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Tuesday, December 19, 2006
Debra J. Saunders :: Townhall.com Columnist
Death penalty decision a bad first step
by Debra J. Saunders
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The latest federal judge to rule against the constitutionality of a state's death penalty is U.S. District Judge Jeremy Fogel, who issued a ruling Friday that found California's lethal injection protocol to be "intolerable under the Constitution." Chalk up the ruling as a victory for Michael Morales, who was sentenced to death for raping and murdering 17-year-old Terri Winchell of Lodi, Calif., in 1981.

Time is on his side. The decision was not your standard slam-dunk ruling against the death penalty. Fogel was careful to note that capital punishment is constitutional and that California's three-drug execution protocol "when properly administered will provide for a constitutionally adequate level of anesthesia."

Fogel signaled that the state could implement more professional training, facilities and oversight -- he cited Virginia as a model -- for executions using the typical three-drug protocol, or that the state could administer a lethal dose of sodium pentothal only. He gave Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger 30 days to explain how he will establish more professional practices, to which the governor already has responded.

Sounds reasonable. But in the meantime, Fogel has demonstrated to Americans that any attack on the death penalty -- no matter how bogus -- will result in years of delays, consume countless tax dollars and make a mockery of the legal system. The safest man in America is a death-row inmate with a pending appeal. The lamest arguments work.

Morales' lawyers argued that the second of the three drugs, a paralyzing agent, casts a "chemical veil" that hides an inmate's excruciating pain. Death penalty opponents often cite an article in the medical journal The Lancet that claimed it was "possible" some American death-row inmates "were fully aware during their execution."

Turns out, "chemical veil" was a made-up phrase for a faux phenomenon, while the Lancet article was based on shoddy research. California's three-drug protocol starts with an injection of sodium pentothal that is 12.5 times the amount given to patients to begin invasive surgery. An inmate could feel pain only if the death-row team grossly failed to administer that drug.

Fogel wrote, "There still is no definitive evidence that any inmate has been conscious during his execution." Fogel's legal threshold for stopping executions is apparently: no real proof. Continued...

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Yuzzy
This is tarpapershack; I changed my nickname to ravingmoderate.com for reasons that should be obvious, so that's how it appears now.

I just saw your last post, and I wanted to say that I'm very sorry to hear about your brother. I certainly feel for the families of murder victims. From what I've read, such families, though invariably grieved and angry, come out on both sides of the death penalty. You, of course, know firsthand what it's like. Though I've known a fair amount of pain in my life, yours must be many times greater. I can only imagine.

If it's not too insensitive of me, you have made me think of something that perhaps buttresses my point. In many murders, for one reason or another, family members become the chief suspects. The Jon Benet Ramsey family comes to mind; the parents were suspects almost right up until the mother's death of natural causes earlier this year. But the consensus now seems to be that the parents were innocent. How much greater would the injustice to them have been if they had been tried, wrongly convicted, and executed?

I don't need to personalize the example any further than to say I don't imagine you would feel justice had been served if someone, anyone, was executed in retribution for your brother's death, and was later revealed to be the wrong one. There are also those who have felt they have gained more from giving forgiveness than they would have from gaining retribution. And there are statistical studies that say the death penalty does not produce deterrence. I haven't surveyed all the surveys, which I'm sure go both ways, but I don't think that the theory of deterrence from the death penalty is a proven one by any means.

I'm not saying how anyone should think, just making my contribution to what I see as an important area of debate, important because, as you point out so eloquently, it is real.

Regardless of any of this, I wish you great comfort and a path back to happiness.

Tarpapershack:
Obviously you have not been the victim of a murderer. I have! This coming April will mark 30 years since my kid brothers murder. A day does not pass without some thought of this in my mind. He was a musician, so every song or guitar solo or name or word awakens the memories. You think only of the murdered person as the victim, but I have to live with certain memories for as long as I live. Why don't you compare the number of murderers that have been alowed to live and have committed more murders, with the number of wrongly convicted people? I think you will find a few wrongly convicted of ANY crime, while the recidivism among those released is hundreds of times higher!
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