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Commutation of death sentences in Illinois deals blow to capital
punishment
By Kate Randall
23 January 2003
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The decision by outgoing Illinois Governor George Ryan to void
the death sentences of all of the states condemned prisoners
has focused attention on the systemic injustice of capital punishment.
On January 11, Ryan exercised his power under state law to carry
out the largest commutation of death row prisoners in US history.
The sentences of 163 men and 4 women were reduced to life in prison,
except for three who received terms of 40 years imprisonment.
The previous day, the governor granted full pardons to four
other death row prisoners, based on overwhelming evidence that
Chicago police had coerced false confessions from them through
the use of physical torture.
Ryan, a Republican elected in 1998 as a supporter of capital
punishment, explained his commutation decision in a speech in
which he indicted the states criminal justice system in
scathing terms. He detailed a process of arbitrary prosecutions,
concocted evidence, false testimony from prison snitches
and confessions coerced by the police truncheon and other barbaric
methods. The Illinois capital punishment system is broken,
he declared.
Ryan delivered his address at Northwestern University, where
students and faculty organized in the Center on Wrongful Convictions
have been responsible for investigations exonerating 17 Illinois
death row prisoners.
Our capital system is haunted by the demon of error,
he said, error in determining guilt, and error in determining
who among the guilty deserves to die. He added that the
system has taken innocent men to a hairs breadth escape
from their unjust execution. One death row inmate, Anthony
Porter, spent 15 years on death row before evidence was uncovered
proving his innocence. Porter came within two days of execution.
Ryans speech articulated the feelings of growing numbers
of people in America when he described a judicial system which
metes out the ultimate punishment to workers, the poor and those
members of society least able to defend themselves. He stated:
In the United States the overwhelming majority of those
executed are psychotic, alcoholic, drug addicted or mentally unstable.
They frequently are raised in an impoverished and abusive environment.
Seldom are people with money or prestige convicted of capital
offenses, even more seldom are they executed.
Ryan is responding to increasing popular oppositionboth
within the US and internationallyto the practice of capital
punishment. Beyond his personal sense of moral revulsion, he reflects
the fear within sections of the political establishment that the
barbaric practice is discrediting the entire system of police,
courts and justice in America.
Within the framework of American bourgeois politics, Ryans
decision required a considerable degree of personal courage. He
was immediately attacked by Republican and Democratic politicians
alike, including the incoming governor of Illinois, Democrat Rod
Blagojevich, who called the blanket commutation a big mistake.
Richard Devine, the states attorney for Illinois
Cook County, which covers Chicagoand accounts for 100 of
the 167 commuted death sentencesdenounced the decision as
outrageous and unconscionable. He did not, however,
address Ryans criticisms of the capital punishment system,
or the fact that a majority of the 17 Illinois death row prisoners
proven innocent were convicted in Cook County.
Many Illinois prosecutors have vowed to begin filling up the
states death row as soon as possible. Steve Ferguson, the
states attorney in Coles County, said he would seek the
death penalty in a murder trial scheduled to begin January 27.
Meg Corecki, the prosecutor in suburban Kane County, said she
would pursue death sentences in four capital cases awaiting trial
or sentencing in her jurisdiction.
US Senator Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut, in one of his first
statements after declaring his candidacy for the Democratic presidential
nomination, denounced the commutation as shockingly wrong,
adding, It did terrible damage to the credibility of our
system of justice.
Ryans sweeping action and blunt criticism have punctured
the official and media propaganda about heroic policemen and tough-minded
prosecutors protecting the public and defending law and
order.
While opinion polls continue to show a majority of the US public
supporting the death penalty, that majority has shrunk considerably
in the last five years, despite near-unanimous support for capital
punishment in the media and the Democratic and Republican parties.
This shift has already begun to have an impact on the frequency
of executions. In 2001, for the first time since the death penalty
was restored in 1976, the number of death row prisoners actually
declined, and the number of executions also dropped.
Despite the furor from police, prosecutors, politicians and
the media over Ryans commutation order, incoming Illinois
Governor Blagojevich said he would continue the moratorium on
executions that Ryan imposed in January 2000, when he set up a
special commission to review all death penalty convictions in
the state. In Maryland, however, the incoming Republican governor,
Robert Ehrlich, said he would immediately lift the moratorium
on executions ordered by his predecessor.
The Illinois decision provides a yardstick for measuring the
character of President George W. Bush. Ryan was a conventional
Midwestern Republican politician when he took office in 1998.
By the standards of American capitalist politics he was a moderate
conservative, ideologically committed to the same nostrums of
law and order to which Bush pays homage.
However, just over a years experience with the operation
of the Illinois capital punishment system led Ryan to impose a
moratorium on executions, because of the obvious frequency of
injustice, wrongful conviction and arbitrary sentencing. Three
years later, he issued his commutation order.
Bush, by contrast, felt no pangs of conscience as he sent more
than 150 men and women to their deaths in Texas from 1995 to 2000.
He even boasted, defending capital punishment during the 2000
campaign, that there was not a single case of wrongful conviction
in a Texas capital case, despite the evidence of defense attorneys
sleeping through trials, being too drunk to stand, or being later
disbarred for incompetence and malfeasance.
Capital punishment is a key component of the Bush administrations
right-wing political agenda, and is backed by the majority of
Democrats in Congress. They promote the death penalty in an effort
to strengthen the police powers of the state and manipulate public
opinion, to encourage the most backward instincts among the population
on social questions.
In the recent Washington sniper shootings, the Justice Department
intervened to make sure that the two suspectsincluding juvenile
Lee Malvoface the death penalty. The Bush administrations
eagerness to keep the assembly line of state killings rolling
is motivated, not by sympathy for the victims of violent crime
and their relatives, but by a drive to terrorize the population
and divert attention from the societal causes of criminal behavior.
See Also:
Law and order in Illinois--frame-up, torture
and legal murder
[23 January 2003]
Illinois death penalty
report reveals widespread abuse
[27 April 2002]
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