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Thursday, March 12, 2009
Debra J. Saunders :: Townhall.com Columnist
Richard Allen Davis: Safe on Death Row
by Debra J. Saunders
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When a jury found Richard Allen Davis guilty of the murder of Petaluma's 12-year-old Polly Klaas in 1996, Davis puckered his lips and extended a middle finger to TV cameras. Later, Davis was sentenced to death, and outraged California voters passed a three-strikes sentencing law.

From death row now, Davis still is puckering up and extending his finger at the public -- and the public is paying for it. It's 2009, yet it was only this month that Davis' first appeal was argued before the California Supreme Court.

"Who would think it would take almost as long for this guy to get his hearing after he was sentenced to death than my daughter was on this Earth and she didn't reach her 13th birthday?" Polly's father, Marc Klaas, told me Tuesday.

Expect a ruling on that appeal within 90 days. Then there's a state habeas corpus appeal. Then Davis has a federal habeas corpus appeal. Before it's over, Davis, now 54, probably will have died of boredom. Or from another opium overdose, like the one for which he was treated in 2006, despite the fact that he was inside San Quentin.

How did it take this long? Davis was sentenced to death in September 1996 for the 1993 crime. Then it took the California Supreme Court office that handles appellate attorneys until mid-2001 to appoint attorney Phillip Cherney to represent Davis. As I've reported before, five years is not an unusual hiatus.

Then it took Cherney until July 11, 2005 to file an opening brief. Producing the appeal took longer than the prosecuting of Davis.

After another four years of delay and back and forth with the California attorney general's office, voila, there was a hearing in March.

"I have no issue with the careful consideration of death penalty appeals or that it is an automatic process," said Klaas, and he wants a system that prevents the execution of an innocent man.

But the last 13 years were not dedicated to a hunt to find the real killer. Davis confessed on videotape. He led authorities to Polly's body.

So the basis of the appeal was legal contortion. Cherney argued that the trial should have been moved from Sonoma County, not to San Jose, but to San Diego. Also, while police had advised Davis about his right to remain silent and consult a lawyer, they did not do so before one pre-confession talk. As if a man with an 11-page rap sheet might be unaware of his rights.

According to The Associated Press, Cherney even complained that California's inability to quickly carry out executions has forced Davis "to endure the uncertainty and ever-present tension on death row for such an extended time constitutes cruel and unusual punishment."

Shameless. "I was expecting some kind of brilliant argumentation," Klaas told me afterward. After all, the five-year process to appoint an attorney is supposed to limit the pool to highly qualified specialists. Instead, Klaas watched "some guy with a ponytail making pretty weak arguments."

In Cherney's defense, weak arguments were all he had. How much has this exercise cost taxpayers? No one knows. That information is restricted. Ron Matthias, the supervising deputy attorney general handling the case, told me, "The frustration that you are describing is shared widely."

Here's the worst part: If Davis said tomorrow that he wanted "the big jab," the state could not comply. In 2006, U.S. District Judge Jeremy Fogel suspended all California lethal injections. Later, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld lethal injection. Didn't matter, because a Marin County judge had ruled that there must be public comment on the new Fogel-inspired lethal injection protocol before it is adopted.

When will the public comment occur? "I don't know," a California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation spokesperson answered.

It's funny how the folks who want to parole criminals to pare the state budget never look at the high cost of glacial appeals. Klaas believes that the decades-long delays are the result of "a silent protest against the death penalty by the defense bar, abolitionists and other death-row apologists." If there ever is an innocent person on death row, he'll die before the courts find out.

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"Justice delayed is justice denied"...
...The victim in this case has been denied justice by the constant appeal system in California and other states.The opponents of the death penalty cannot get the majority of our people to agree with them,so they try to implement their opinions by these constant appeals.That is why the victim has not received Justice.Only an uncivilized society would tolerate this sham.

Bullets are cheaper
and less painful. I conducted a research paper regarding this, and lol, this is what scientists claim.

I was there.
I lived near where it all happened. I remember the disappearance, the evidence that somebody had climbed into the girl's room through her window, the search for the killer and the body. A coworker of mine who, like the Klaases, lived in Petaluma, bought his 12-year-old daughter a gun, trained her in its use, and required her to keep it at her bedside at night, loaded. Unlike Polly, she is now a living adult. Unlike Polly, she was able to graduate from high school, fall in love, get married, and experience the joy of having children of her own. The POS Davis took all this away from Polly. He made the last day of her life a horrifying nightmare. Anyone who opposes the death penalty values the lives of scum like Davis more than the lives of innocent little girls.

A really cynical comment
The left is reluctant to execute child killers because killing children is the central plank of their platform.

The courts are corrupt
Any Court that takes this long to decide an issue is either incompetent or corrupt. Neither of these options is acceptable but as long as we the people tollerae it the judges will use the system to enforce their own agenda which has little to do with the law or justice. This stinks.

Guilty!
Take Mr. Davis out to the prison yard, stand him against the wall and then, for all to see, shoot the guilty SOB.

can't argue
...with the posts here. I can't help but shake my head at the liberal attitude and outrage that there are more that the national prison population is about 2 million. As if this population is there for no good reason or shouldn't be there.

I tell them that it should be more like 6 million. They have NO idea what kind of violent people have been paroled, who are on the edge of madness and own weapons or are sex criminals that have more than three strikes behind them before such 'stikes' were implemented.
Even the idea of three strikes is ridiculous. Why not just the first one?

This is why the death row asylum makes the appeals situation so expensive. It is NOT more expensive to execute a prisoner. It's the chronic appeal system that is.

Name 65-66 is right. Justice delayed IS justice denied. The victim loses value as does their lives, and the criminal who killed them has the ability to garner sympathy, expensive medical care, moral support and a softening of the environment so they don't go crazier than they already are.

In the meantime, the expense of all that diminishes the funds that could be put to use elsewhere.


For aspacia, Edwin
How about hanging Davis with a kevlar rope?

(or better yet, piano-wire)

Ungodly systems: no justice

“The god of this world hath blinded the minds of them which believe not, lest the light of the glorious gospel of Christ, who is the image of God, should shine unto them.” (2 Cor. 4:4)

The God of believing Christians is clear in stating his holy standards. 2 Thessalonians 3:10 states: : "If a man will not work, he shall not eat.” This is the moral basis of capitalism. People work for what they need and want. Lawmakers who insist that legislation meet this criteria have some credibility if they claim to believe in Jesus Christ.

It is the god of this world, Satan, who authored the damnable enslaving political systems of Socialism and Marxism. Legislators who make laws that take away the fruits of a man’s labor and gives it to those who have not worked for it can make no credible claim of being a believer in Christ.

It is the god of this world, Satan, who authored the “right to privacy” provision in Roe vs. Wade decision. It was not in the Constitution, it was legislated from the bench. Lawmakers who support this murdering legislation can make no credible claim of being a believer in Jesus Christ, for believers in Christ must keep his commands. Christ is God and this is what He says about the shedding of innocent blood.

"Surely I will require your lifeblood; from every beast I will require it. And from every man, from every man's brother I will require the life of man. Whoever sheds man's blood, By man his blood shall be shed, For in the image of God He made man.” Genesis 9:5-6.

'So you shall not pollute the land in which you are; for blood pollutes the land and no expiation can be made for the land for the blood that is shed on it, except by the blood of him who shed it. Numbers 35:33.

The Constitution of the United States of America was framed upon the foundation of the Word of God. Any interpretation that deviates from the truths of Scripture is a false interpretation.

“That medicine didn’t help.”

If you think the death penalty doesn’t work, next time the doctor prescribes medicine for a serious illness, don’t take it, just put it on a shelf. Occasionally look in the bottle, shake it once in a while, and after 15 years of suffering, take the medicine. Then you’ll say, “That medicine didn’t help.”

On February 15, 1933, a bricklayer, Giuseppe Zangara attempted to assassinate President-elect Roosevelt. He killed the mayor of Chicago, Anton J. Cermak, instead, and Zangara was executed a month later, March 20, 1933. The death penalty was swift and effective. Zangara never killed again!

Both medicine and the death penalty work best when used immediately, not 15 years after the fact.

If we find that we have executed an innocent person, or have acquitted a guilty murderer, we will just immediately execute all lawyers involved, because their only concern was The Legal System and their own ego and pocketbook, not the Justice System.

Most lawyers don’t like the idea of a Justice System especially when they are the so-called defense attorney. They want their client found innocent, even if he is guilty. No way does a defense lawyer want Justice — that is, convict the guilty, acquit the innocent.

As you hear on a so-called conservative’s radio program, “Friends don’t let friends plead guilty,” of DUI. That is terrible, how can a conservative say such a thing. If you are guilty, you must be convicted, who ever you are, and whatever traitor you hired as your lawyer.

I am opposed to the death penalty
With all sympathy to the Klass family, Davis has not harmed me. I am not emotionally bound up in the death of their child. This case is key to my beliefs about capital punishment.

In my better world, the hatefulness of the crime would not matter. The best/worst the state can impose is life imprisonment. However, big however... At the sentencing phase of the crime those who are personally harmed by the action get to testify and they determine the penalty, not the state. In this particular case, if Mr. Klass was physically incapable of shooting the SOB, I would hold the gun and cheerfully pull the trigger for him.

svpallava - Post #8
The method really makes no difference. Just "Git 'er done!"

a Kevorkian Room

Bleeding Heart Liberal Location: CA
Reply # 11
Date: Mar 12, 2009 - 11:55 AM EST
I am opposed to the death penalty
==========

Let's make sure the Government does not execute any prisoner, especially if they have killed Bleeding Heart Liberal's baby, mother, wife, or any of those other people who were not worth more than the criminal.

Let's let the criminal do it. In each and every prison or jail, install a Kevorkian Room open 24/7.



So I goofed

Bleeding Heart Liberal Location: CA
Reply # 11
Date: Mar 12, 2009 - 11:55 AM EST
I am opposed to the death penalty
With all sympathy to the Klass family, … … … if Mr. Klass was physically incapable of shooting the SOB, I would hold the gun and cheerfully pull the trigger for him.

======

I didn't read the whole post. I read the first paragraph, and was so disgusted to see that liberal crap, that I responded before I read the last statement.

General Population
Put Davis in the prison's general population. The other prisoners will take care of his sentence with no pay.

Death penalty
I’d like to pull the trigger on this killer myself and I could do it while enjoying a tuna sandwich.

Excellent idea Barbie
and one borne out in Canuckistan where they have several killers (Clifford Olson, Harold David Smeltzer, ...) in permanent solitary--in fact, this was cited precisely as the reason to isolate Olson and Smeltzer.

Response to Edwin: my actual preference would be to dip him in boiling oleum (ultra-concentrated--as in more than cent-percent--sulphuric acid) feet-first at 1" each hour (slow, painful death) which would also save costs of disposing his carcass.

I thought you people were pro life
gosh, what judgmental types you are! What if he'd killed an abortion doctor? What a dilemma, eh?

Dear Robert
I see you haven't "progressed" beyond your tendency of making utterly idiotic remarks.

Wow,what a response Steve
I love how you rightwingers sit in judgment of everyone, but you'd be crying your eyes out if an abortion doctor murderer was on death row.

and how do you justify the death penalty.

Robert-a
Don't twist punishment into an abortion and infanticide debate. The murderer is guilty and the punishment is death. And it should be swift.

An innocents right to life isn't quite the same circumstance.

How contorted can your thought process be to want to kill the innocent and spare the guilty.

John, Florida.

actually
I believe in the death penalty, and choice. So I have nothing to distinguish.

I'm against the death penalty.
There. I said it. I vote for the most conservative candidates, I am against abortion, I don't think anybody should be bailed out or stimulated, I think the Fairness Doctrine is some sick stuff, Employee Free Choice Act is doublespeak scary s***, and the death penalty is wrong. I just do. If you want to sit down and have coffee with me sometime and chat about my thought process and conclusion, that's cool. If you want to berate me and call me a proponent of child killers, that is your right. But this is my conviction, and it doesn't make me a liberal. It makes me a person lucid enough to weigh the subject matter in her own mind and determine what is right for her. It makes me a conservative, one might argue.

execute, execute
I believe in execution, especially of child murderers. Such executions should be carried out within one year. Said suspect, of course, should have been convicted without a shadow of a doubt using forensics.

Liberals lament for the wrong person. Conservatives lament for the correct ones, the victims.

RE Death?Executions?
Have any of U ever seen an Execution, up close??
In 1967/68 I went to see a "Public Hangin'" with a couple Air America Folks in Laos.. I was drunk when I went but was considerably more lucid before the "deal went down". Not exactly a professional job.. Botched Terribly.
But that never changed my views--Certain cimes deserve retribution and as long as it's done professionally, so be it.. and I'm not sure that it shouldn't be done PUBLICLY..Mean OLD REPUB, eh, what??

So right on, Doug and Edwin
Doug, I just love your comment. You are so right on. I didn't live in Petaluma, but I remember this whole nightmare so well. It was the talk of California and the way this whole kidnapping came down was so unbelievable and frightening. To climb in through a window while having a slumber party with her mother and little sister in the next room and stealing Polly made every parent, including me, so scared and angry and much more vigilant. And she went willingly because she didn't want her little sister to go instead. What Davis did to this little girl, how scared she must have been makes me sick to my stomach, makes my heart break. Let's not forget that two cops pulled this scumbag over for a traffic violation right after the kidnapping. Polly might have still been alive at that time, maybe in the trunk. But they let him go. The fact that Davis is still alive after all this time is sickening and just shows how our liberal judges go against the will of the people WHO WANT THE DEATH PENALTY!! I can't stand anti-death penalty idiots either, how would they like it if someone in their family was violently taken and murdered, especially a child? They would rather see a child killed in the womb then some violent rapist/killer die by a needle. A death far less painful then the one Polly Klaas endured, BTW. But I digress. I guess I can't express my anger enough, so I'll just stop, but I just want to say that Edwin has the right idea. Stand this scumbag against the prison wall and shoot him, slowly. In the knee, in the shoulder, in the abdomen then the head. One suggestion, let Mark Klaas do the deed. Then and only then will justice be served.

Davis
This 'thing' this animal is truly the lowest form of human life on this earth. Today DC sniper (williams) will pay for his crimes merely 2 years after he was sentenced. This is how it should be...he's guilty, he had his appeals, now he pays..Davis should have been put to death long ago (20 years) this is unfair to Mr. Klass and all parents of little girls who because of monsters like Davis must forfeit some of their childhood to live and fear.
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