Monthly Archives: May 2012

How much doubt is reasonable?

Earlier this week, the Columbia Human Rights Law Review published its Spring 2012 issue with an article that strongly suggests Carlos DeLuna was innocent of the crime for which the State of Texas executed him.

Today, Michael McLaughlin writes in The Huffington Post that

A Texas judge who reviewed the controversial 2004 execution of Cameron Todd Willingham planned to posthumously exonerate the father who was put to death for killing his three daughters in a house fire.

When the conversation turns to the possible execution of an innocent person, Willingham’s name and case is often cited. Willingham’s home in Corsican, Texas burned on 23 December 1991. His three daughters, trapped inside, died. He escaped. His wife was away at the time.

The investigation concluded the fire was deliberately set and an accelerant used. Two weeks after the blaze, the authorities arrested Willingham. He maintained his innocence and turned down a plea bargain that offered him life in prison.

At his 1992 trial, the fire investigators testified Willingham had set the fire. A jailhouse informant also asserted that he had heard Willingham admit to the act while they were in jail together. The jury convicted Willingham. His execution took place in 2004.

Doubts about Willingham’s guilt persisted through the years. The informant recanted in 2000. Forensic evidence has developed over the years.

Shortly before Willingham’s execution, his attorney contacted Gerald Hurst a fire science expert and chemist who does  pro bono arson defense work. In a 2010 interview related to a Frontline film titled Death by Fire, Hurst defines his role as seeing “that the defendant gets a fair trial; that all the cards are put on the table.”

Hurst submitted a report days before Willingham’s execution that stated the house fire was not arson although it did not identify a cause. He sums up the report in the 2010 interview:

But what I do know 100 percent is that there is not a single bit of evidence that this was an incendiary fire, that it was started by human hands.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry received the report. He denied a reprieve and the execution took place.

Michael McLaughlin, writing today in The Huffington Post, reports that the new arson evidence and the change in the testimony of the jailhouse witness convinced District Court Judge Charlie Baird in 2010 that “Texas wrongfully convicted” Willingham. Baird even went so far as to put together a document exonerating Willingham. The order “never became official, because a higher court halted the posthumous inquiry while it considered whether the judge [Baird] had authority to examine the capital case.” McLaughlin continues:

While waiting for permission to finish the case from the Third Court of Appeals, Baird put together the document that “orders the exoneration of Cameron Todd Willingham for murdering his three daughters,” because of “overwhelming, credible and reliable evidence” presented during a one-day hearing in Austin in October 2010.

“You can’t do anything for Willingham except clear his name,” Baird told The Huffington Post. “When they tried Willingham, I’m convinced that everyone worked in good faith. The problem is that up until the execution, everything had changed so dramatically that you realized the science relied upon at trial was not reliable enough to take a man’s life.”

Baird’s intended order never came to light because the court of appeals criticized his handling of the case  and prevented him from resuming work on it before he left the bench at the end of 2010 after choosing not to seek re-election. No one asked him for it after the court of appeals blocked him, he said.

Lawyers for Willingham’s family continue to pursue a pardon that would clear his name, working with The Innocence Project.

The revelations of the week lead me to wonder: does it take absolute proof that an innocent person has been executed to lead our society to ponder seriously the abolition of the death penalty? Or is reasonable doubt enough? If so, how much?

See you along the Trail.

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Comeback or history?

Through eight innings, twenty-six Pirates had stepped into the batter’s box, dug their toes into the dirt, took their stance and faced Justin Verlander of the Detroit Tigers. Two walked. Twelve struck out. Twelve connected bat to ball but failed to reach base.

A no-hitter loomed for Verlander.

The Pirates trailed 6-0 going into the ninth. Did their fans hope for a comeback? Or did they hope to witness history? Verlander had already tossed two no-hitters; only five other pitchers have thrown three.

The crowd at Comerica Park rose to its feet between the eighth and the ninth inning.

Michael McKenry moved toward home plate. On the sixth pitch, he hit a grounder to short. One out. Two to go.

Did the Pirates fans hope for a comeback? Or to witness history?

To the batter’s box came Josh Harrison.

He swung and missed.

Did the Pirates fans hope for a comeback or to view history?

He swung and missed.

A comeback or history?

He swung and connected, driving the ball foul.

Did the Tigers fans believe the second out would soon happen? Did the Pirates fans hope for a comeback or wish to witness history?

Harrison took the next pitch for a ball.

Comeback or history?

Verlander reached back and delivered the next pitch. Harrison swung, connected, and dropped a single into center field.

That swing ended the chance to witness history. And the next two Pirates each grounded out. No comeback would take place.

Comeback?

History?

This game saw neither.

But there will be other games and sometimes fans of the Pirates and of the Tigers and of every other team will witness a comeback. Sometimes they will witness history.

That’s the beauty of the game.

See you along the Trail.

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Potential

Wait.

Watch.

Something will happen.

Something will happen.

7 May 2012
Central Park Zoo

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Hunger strike for Palestinian human rights: update

On Monday, May 14, Palestinian prisoners and Israeli authorities reached an agreement that ended the  hunger strike by the Palestinian prisoners.

Reports from today indicate that either three or four prisoners remain on hunger strikes, continuing their nonviolent resistance of refusal.

Thanks are in order for this development and for all who helped make it possible. Prayers are in order for those who have been on the hunger strike – for their health and wellbeing – for their nonviolent witness. Work is in order to recognize and respect the human rights of Palestinians. The effort to establish a just and durable peace for Palestinians and Israelis continues.

Agreement Signed Between Palestinian Prisoners and Israeli Prisons’ Administration – Palestinian News Network

On Monday, 14th May, Head of Palestinian Prisoners’ Society, Qadura Fares, announced that an agreement between the Prisoners’ Committee in Ashkelon Prison and Israeli Prisons’ administration has been signed.
Fares confirmed that all the parties signed the agreement to end the open hunger strike that 1600 Palestinian prisoners have started since 28 days, with the presence of the representative of the Egyptian government

Palestinian prisoners end hunger strike as agreement reached with Israeli officials – Haaretz

Israel Prison Services reported on Monday that Palestinian prisoners have agreed to end their hunger strike. Senior sources within the Palestinian Prisoner’s Club told Haaretz that an agreement was forged between the Israel Prison Services and the prisoners, containing three main chapters concerning administrative detainees, solitary confinement policy, and visits from family members residing in Gaza.

Lawyer: Administrative detainees agree to end strike – Ma’an News Agency

Prisoners on long-term hunger strike agreed late Monday to join a deal ending the strikes in exchange for improved conditions, a lawyer said.

The Egyptian-brokered deal to end the mass hunger strike in Israeli jails will see the prisoners — including Bilal Diab and Thaer Halahla on a 77-day strike — released at the end of their administrative detention term.
Ofir Gendelman, spokesman for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, told Ma’an that all prisoners must end the hunger strike within 72 hours, and not later refuse food, for the deal to hold.

Palestinian inmates in Israel end mass hunger strike – BBC

Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails have agreed to end a mass hunger strike, which has been going on for more than two months.
More than 1,500 Palestinians have been refusing food to demand an improvement in conditions.
Under a deal, Israel conditionally agreed not to renew detentions without charge, which had been a key grievance.

Israel, Palestinian prisoners ink deal to end strike – Jerusalem Post

Israel and Palestinian security prisoners on Monday signed an Egyptian-mediated deal to end a 28-day hunger strike by inmates.
According to the terms of the agreement, Palestinian prisoners committed to refrain from involvement in “activities against security” within prison walls. In exchange, previously suspended benefits will be reinstated by the Prisons Service, including the renewal of familial visits and allowing inmates held in separate cells to return to the general prison population.

Deal reached over Palestinian hunger strike – Al Jazeera

Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike have agreed on a deal with Israel to end their fast in return for an easing of their conditions, officials on both sides said.
The deal was reached after talks mediated by Egypt and the Palestinian Authority and made possible by the agreement of Palestinian groups “outside the prisons,” Israel’s Shin Bet internal security agency said in statement on Monday.

See you along the Trail.

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Was an innocent man executed?

One argument against the death penalty focuses on the possibility of executing an innocent person. A number of individuals have been  proven innocent and exonerated after serving time on death row. Questions have been raised in a number of cases where executions have taken place.

The case of Carlos DeLuna is often cited as one such instance. DeLuna was convicted of murdering Wanda Lopez in a February 1983 robbery in Corpus Christi. The jury sentenced him to death. The state of Texas executed him in December 1989.

DeLuna maintained his innocence from the time of his arrest to the time of his execution. He maintained that Carlos Hernandez committed the murder. Doubts about his guilt have persisted. In 2006, a series in the Chicago Tribune explored those doubts, positing that “New evidence suggests a 1989 execution in Texas was a case of mistaken identity.

This week, the Columbia Human Rights Law Review  (at Columbia University) published and posted its Spring 2012 issue. The issue features a single piece of work about the murder of Wanda Lopez, Carlos DeLuna, and Carlos Hernandez: “Los Tocayos Carlos: Anatomy of a Wrongful Execution.” James S. Liebman, Shawn Crowley, Andrew Markquart, Lauren Rosenberg, Lauren Gallo White, Lauren Rosenberg and Daniel Zharkovsky authored the book-length piece. I understand that Los Tacayos can be translated from Spanish as “namesakes.” Beyond sharing the first name, the two men (DeLuna and Hernandez) apparently have a striking physical resemblance to each other.

It promises to be an important article. The Columbia Human Rights Law Review notes that as part of the reason for devoting the issue to the one article.

Should DeLuna’s innocence be proved, will that make a difference in the effort to abolish the death penalty? I am among those who hope so. However, significant doubt has been cast on the guilt of Cameron Todd Willingham, convicted of murder and executed for the deaths of his three young children by arson at the family home in Corsicana, Texas in 2004. The struggle continues. I look forward to reading Los Tocayos Carlos: Anatomy of a Wrongful Execution and to seeing how it contributes to that struggle.

See you along the Trail.

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Why I like New York 5 – Tubas, ‘bones and baritones

The sun shone as I crested the top of the stairs from the subway station at 125th and St. Nicholas. I had taken but a few steps when I heard drums. Cadenced drums. A drum line.

At 124th and St. Nicholas I saw them, waiting for the light. Drummers, young women with batons, and a band. When they started to play, I realized all the instruments were brass. When they began to march, I saw they were all low brass – tubas, trombones, and baritones.

I have no idea of who they were or what they were doing, but memories of the Grove City High School marching band washed over this old baritone player as the band marched me to Morningside Avenue.

See you along the Trail.

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Why I like New York 4 – Steel drums

At any given moment, somewhere in the city, someone plays a steel drum. Probably several people playing in several places. Every now and then, I stumble across one of those players.

As I passed through Penn Station today, I heard him play.

Lara’s Theme” from Dr. Zhivago slowly segued to “My Favorite Things” before the train arrived.

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Purple flowers, Central Park Zoo 1

Someday I should learn the names of the various flowers whose photos I take. For now, let me say: spotted these while Tricia and I visited the Central Park Zoo last Sunday. We had a hard time finding the zoo, which surprised us. After all, a zoo is  fairly big. Once we found the zoo, we enjoyed ourselves. Snatches of Simon and Garfunkel and Tom Paxton played in my interior soundtrack.

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The truth and the lie

“We all grow old,”
we hear someone say.

We laugh and we smile

at the truth and the lie
those words convey.

11 May 2012
Shire on the Hudson 

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Solidarity in Dublin

Our quest to hear traditional music took us to several stops. The first evening we heard but two songs. The second, in Belfast, we heard a duo. They covered a number of songs by Christy Moore. They covered Dylan. They played well. We enjoyed the music. But it did not fit the bill of traditional.

On our final evening in Dublin, our final evening in Ireland, Tricia and I ventured to the Cobblestone with Joel and Roja. We talked. We consumed Guinness. We laughed. After a while, we said farewell as Roja and Joel left for a family dinner.

Tricia and I had another round as we waited. And the music began. Traditional. Soft. Sweet. Wondrous. We listened for an hour or so before we decided that the time had come for us to return to our hotel. I made a trip to the men’s room before we did so. On my way back, I looked above our seats. There I saw, present all the time but unnoticed until that moment, an expression of solidarity:

See you along the Trail.

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