Texans should be barred from running for President. As much as I like Ron Paul, I would respect him much more if he was not from Texas.
Texas lead the USA in executions and is among the worst education systems in the USA. They have an obsession with death, glorifying stupidity, and barbarism I guess. Let me say again one of many reasons I can't stand Texas nor its people, and this may bother some Texans on here - LEARN TO PRONOUNCE WORDS IN ENGLISH PROPERLY! The Texas accent is annoying to hear and comes off as idiotic. Perhaps the way they speak English corresponds with their poor education system