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Texas executes Mexican national despite international protests
By Kate Randall
16 August 2002
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Rejecting international protests and a direct appeal from the
president of Mexico, the state of Texas put to death Javier Suarez
Medina on Wednesday evening. The 33-year-old Mexican national
was pronounced dead at 6:23 p.m. following an injection of lethal
chemicals as he was strapped to a gurney in the death chamber
at the Huntsville prison facility. Reports from the execution
were broadcast live on national Mexican radio.
Mexican President Vicente Fox announced late Wednesday he was
canceling a planned trip to Texas to protest the execution. The
trip would have taken him to four cities and George W. Bushs
ranch in Crawford. A written statement from Foxs office
read: Mexico is confident the cancellation of this important
presidential visit will contribute to strengthen the respect of
all states of international rights norms and the conventions that
regulate relations between nations. Capital punishment is
outlawed in Mexico.
Apparently taken off guard by the announcement canceling Foxs
trip, a White House statement glibly commented that the two presidents
have an excellent professional relationship and a strong
friendship that reflects the deep bonds between the two countries
and that Bush looks forward to his next meeting with President
Fox.
An unprecedented 13 nations had joined with Mexico including
Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras,
Panama, Paraguay, Poland, Spain, Uruguay and Venezuelato
file a friend of the court brief with the US Supreme
Court on Suarez Medinas behalf. They argued that authorities
failed to advise him of his rights to contact the Mexican consulate
after his arrest, a right upheld by the 1963 Vienna Convention
on Consular relations, which the United States signed.
The brief also declared that Texas should not be permitted
to damage the United States relationship with its allies,
invite international condemnation, and increase the danger that
nationals detained abroad will be denied their time-honored right
to consular assistance and protection.
Mary Robinson, UN high commissioner for Human Rights, also
sent a letter to Secretary of State Colin Powell calling for clemency,
in which she wrote that there were serious concerns that
the trial proceedings in the case had not complied with international
human rights standards.
Javier Suarez Medina, a former fast-food worker, was convicted
of the 1988 murder of undercover narcotics officer Lawrence Cadena
during a sting operation. Although Suarezs lawyers do not
dispute that he killed Cadena, they argued that their client did
not know he was a police officer, and that he could have avoided
the death penalty if he had been given timely legal help with
this claim from the Mexican authorities.
Vicente Fox sent a letter to Texas Governor Rick Perry, calling
the execution illegal because it violated the condemned
mans consular rights. As a consequence of this serious
violation, Fox wrote, Mr. Suarez Medina was not only
deprived of the assistance of his country when he needed it, but
the Mexican government was also prevented from providing the priority
assistance that could have influenced the result of the trial.
Fox spoke with Bush by phone on the eve of the execution, urging
him to intervene.
The Mexican Senate also took the unusual action of running
half-page advertisements in some Texas newspapers earlier in the
week urging the Texas governor and parole board to grant clemency
and for suspension of his execution, to allow a more exhaustive
evaluation of the case.
All of these protests fell on deaf ears. The Texas Board of
Pardons and Paroles voted 17-0 Tuesday to reject a commutation
request in Suarez Medinas case, and Governor Perry refused
to grant a 30-day reprieve. The Supreme Court rejected his appeal,
without comment, and the State Department did not intervene.
Lori Ordiway, chief of the Dallas County district attorneys
office, rejected any notion that Texas authorities are bound by
international law. She stated that Suarez Medina was educated
here in the United States. He reads and writes and speak the English
language. And essentially, even if he had been from Mexico, hes
not the kind of candidate contemplated by the Vienna Convention
as someone in a foreign land and doesnt understand the laws
and procedures and needs assistance from their own countrys
government.
Texas authorities have in the past made the remarkable claim
they were not bound by the 1963 treaty on consular rights because
they had not signed it. However, Suarez Medinas attorney
Sandra Babcock argued in her clients Supreme Court appeal
that Under the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution,
this treaty obligation is binding on all individual states, including
Texas.
Texas put to death another foreign national, Canadian citizen
Stanley Faulder, in June 1999 despite international protests.
At the time, George W. Bush was governor of Texas and an aspiring
presidential candidate. In November 2000 Bush refused to grant
a reprieve to Mexican citizen Miguel Flores, who was denied his
consular rights. During his five years as governor, Bush presided
over 152 state killingsmore than any other governor.
More than two dozen of the 453 inmates on death row in Texas
are foreigners, including 18 from Mexico, and at least four Mexican
nationals have been put to death in the state since the US Supreme
Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976. Of the 791 total executions
carried out during this period in the 38 states that permit the
death penalty, 277 have been in Texas. These have included not
only foreign nationals, but the mentally ill and impaired, and
those convicted of crimes committed when they were juveniles.
Forty-one condemned men and woman have been executed nationwide
this year. Also sent to his death on Wednesday night was 35-year-old
Daniel Basile, in Missouri, after rejections of his appeals by
the Missouri Supreme Court, the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals and
the US Supreme Court.
See Also:
British citizen executed in
US despite international protests
[14 March 2002]
Executions continue
as US rejects worldwide moratorium on the death penalty
[27 April 2001]
Texas executes Mexican
national
Governor Bush refuses to grant reprieve
[11 November 2000]
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