An Execution in Texas... A Judge
on the Hot Seat
In the afternoon on September
25, the clerks office of the
highest criminal appeals court
in Texas closed for the day at
its usual time. That much is not
in dispute.
But September 25 was not a usual
day for the death penalty and
post-conviction lawyers in Texas
and throughout the Death Belt.
That morning, the U.S. Supreme
Court granted certiorari in Baze
v. Rees, No. 07-5439. It was
also the day that Texas inmate
Michael Richard was scheduled to
die by lethal injection.
Richards lawyers immediately
decided to write a new appeal to
the Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals raising an Eighth
Amendment claim since Texas
lethal injection protocol is
identical to the one the Supreme
Court had agreed to scrutinize.
But the problem of printing out
the requisite 10 copies of their
100-page brief caused by a
series of computer crashes at
the Texas Defender Service
office Houston. Richards lawyers
called the clerks office in
Austin three times to beg the
court to stay open. The chief
judge, Sharon Keller, ordered
the office to close as
scheduled, at 5:00. The appeal
arrived between 5:20 and 5:30.
The door to the clerks office
was locked. Michael Richard was
executed three hours later.
Neither Judge Keller nor the
clerks office notified the other
eight judges of the court of the
request for a late filing. The
judge to whom Richards case was
assigned, Judge Cheryl Johnson,
expressed dismay and anger,
telling the Associated Press, in
charge of the execution, I ought
to have known about those
things, and I ought to have been
asked whether I was willing to
stay late and accept those
filings.
In reply, Judge Keller conveyed
that she was merely enforcing
the courts long-standing policy
of closing on time. But one of
her colleagues expressed concern
because Richards case not only
raised troubling issues, but the
refusal to accept Richards
filing cast poor light on the
integrity of the Texas judicial
process. Judge Cathy Cochran
stated:First off, was justice
done in the Richard case? And
secondly, will the public
perceive that justice was done
and agree that justice was done?
In a San Antonio News article
the next day, Judge Paul Womack
was quoted as saying, All I can
tell you is that night I stayed
at the court until 7 oclock in
case some late filing came in, I
was under the impression we
might get something.
If proven as alleged, Judge
Kellers actions violated
Richards constitutional rights
to due process of law under the
state and federal constitutions,
Texas constitutional right to
access to the courts and due
course of law, and thereby
expedited his death. They also
comprised a failure in Judge
Kellers role as presiding judge
to advise and engage the court
in the exercise of its
jurisdiction with regard to the
most important cases that come
before it. She usurped the
authority of Judge Johnson, who
held responsibility for the
case. She scuttled the lawyers
ability to act on behalf of
their client and to present his
legitimate claims, not only to
the court of criminal appeals,
but also to the U.S. Supreme
Court. Most importantly , Judge
Kellers actions impugn the
integrity of the judicial
process.
When these allegations were
presented to NACDL Board of
Directors at the fall meeting in
Key West, the Board voted to
file and official complaint with
the State Commission on Judicial
Conduct over my signature. It
was sent by first class mail and
a copy was hand-delivered on
Oct. 23. To the best of my
knowledge, this is the first
time that NACDL has ever filed a
judicial conduct complaint
against s setting judge. Only a
full and complete investigation
of this incident will suffice.
Was it a horrible clerical error
or reckless indifference to
human life? Whatever the
findings of the judicial conduct
commission, the handling of Mr.
Richards case-and his death-
will remain unacceptable.
On Oct. 30, the Supreme Court
granted a stay of lethal
injection for the Mississippi
inmate Earl Berry. Two days
later, the Florida high court
held that lethal injection is
not a cruel and unusual
punishment under the Eighth
Amendment despite the highly
publicized, agonizing 34-minute
death of Angel Diaz last
December. The needles were
pushed all the way through Mr.
Diazs veins, which released the
poisons slowly into the muscles
of his arms. In its Nov. 1
ruling, the court said that the
state had adopted additional
safeguards to ensure that the
prisoner would be fully sedated
with a large dose of Pentothal
prior to the injections of the
poisons that paralyze the
muscles and stop the heart. The
decision was unanimous, and is
sickened me. On Nov. 15 the
Supreme Court issued a stay five
hours before Mark Dean Schwab
was scheduled to be executed in
Florida.
For more information on
An
Execution in Texas A Judge on
the Hot Seat...
Contact
Gilbert Garcia today at
936-756-3333. |