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WSWS : News
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America : The
Brutal Society
Virginia to execute juvenile offender
By David Walsh
17 June 1999
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In violation of international law, the state of Virginia was
scheduled Wednesday to put to death a man who was only seventeen
years old at the time of his alleged crime. Douglas Christopher
Thomas was convicted of murdering his girlfriend's parents in
1990.
Opponents of the death penalty called on Governor James Gilmore
to grant clemency to Thomas on humanitarian grounds. They also
expressed concern that the death row inmate's case was transferred
out of the juvenile courts without a full and impartial hearing
and that the jury that imposed the death sentence never took into
account Thomas's developmental immaturity and other important
mitigating circumstances.
The US is one of only a handful of nations worldwide that permits
the execution of juvenile offenders. Since 1990 only five other
countriesIran, Nigeria, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Yemenare
known to have imposed the death penalty in such circumstances.
According to the Death Penalty Information Center, there are
currently 74 death row inmates in the US who allegedly committed
their crimes as juveniles, 2 percent of the death row total. Thirty-seven
percent of these juveniles are in Texas. Thirteen men have been
put to death since 1976 in the US for youthful crimes. Over three-quarters
of the 74 currently on death row are 17 year olds and two-thirds
of them are minority offenders. The paradigm case of the
juvenile offender on death row, notes the DPIC, is
that of the 17 year-old African-American or Hispanic male whose
victim is a white adult.
The US Supreme Court recently asked the Clinton administration
for its views on the execution of juvenile offenders in light
of an international treaty that bans such a practice. The US has
signed and ratified the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights, but filed an exception so that states could continue to
execute juvenile offenders.
Two other executions were scheduled for Wednesday. Missouri
is set to execute Bruce Kilgore; his codefendant, whom recent
witnesses accuse of the actual slaying, received a life sentence.
The state of Arizona will execute Michael Poland, who has been
sitting on death row for 20 years. On Thursday Texas plans to
execute Stanley Faulder, a Canadian citizen who was not afforded
his rights under the Vienna Convention. Secretary of State Madeleine
Albright has asked Texas to stop the execution.
Meanwhile Clarence Richard Dexter, Jr. was released in Missouri
June 7, becoming the eightieth individual since 1973 to escape
death row after evidence indicated his innocence. Dexter is the
sixth person to be released from death row this year. He was convicted
in 1991, defended by an attorney who failed to adequately investigate
the evidence against him. Much of the evidence pointed to a botched
robbery. The conviction was overturned in 1998. After blood experts
refuted much of the state's case, the prosecution decided to let
Dexter return home.
A recent piece in the Economist (The cruel and
ever more unusual punishment) notes that 80 percent of the
executions in the world in 1998 were carried out in China (1,067),
Congo (100), the US (68) and Iran (66). The US total may reach
100 this year. One hundred and five nations have now ended capital
punishment in law or in practice.
The journal also notes that, contrary to popular wisdom, capital
punishment cannot be viewed as a vestige of America's frontier
past: In the late 18th century, American states began restricting
the use of the death penalty to first-degree murder while most
European countries were still hanging people for a wide variety
of crimes. And the state of Michigan, closely followed by Rhode
Island and Wisconsin, led the way in completely abolishing the
death penalty in 1846, almost 20 years before Portugal became
the first European state to do so. Yet though pressure for abolition
built up in America before the Civil Warand again briefly
after the second world warit has dropped sharply since.
See Also:
Trinidad executes nine in four days
[17 June 1999]
People's Alliance regime in
Sri Lanka seeks re-introduction of the death penalty
[14 April 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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