PDA

View Full Version : GOP Moves To Speed Up Executions By Limiting Appeal Process



Gold9472
11-17-2005, 01:22 PM
US Congress moves to cut delays in death sentences

http://www.thepeninsulaqatar.com/Display_news.asp?section=World_News&subsection=Americas&month=November2005&file=World_News2005111721928.xml

(Gold9472: Population Control?)

Web posted at: 11/17/2005 2:19:28
Source ::: Reuters

WASHINGTON: Republicans in the US Congress said yesterday they were moving ahead with legislation that would speed up executions in the United States by limiting the ability of those sentenced to death to appeal to federal courts.

Pennsylvania Senator Arlen Specter said he intended to bring the so-called "Streamlined Procedures Act of 2005" to a vote today in the Judiciary Committee which he chairs. A similar bill is also moving forward in the House of Representatives and could clear the committee stage soon.

Republicans have also attached a key provision of the bill to legislation renewing the USA Patriot Act, which Congress is expected to act on later this month. Lawmakers clashed fiercely at a hearing on Wednesday of the Senate Judiciary Committee. Vermont Democrat Senator Patrick Leahy called it a "crude partisan solution to an unproven and largely nonexistent problem."

Arizona Republican Senator Jon Kyl, the bill's author, said he resented that characterization and insisted he had consulted widely with members of both parties. Leahy later withdrew the words "crude" and "partisan" and apologised. The bill would restrict the ability of defendants facing the death sentence to have their cases reviewed by federal courts in what are known as habeas corpus appeals.

Kyl said such appeals were often tied up in the courts for 10 years or more, sometimes for 15 years or more. Opponents, including the the American Bar Association and other legal groups, say the law would strip the ability of federal courts to review most claims in capital cases and would result in innocent people being put to death.

Specter said he was trying to strike a middle ground, eliminating enormous delays in executions while preserving the legal rights of people sentenced to death.

He noted that the bill included a clause giving all those convicted of all criminal charges the right to DNA testing. Habeas corpus-the phrase in Latin for "you have the body"-has been a centerpiece of Anglo-American jurisprudence since it was first developed over 300 years ago in Britain. It gave defendants the right to have their imprisonment reviewed by a court.

The number of people sentenced to death and put to death in the United States has been falling in recent years. Last year, 59 prisoners were executed, six fewer than in 2003, according to the Justice Department, which also reported this week that 125 people, including five women, were sentenced to death, the smallest number since 1973.

The provision of the bill being attached to the Patriot Act concerns what happens when people sentenced to death argue they have been represented by incompetent attorneys. In the past, there have been several documented cases of defense attorneys falling asleep during capital cases or being drunk or simply of gross incompetence.

Partridge
11-17-2005, 01:40 PM
Culture of Life :D