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Evolution in Texas — On the Death Penalty

by John Nichols

There are many Americans who do not believe in evolution. And it is probably fair to say that a disproportionate number of them reside in Texas.

But it is from Texas that we gain confirmation of the absolute certainty that human evolution is a reality.

When George Bush was governor of Texas in the 1990s, he approved executions with impunity, sending to death those who might have been innocent and those who might have been guilty, those who had repented and those who had not, those who had adequate representation and those whose lawyers slept through the trials, those who had the mental capacity to understand their crimes, those whose mental state would have barred even a trial in more civilized jurisdictions.

In all, Bush signed more 150 execution orders as governor, a record for the state and nation. The world press recognized him as the “Texecutioner” or, in the slightly less volatile phrasing of London’s Independent newspaper: “a death penalty enthusiast.”

As president, Bush has continued his energetic advocacy for state-sponsored slaying. Only this month, it was reported that Bush and his soon-to-be-former Attorney General had developed a plan to speed up the executions of Americans lingering on the nation’s death rows. The plan, which will be one of the last initiatives of Alberto Gonzales, is to make it easier for executions to be “fast-tracked” by states that want to avoid long appeals processes in the federal courts.

The Bush-Gonzales plan is to borrow a page from recent anti-terrorism legislation — which strip away habeas corpus protections and other legal guarantees — in order to allow states to rely on the Justice Department, rather than the federal courts, to decide whether death-row inmates received adequate representation at trial.

That would eliminate one of the primary avenues of appeal from convictions in states such as Texas, which have a history of providing inadequate representation for poor and minority defendants.

Bush and Gonzales, who have worked together since the president’s days in Texas to make the killing machines of the states run more smoothly, also want to reduce the amount of time that death-row inmates have to file federal appeals and to pursue them.

So what’s this about evolution? Clearly, Bush has not grown as a human being or as a public official with the power to decide who lives and dies.

But Bush is no longer the governor of Texas. Conservative Republican Rick Perry has the job. And on Wednesday, Perry commuted the sentence of Texas death row inmate Kenneth Foster’s sentence to life. The decision came just hours before an innocent man was to be killed by the state — a prospect that would not, in all likelihood, have concerned George Bush or Alberto Gonzales but that did concern Rick Perry.

Foster and his lawyers had long contended that, while he was in a car that was involved in a 1996 armed robbery spree that ended in the murder of a 25-year-old San Antonio man, he killed no one and had no knowledge or intention that a murder should occur. Indeed, Foster was at least eighty feet from where the killing took place.

All of this should have been sorted out at his trial. But Foster’s trial was a travesty at which his attorney was not given a chance to cross-examine the defendants partners, who both received life sentences. Even if Foster’s trial had been by a legitimate one, however, he might not have escaped the draconian implications of a Texas law that permits the casual execution of any and all participants in crime sprees that turn deadly.

The murderous mess that is Texas jurisprudence was dramatically illustrated by the Foster case. Thanks to the tremendous work of the Save Kenneth Foster Campaign, the world was made aware of the fact that Texas was preparing to perpetrate one of the most wrongful executions in the state’s long history of wrongful executions. Even death-penalty proponents began to object.

Last Sunday, the conservative Dallas Morning News editorialized last:

Kenneth Foster was a robber. He was a drug user. He was a teenager making very bad decisions.

He is not an innocent man.

But Mr. Foster is not a killer.

Still, the State of Texas plans to put him to death Thursday.

Joining calls religious and political leaders around the world for a commutation of Foster’s sentence, the Morning News ended its editorial by declaring, “Mr. Foster is a criminal. But he should not be put to death for a murder committed by someone else.”

“Governor Perry once said that there was no hue and cry against the death penalty in Texas,” said Lily Hughes of the national Campaign to End the Death Penalty. “Well, here was your hue and cry.”

On the eve of the scheduled execution, Perry announced that, “After carefully considering the facts of this case, along with the recommendations from the Board of Pardons and Paroles, I believe the right and just decision is to commute Foster’s sentence from the death penalty to life imprisonment. I am concerned about Texas law that allows capital murder defendants to be tried simultaneously, and it is an issue I think the legislature should examine.”

That is not a message that would have been issued by Governor George Bush — particularly the part proposing legislative intervention to correct an injustice.

This small measure of evolution, occurring in the unlikely state of Texas, has saved the life of a man who should never have been charged with a capital crime.

John Nichols’ new book is The Genius of Impeachment: The Founders’ Cure for Royalism. Rolling Stone’s Tim Dickinson hails it as a “nervy, acerbic, passionately argued history-cum-polemic [that] combines a rich examination of the parliamentary roots and past use of the ‘heroic medicine’ that is impeachment with a call for Democratic leaders to ‘reclaim and reuse the most vital tool handed to us by the founders for the defense of our most basic liberties.’”

Copyright © 2007 The Nation

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6 Comments so far

  1. netminno August 31st, 2007 12:34 pm

    I’m sure I am not the only Common dreams reader that took action to contact Gov. Rick Perry to grant a commutation and I hope the readership will take time to thank him for taking the steps the “Decider” wouldn’t for at least one victim of Texas “justice”.

  2. mirf59 August 31st, 2007 4:03 pm

    Rick Perry may represent an evolutionary leap up from Bush 43, but it is the equivalent of the upgrade from cyanobacteria to phytoplankton.

    Anyway, let’s not forget, in this discussion, that Bush has not stopped being a killer since he left Texas.

    As the decider and commander in chief, he has initiated a grand blood spectacle that was 100% discretionary and which may well have slaughtered as many as 500,000 or more innocent people.

    Since Bush is at the helm, and this is his war, he is directly responsible for all of these deaths. That makes him a killer of spectacular proportions, and more worthy of life imprisonment that any of the Texans he killed.

  3. Dichterfreund August 31st, 2007 4:11 pm

    “As the decider and commander in chief, he has initiated a grand blood spectacle that was 100% discretionary and which may well have slaughtered as many as 500,000 or more innocent people.”

    Mark Crispin Miller noted several years ago in his “Bush Dyslexicon” that Bush only stumbles and sounds like an idiot when he’s trying to sound humane; when he’s discussing murdering people & inflicting mass casualities, he’s concise, never stumbles, and his eyes glisten with the prospect of death.

    Of course, when the occasion arose for him to kill in person with full approval, he backed away because it meant risking his own snake’s neck, as did his vice-viper.

    “Rick Perry may represent an evolutionary leap up from Bush 43, but it is the equivalent of the upgrade from cyanobacteria to phytoplankton.”

    I think of them more as constantly mutating viruses, that apparently are far more resistant than HIV.

  4. Nick Lewis September 1st, 2007 1:25 am

    This praise of Gov Perry is almost-satirically under deserved, and I wish I could actually slap your wrist for encouraging him, and his fabulous hair (which guides his decisions).

    What is this? Are we congratulating Rick Perry for not allowing an innocent man to die?! Please: you may as well congratulate President Bush for all of the troops who haven’t died.

    Iranian Mullahs put Rick Perry to shame when it comes to human justice. No seriously.

    ***
    Source: http://www.abanet.org/crimjust/juvjus/beazley.html
    At one time, I was able to say that Texas was in the proud company of the The Democratic Republic of Congo, and Iran in executing offenders under the age of 18. But times have changed:
    -Iran has publicly stated they no longer execute juveniles.
    -Republic of Congo commuted all of death sentences of juveniles

    That’s right, Rick “nice hair” Perry’s state is the only place *IN THE WORLD* where executing juveniles remains “policy”.

    Apparently, the other 2 of 3 idiot-f#%k nations got uncomfortable with executing teenagers. But not Texas! Yeeeha! We do what we want!

    So go ahead, make Gov. Perry feel all warm and fuzzy inside for responding to pressure from his religious base. ::Applause:: Good bless you Rick, you saw that it was wrong for the state to kill a man who had not committed a crime deserving the death sentence (if there is one…)! But spare the rest of us. It raises our blood pressure.

    Don’t even get me started on the Texas Justice system… Do I think most of the people executed are guilty? No. Not by a long shot. As far as I can tell, their only common attribute is the color of their skin.

    Please, never praise Gov. Perry again.

    ***
    siderant:
    I wish when people bashed Texas, they’d leave a footnote that read, “but Austin is cool…” It ruffles our feathers down here… We’re really not part of Texas, we vote bluer than true American blue in most elections. We registered a 12% vote for Ralph Nader in 2000 (not to say that was a good idea, but still, we’re on your side here people… and yes, we have our thumbs in Austin)

  5. Nietzsche September 1st, 2007 2:38 pm

    George is a Crusader at heart: Kill them all and let God sort them out.

  6. dell September 1st, 2007 4:07 pm

    What the Texas legislature needs to consider is the “Parties” law which allows for innocent people like Foster who are said to be “party” to the crime to receive the death sentence.

    What the people of Texas need to consider is getting Democrats back in power frrom the governor down and the need for a massie reform of the judicial system.

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