Upcoming Executions
Click for a list of upcoming scheduled executions in Texas.
Innocence
The death penalty puts innocent people at risk of execution.
Todd Willingham
Todd Willingham was wrongfully executed under Governor Rick Perry on February 17, 2004.

The Austin American-Statesman has an article in today’s paper about the Law of Parties bill being altered by the Senate Criminal Justice Committee yesterday after Governor Rick Perry threatened to veto the bill if it passed the Senate with a provision to end the death penalty in Law of Parties cases. The article contains some misinformation from Austin lawyer William “Rusty” Hubbarth, vice president of Justice for All. Hubbarth claims that a 1992 murder-for-hire case was a law of parties case, but he is wrong. Hiring someone to kill someone else is not a Law of Parties case. Murder for remuneration is itself a capital crime. Law of Parties cases are very rare. There have been only 3 Law of Parties executions in Texas out of the total of 438 executions, which is less than one percent.

A person who who hires someone to kill another person is charged with capital murder under section 19.03 of the Texas Penal Code, not under Section 7.02 of the Texas Penal Code, which is the Law of Parties section. Both the hiring of the person and the one who actually commits the murder is charged with capital murder and can receive the death penalty.

The Law of Parties is a different concept in which a person can be charged with capital murder if they are participants in another felony, such as robbery, and in the course of that first felony, an accomplice commits a second felony (murder), then anyone who was an accomplice in the first felony (robbery) can be charged with the second felony (murder), because the law says they “should have anticipated” that a murder could occur.

The Statesman is doing a disservice to its readers if it does not correct the misinformation in the article. A newspaper has an obligation to correct false information it gives out, so that its readers can make informed judgments about public policies reported in the news. It is just this sort of false understanding of the Law of Parties that leads some people to oppose ending the death penalty under the Law of Parties without understanding what the Law of Parties actually is. It is a law that allows people who have not killed anyone and who had no intention to kill anyone to be sentenced to death.

Veto threat dooms change in death penalty law
Measure banning execution of people who haven’t killed won’t advance.
By Mike Ward
AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
Friday, May 22, 2009

Death penalty opponents have long decried a Texas law that allows the state to impose the ultimate punishment — execution — on people who have not killed anyone.

Legislation to change that was working its way toward Gov. Rick Perry’s desk Thursday, when its sponsor said a threatened veto forced him to drop the controversial provision that would have exempted participants in capital crimes who did not pull the trigger.

“We wanted that provision to stay in, but the governor’s office made it clear they would veto the bill if that went through,” said state Sen. Juan “Chuy” Hinojosa, D-McAllen.

Hinojosa amended the legislation to require only separate trials for co-

defendants in capital murder cases in which one or more of the defendants did not kill anyone.

Though he was not satisfied with the change, Hinojosa said, “we’re not going to get any progress on this area of law until we get another governor. I realize that, so we do what we can.”

Perry’s office did not return phone calls Thursday evening.

Austin lawyer William “Rusty” Hubbarth, vice president of Justice for All, a national victim advocacy group based in Houston, applauded the veto threat.

“I congratulate Gov. Perry for showing he has the courage to protect the interests of victims,” Hubbarth said.

The problem with the bill, he said, was letting all capital co-defendants off the hook if they didn’t pull a trigger.

As proof, he cited a 1992 case in which a husband hired a hit man through Soldier of Fortune magazine to kill his wife; the husband was convicted of premeditated murder and sentenced to death.

As approved by the House last week, the bill would have made a significant change in the state’s death-penalty law, a change vehemently opposed by prosecutors and cheered by death-penalty opponents.

Under current law, multiple defendants in a capital murder case can face execution, even though not all caused a death.

Texas has been criticized nationally in past years for cases in which the triggerman cut a deal with police and escaped execution, while a co-defendant who did not kill anyone was executed.

Although other states also hold accomplices responsible for others’ crimes under the so-called law of parties, few of those states have a death penalty. None executes as many people as Texas, which has put to death more than 400 people since the state resumed executions in 1982.

Prosecutors in the past have argued that if defendants participate in a crime, even if they stood and watched an accomplice commit murder, they should be held equally accountable — and several have been sentenced to death.

After the disputed wording was deleted Thursday, the bill was passed unanimously by the Senate Criminal Justice Committee, the last stop before the measure goes to the full Senate for a vote.

When the measure passed the House on May 15, its sponsors tagged it the “Kenneth Foster Jr. Act,” after a man whose death sentence was commuted to life imprisonment by Perry in 2007.

A former member of a San Antonio crime gang, Foster was sentenced to die as an accessory to the Aug. 25, 1996, slaying of Michael LaHood Jr., a 25-year-old law school student who was gunned down during a botched robbery.

Foster, then 19, drove the getaway car, which was parked 80 feet away.

Foster’s impending execution had drawn a flood of protests from around the world, with South African peace activist Desmond Tutu and former President Jimmy Carter among the hundreds who filed written protests to stop the execution — all arguing that Texas was taking the life of a man who had not killed anyone.

In commuting the sentence, Perry noted that Foster was tried, convicted and sentenced alongside the triggerman, Mauriceo Brown. Perry said that could have tainted the jury’s decision.

“After carefully considering the facts of this case, along with the recommendation from the Board of Pardons and Paroles, I believe the right and just decision is to commute Foster’s sentence,” Perry said at the time. “I am concerned about Texas law that allowed capital murder defendants to be tried simultaneously, and it is an issue I think the Legislature should examine.”

HB 2267 will be heard in the Senate Committee on Criminal Justice, Thursday, May 21, at 1:30 PM or upon adjournment of the Senate.

This is the law of parties bill by Rep Terri Hodge and Rep Harold Dutton, recently renamed the Kenneth Foster, Jr Act. It would require separate trials in capital cases and would prohibit the state from seeking the death penalty against co-defendants in Law of Parties cases if they are not the person who actually killed someone.

Please come to the hearing and sign a Witness Affirmation Form in in favor of HB 2267.

The hearing will be in room E1.014.

If you can not attend the hearing, then call the offices of the Committee members and urge them to vote in favor of HB 2267.

Please call Texas State Senators and Urge Them to Vote for HB 2267

If you live in Texas, click here to find out who your state senator is.

After you have first called your own state senator, move on to calling the members of the Senate Committee on Criminal Justice (Listed below).

After you call the committee members, just start calling any or all of the other state senators from this list.

Sample Message (change it to your own words) “Hello, I am calling to urge Senator X to vote in favor of HB 2267, the “Kenneth Foster, Jr Act”. It has already been approved by the Texas House of Representatives. HB 2267 would require separate trials for co-defendants in capital trials and would prohibit the state from seeking the death penalty for people who do not kill anyone but are convicted under the Law of Parties. I do not believe it is fair to sentence someone to death, like Kenneth Foster was, if they did not kill anyone.

The Law of Parties allows people who “should have anticipated” a murder to receive the death penalty for the actions of another person who killed someone. A person sentenced to death under the Law of Parties has not killed anyone. They are accomplices or co-conspirators of one felony, such as robbery, during which another person killed someone, but a person should not be executed for the actions of another person.

Thank you and call your state senator today!

Members of the Senate Committee on Criminal Justice

Chair, John Whitmire
Phone: (512) 463-0115
Email Form

Vice-Chair, Kel Seliger
Phone:(512)463-0131
Email Form

John Carona
Phone:(512) 463-0116
Email Form

Rodney Ellis
Phone:(512) 463-0113
Email Form

Glenn Hegar
Phone: (512) 463-0118
Email Form

Juan “Chuy” Hinojosa (He is the Senate sponsor, so no need to call him)
Phone: (512) 463-0120
Email Form

Dan Patrick
Phone:(512) 463-0107
Email Form


From the Death Penalty Information Center

Daniel Wade Moore was acquitted of all charges by a jury in Alabama on May 14. Moore was originally found guilty of the murder and sexual assault of Karen Tipton in 2002. The judge overruled the jury’s recommendation of a life sentence and instead sentenced him to death in January 2003, calling the murder one of the worst ever in the county. A new trial was ordered in 2003 because of evidence withheld by the prosecution. A second trial in 2008 ended in a mistrial with the jury deadlocked at 8-4 for acquittal. (Moore is the 133rd person to be exonerated and freed from death row since 1973, according to DPIC’s record of exonerations.)

Just last week, the 132nd innocent person was exonerated.

132. Paul House Tennessee Conviction: 1986, Charges Dismissed: 2009

The state of Tennessee dropped all charges against House, who was accused of the 1985 rape and murder of Carolyn Muncey based largely on circumstantial evidence. Biological evidence used against him at trial was later found through DNA testing to belong to Muncey’s husband. In House v. Bell, the U.S. Supreme Court considered the new DNA tesing and questions about blood stains on House’s clothes. In 2006, the Court held that no reasonable juror would have found House guilty based on this new evidence, thus entitling him to raise constitutional issues that led to a reversal of his conviction. In 2008, a Tennessee judge ordered House released from prison, pending a new trial.

Texas today executed the 199th person under the current Texas governor Rick Perry, who has been governor for more executions than any other person in U.S. history. Michael Riley was the 438th person executed since 1982 in the nation’s number one execution state.

To participate in protests of the 200th execution on June 2, visit protest200executions.com.

From the AP:

Texas has executed a man on death row for more than two decades for fatally stabbing a convenience store clerk during a robbery.

Fifty-one-year-old Michael Lynn Riley was pronounced dead at 6:18 p.m. Tuesday. He was the 15th convicted murderer executed this year in the nation’s most active death penalty state.

Riley was condemned for the 1986 slaying of Wynona Harris, a 23-year-old clerk at a convenience store in his hometown of Quitman, about 75 miles east of Dallas.

Watch video on YouTube.

“Images from Texas Death Row” to be Exhibited in the Ground Floor Rotunda of the Texas Capitol Monday, May 18 – Friday May 22

Event: Images from Texas Death Row “The Photography of John Holbrook”

Sponsor: Texas Friends and Allies Against the Death Penalty

Dates: May 18 – May 22

Where: The Texas State Capitol Building in the ‘Ground Floor Rotunda’ (Take elevator down to G)

Page 164 of 358« First...102030...162163164165166...170180190...Last »
%d bloggers like this: