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WSWS : News
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Brutal Society
Texas executes Canadian Stanley Faulder
By Kate Randall
19 June 1999
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Stanley Faulder, a 61-year-old native of Jasper, Alberta, was
executed by lethal injection in Huntsville, Texas on Thursday.
His final appeal to the US Supreme Court was rejected 75 minutes
before he was put to death. Faulder became the first Canadian
executed in the US since 1952.
Aspiring presidential candidate and Texas Governor George W.
Bush did not intervene to halt the execution. The Texas Board
of Parole and Pardons voted 18-0 Wednesday to deny Faulder's request
for reprieve or commutation of sentence. Although Bush could not
override their ruling, he could have granted a one-time 30-day
delay.
Plans to execute Faulder had provoked international protest
because Texas authorities failed at the time of his arrest to
inform him of his right to seek assistance from the Canadian consulate.
In violation of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations, Faulder
had been in prison for 15 years before the Canadian government
was informed of his arrest and conviction. The United States is
a signer to the treaty, although Texas claims it is not required
to abide by it, as the state did not sign it.
Amnesty International, the human rights group, has reported
that it knows of 73 foreign nationals from 24 countries currently
sitting on death row in the United States. Of these, only three
were informed of their consular rights. Texas has executed three
foreign nationalsCarlos Santana, Ramon Montoya and Irineo
Tristan Montoya. The state of Virginia executed Paraguayan Angel
Francisco Breard early last year, despite protests from the International
Court of Justice.
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright had intervened in the
Faulder case, urging a full clemency review and the granting of
a 30-day reprieve. The Canadian government had also called for
a stay of the execution. Faulder's lawyer Sandra Babcock argued
as well that the 22 years the prisoner spent on death row and
his nine previous execution dates constituted cruel and unusual
punishment.
Faulder was convicted in 1977 for the 1975 murder of an elderly
woman in Gladewater, Texas, and was sentenced to death. The victim's
wealthy family hired private prosecutors, and their case relied
upon the testimony of an alleged accomplice in the crime, who
was granted immunity. The family offered this witness a large
cash payment in exchange for testimony incriminating Faulder.
The prosecution also hired "expert" witnesses to testify
to Faulder's supposed sociopathic tendencies.
Faulder was provided with a court-appointed lawyer, who never
brought out at trial that Faulder had suffered a massive head
injury at the age of three, causing permanent brain damage and
mental impairment. The attorney carried out no pre-trial investigation
and called no witnesses. Texas law does not forbid the execution
of the mentally impaired.
In a related development, Governor Bush is expected to veto
a bill passed by the both houses of the Texas state legislature
that would provide the most minimal protection for indigent defendants.
The bill would require that defendants be provided with legal
counsel within 20 days of requesting one. In most states, the
court must appoint an attorney within 72 hours. In Texas the appointment
of attorneys to the indigent is the responsibility of local judges,
who determine their fees. Judges, who are elected in the Texas,
often assign these cases to lawyers who have contributed to their
campaigns.
As of April 1, there were 436 prisoners on death row in Texas,
including 24 juveniles. Those as young as 17 can receive a death
sentence. Since the death penalty was reinstated in the US in
1974, the state has carried out 176 executions, the greatest number
of any US state.
See Also:
Virginia to execute juvenile offender
[17 April 1999]
Texas sets date for execution
of Candian Stanley Faulder
[13 March 1999]
The death penalty
in the US: a rising toll of state executions
Part 5 in a series of articles on Amnesty International's report
on human rights abuses in the US
[19 November 1998]
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