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Texas executes British citizen despite international protests
By Kate Randall
6 February 2003
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The state of Texas put to death British citizen John Jackie
Elliott on Wednesday despite pleas for clemency from the British
foreign secretary, home secretary and 100 members of Parliament.
Elliott, who maintained his innocence to the end, had no comment
before lethal chemicals were pumped into his veins at the execution
chamber in Huntsville, Texas. He became the 296th person, and
the sixth foreign national, executed in the state since the US
Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976.
Elliott, 42, was born to American parents in Suffolk, England
and possessed dual US/British citizenship. He was sentenced to
death for the rape and murder of 18-year-old Joyce Munguia in
1986. His lawyers said that new evidence had emerged since his
trial which might have exonerated him.
Elliott had always contended he was convicted solely on the
basis of the testimony of police informers covering their own
guilt. In the days leading up to his execution, his defense team
discovered 40 police reports identifying other key suspects, which
they claim were suppressed by the prosecution.
Elliotts attorneys asked a Texas appeals court to halt
the execution to allow for DNA testing which was never conducted
at trial. The DNA evidence reportedly does not directly involve
Elliott, but other suspects in the case. Conservative MP John
Grummer, who represents the British constituency where Elliott
was born, commented: The latest evidence, uncovered in the
past two or three days, is there is a further witness who points
the finger at the very person who accused him [Elliott] and who
otherwise would have been in the dock, and on whose evidence the
whole case stood.
Grummer also said Elliotts original lawyer never defended
a criminal case and that the forensics expert who testified against
Elliott was subsequently exposed as a fraud.
The appeals court refused to consider the new DNA evidence
on Tuesday, and failed to overturn his conviction. On Wednesday,
Elliotts execution day, the Texas Board of Pardons and Parole
rejected his final plea for clemency and he was put to death.
John Elliotts mother and brother presented a written appeal
to Prime Minister Tony Blairs 10 Downing Street office,
asking Blair to intervene on his behalf and asking him to raise
the issue personally with President Bush. It has not been reported
that Blair, who met with Bush in the US on January 31 on the impending
war against Iraq, pursued the issue.
The US has come under increasing criticism for its execution
of foreign nationals. Last August 14, Texas put to death Mexican
Javier Suarez Medina, 33, despite international protests and a
direct appeal from Mexican President Vicente Fox. Thirteen nations
joined with Mexico to file a friend of the court brief
with the US Supreme Court on Suarez Medinas behalf, arguing
that Texas authorities failed to advise him of his right to contact
the Mexican consulate after his arrest, a right protected by the
1963 Vienna Convention on Consular Relations (VCCR).
On February 5, the day of John Elliotts execution, the
International Court of Justice, known as the World Court, ruled
that the US must temporarily stay the execution of three Mexican
citizens on death rowCesar Fierro, Roberto Ramos and Osvaldo
Torres Aguilera. The court called for the delay while it investigated
whether the 3, and 48 other Mexicans on death row, were afforded
their consular rights.
The United States has consistently refused to abide by such
rulings. In 1999 the World Court ruled that the US had violated
international law by not informing a German citizen of his right
to consular assistance. Walter LaGrand was executed in Arizona
on March 3, 1999, in violation of this ruling.
According to the Death Penalty Information Center, as of February
1 there were 112 foreign nationals on death row across the US,
including 36 in California, 25 in Texas and 22 in Florida. Twenty
have been put to death since 1976. DPIC reports that in only seven
cases of foreign nationals who received death sentences can it
be proven that authorities fully complied with Article 36 of the
1963 VCCR, which requires that foreign citizens be informed without
delay of their consular rights.
On February 3, Amnesty International issued a new report, TexasIn
a World of Its Own as 300th Execution Looms. The report
noted that with John Elliotts execution, and another four
scheduled to die by lethal injection this month, Texas will have
put to death 300 people since it reinstituted capital punishment
in 1982, more than any other state and more than a third of the
829 executed nationwide since the reinstatement of the death penalty.
According to Amnestys report: Texas death
penalty system is marred by widespread geographic disparities,
issues of innocence, racial bias, and the shameful practice of
executing juvenile offenders and that the states capital
punishment system exemplifies the findings that have emerged in
recent studies conducted in Maryland and Illinois that reveal
that the death penalty is determined by geographic lotteryin
other words, whether or not a defendant receives a death sentence
is determined in large measure by where the case is tried.
On January 11, Illinois Governor George Ryan commuted the death
sentences of all of the states 167 death row prisoners,
reducing the majority of them to life in prison. Ryan said the
states capital punishment system was broken
and plagued by prosecutorial misconduct, confessions coerced through
torture and other abuses. Since the state reinstated the death
penalty, 17 death row inmates have been exonerated.
Ryan was responding to growing popular opposition to capital
punishmentboth within the US and internationallyand
the fear within sections of the ruling establishment that the
barbaric practice is being discredited, along with the entire
criminal justice system in America.
Since 1987 in Texas, seven death row inmates have been released
after evidence of their innocence emerged. But Texas authorities
have said they have no intention of calling a moratorium on executions
or submitting the death penalty system in the state to examination.
George W. Bushwho presided over more than 150 executions
as Texas governormaintains that no innocent men were put
to death under his administration.
The refusal of Texas authorities to stay John Elliotts
executiondespite international protests, and in the face
of new evidenceis indicative of the states merciless
drive to keep the death machine rolling.
See Also:
Commutation of death sentences
in Illinois deals blow to capital punishment
[23 January 2003]
Law and order in Illinoisframe-up,
torture and legal murder
[23 January 2003]
Texas executes Mexican
national despite international protests
[16 August 2002]
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