Tuesday, October 27, 2009

The Dying Death Penalty in Maryland

The death penalty, in Maryland and elsewhere, is dying. Its death rattle is audible in court rooms and state houses around the nation. And well it should, because it just doesn't work the way it's applied. So maybe the time has arrived to end all the delaying and posturing by doing away with capital punishment once and for all. Governor O'Malley, a death penalty opponent, tried and failed but settled for a compromise. And here we are again, hung up on the protocols of taking a life by lethal injection.

The death penalty in America is an elaborate game of angles and loopholes that anybody on death row can play with the help of a willing attorney who'll file a lifetime of appeals that have little or no relationship to the condemned person's transgression. And all the while it costs $50,000 a year to house a prisoner. There are currently five inmates on death row in Maryland

The death penalty in Maryland has, in effect, been suspended for three years in a dispute over the manner in which the punishment is applied. And the moratorium was recently extended by indirection when a review panel of legislators found "serious flaws" in the new regulations that were proposed by the O'Malley administration. The committee attempted to subpoena all 24 state's attorneys to testify because of differences over how the death penalty is applied in the various counties. The subpoenas were dropped.

Read the rest: The Slow Death of Capital Punishment | Politics & Media | SPLICETODAY.COM
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It should NEVER be too late for claims of innocence

News out of Texas:
It's not entirely unusual for supporters of a death row inmate to throw everything but the kitchen sink out there to make their case, but a fax from "Supporters of Reginald Blanton," have made an interesting allegation. Blanton is scheduled to be executed tomorrow.
Reginald Blanton who faces execution on October 27, 2009 has
just been denied commutation of his death sentence to a lesser
penalty by the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles. This is in the
face of being advised that there is no physical evidence of guilt.
There is evidence of a shoe print on the door of the murder
victim's apartment which does not match the shoes worn by Blanton
either is style of shoe sole or in size. Charles Aycock, an
attorney and member of the Board of Pardons and Paroles, met with
Blanton and refused to listen to Blanton's description of his
innocence and unfair legal process. Aycock told Blanton that the
Board was not interested in his innocence. Blanton asked if the
Board was not the last forum to which the issue of innocence could
be brought. Aycock told Blanton again that the Board was not
interested in his innocence. He also refused to listen to any
explanation by Blanton for the number of infractions reflected in
Blanton's prison record as being the result of Blanton's stand for
fair treatment of inmates and compliance by the Texas Criminal
Justice Department with their own regulations. Recent coverage of
the bias of the Board in the Houston Chronicle is confirmed by the
treatment Blanton received. Blanton said it is evident that
Aycock had not read the petition for clemency.
To be fair, I'm not sure it is the board's job to retry the case.
So, what? Just kill him instead? Like they did Cameron Todd Willingham? Yes, due to a technicality, ignore the claims of innocence, and kill the bastard. Because it is the structure and technicalities of the American justice system that keep it's crime rates so respectably low, right? *shakes head*

TEXAS DEATH PENALTY Blog | The Dallas Morning News

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Friday, October 23, 2009

Prison Book: A Prison Diary by Jeffrey Archer

http://media.us.macmillan.com/jackets/258H/9780312330842.jpgA Prison Diary by Jeffrey Archer is about prison in the UK. Jeffrey Archer was a bestselling novelist and British Lord. He was convicted of perjury and sentenced to four years in prison. This is volume one in a series of 3 books recounting his time in British prisons, starting with BMP Belmarsh, a notorious, maximum security lockup. This first of three was written while he was incarcerated at Belmarsh.

The book describes daily life in British lockup and explains the daily routine as well as the unexpected moments he experienced while at Belmarsh.

Jeffrey Archer is critical of the British prison system and questions many different policies, including sending small time criminals and short-term offenders to a high-security prison like Belmarsh, explaining that it makes a bad situation worse.

While I would hardly describe this book as excellent, it was extremely interesting to someone who almost exclusively reads books about the American prison system. There are some blaring differences and some surprising similarities. It is definitely worth a read, along with the other two books in the series, Purgatory: A Prison Diary Volume 2 and Heaven: A Prison Diary Volume 3

To suggest a book to be featured on Genpop, please email me: vlu777@gmail.com

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Thursday, October 22, 2009

DNA Test Waivers, or Rather, Bull%&*$

The Plain Error Blog at the Innocence Project of Florida just keeps getting better and better. I highly recommend subscribing to the feed.

Plain Error recently posted about DNA test waivers, which basically make federal defendants waive their right to DNA testing if they plead guilty. I really don't understand this, and I will never understand anyone's opposition to DNA testing whenever possible. Pre-trial, post-conviction, post-execution, it doesn't matter. Should the truth not matter more than anything? More than the cost of DNA testing, more that the possibility of the authorities being wrong? I believe DNA testing should be allowed, automatically, for any defendant, convicted felon or death row inmate no matter how long it's been since conviction. We should, first and foremost, be concerned with the rights of human beings, and denying a potentially innocent person the right to prove that innocence is a violation of basic human rights, even if 9 out of every 10 are proven guilty.
During the Bush administration, a policy was passed requiring some federal defendants to abandon their right to DNA testing, mainly those who plead guilty. These waivers deny the defendant DNA testing, a federal right granted to them in the Innocence Protection Act of 2004, even if new evidence emerges.
Prosecutors who use them, including some of the nation’s most prominent U.S. attorneys, say people who have admitted guilt should not be able to file frivolous petitions for testing. They say the wave of DNA exonerations has little impact in federal court because all those found to be innocent were state prisoners, and the waivers apply only to federal charges. DNA evidence is used far more frequently in state courts.
This pretty much undermines the 2004 law, since a majority of federal inmates plea guilty (97%). Prosecutors often present the waiver alongside a plea agreement, and failure to sign the waiver breaks the agreement seeking lighter prison time.

Read more: Justice Department to Review DNA Test Waivers | Innocence Project of Florida

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Tenth Annual March to Abolish the Death Penalty

From the Texas Moratorium Network:

It is time to march and rally to abolish the death penalty. This Saturday at 2 PM in Austin at the Texas Capitol is the 10th Annual March to Abolish the Death Penalty.

Three innocent, exonerated former death row prisoners will be among the special guests at theTenth Annual March to Abolish the Death Penalty October 24, 2009 on the South Steps of the Capitol at 11th and Congress. Also attending will be the friend of Todd Willingham, Elizabeth Gilbert, a Houston teacher and playwright who first investigated his innocence and is still fighting to exonerate him. Plus, Todd’s last lawyer Walter "Skip" Reaves.

Scott Cobb of Texas Moratorium Network said: “The last request of Todd Willingham to his parents was 'please don’t ever stop fighting to vindicate me.' Please attend the march to support the Willingham family as they continue to fight to prove that Todd Willingham was innocent."
10th Annual March to Abolish the Death Penalty October 24 in Austin


Panel Discussion: Friday, October 23, the night before the march, there will be a panel discussion on the campus of the University of Texas at Austin at 7 PM with Elizabeth Gilbert (the penpal of Todd Willingham who first investigated and then advocated for his innocence), Shujaa Graham and Curtis McCarty, who will both speak about what it is like to be innocent and sentenced to death. Shujaa spent three years on death row in California. Curtis spent 19 years on death row in Oklahoma before his exoneration and release in 2007. The panel is in the Sinclair Suite (room 3.128) of the Texas Student Union on Guadalupe Street.

Schedule for the 10th Annual March to Abolish the Death Penalty
Saturday Oct 24 in Austin

1 PM – 2 PM Press conference in the Speaker’s Committee Room (2.W6) inside the Capitol building. The purpose is to allow the media to ask questions and conduct interviews with the speakers listed above.
2 PM We start to gather at the Texas Capitol on the sidewalk by the South gate of the Capitol entrance on Congress Avenue at 11th Street (Map)
2:30 or 2:45 Start to march down Congress Ave to 6th Street and back to Capitol
3:00 or 3:15 Rally on the South Steps of the Texas Capitol with speakers.


Speakers at the march will include three innocent, now-exonerated death row prisoners (Shujaa Graham, Curtis McCarty and Ron Keine), Jeff Blackburn (Chief Counsel of the Innocence Project of Texas), Jeanette Popp (a mother whose daughter was murdered but who asked the DA not to seek the death penalty), Elizabeth Gilbert (the penpal of Todd Willingham mentioned in The New Yorker article who first investigated his innocence and helped his family find a fire expert to investigate), Walter Reaves (the last attorney for Todd Willingham, who fought for him through the execution and continues to fight to exonerate him), Terri Been whose brother Jeff Wood is on death row convicted under the Law of Parties even though he did not kill anyone, and Anna Terrell the mother of Reginald Blanton who is scheduled for execution in Texas on Oct 27 three days after the march, plus other family members of people currently on Texas death row.

Post-march Strategy Meeting: Immediately after the march on October 24, we plan to hold a networking and strategy meeting inside the capitol. Everyone is invited to attend the strategy session and help us plan how to move forward towards abolition in Texas. A major aspect of the session will be for family members of people on death row to share their stories and learn from each other and us how tThe strategy session will start about 30 minutes after the last speaker at the march and last about an hour and a half.

If you are in Houston and want to ride a bus to Austin for the march, e-mail abolition.movement@hotmail.com to confirm a seat on the bus from Houston to Austin for the march on Saturday. They will meet at S.H.A.P.E. Center, 3815 Live Oak, 9:30 Saturday morning in Houston, have a press conference at 10:00 where they will shout it from the rooftop that Todd Willingham was innocent. Then they will leave for the march in Austin. They will return to Houston after the march and rally.

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia wrote in 2006 that in the modern judicial system there has not been “a single case–not one–in which it is clear that a person was executed for a crime he did not commit. If such an event had occurred in recent years, we would not have to hunt for it; the innocent’s name would be shouted from the rooftops.” On Saturday Oct 24 in Austin, people from across Texas will gather and shout out that Todd Willingham was innocent to show the world and Rick Perry that there are people in Texas who are convinced that Todd was innocent and that executions in Texas should be stopped before another innocent person is executed”.

The annual march is organized by several Texas anti-death penalty organizations, including the Austin chapter of the Campaign to End the Death Penalty, Texas Moratorium Network, the Texas Death Penalty Abolition Movement, Texas Students Against the Death Penalty and Kids Against the Death Penalty and sponsored by over 50 various organizations. For the full list of sponsors, click here.

Thank you to everyone who has already signed the petition to Governor Rick Perry and the State of Texas to acknowledge that the fire in the Cameron Todd Willingham case was not arson, therefore no crime was committed and on February 17, 2004, Texas executed an innocent man.

More than 3,260 people have signed. We are also working with another organization (CredoMobile) that collected 2,617 on their own similar petition. So together we are nearing 6,000 petition signatures to turn in to Rick Perry on October 24 during the 10th Annual March to Abolish the Death Penalty in Austin at the Texas Capitol.

Thank you also to the many people who have donated to help us organize the march. We have reached our goal of raising $1,000 for the march! Your contribution now will help us continue to fight the death penalty after the march.

You can make a tax-deductible donation by credit card or by sending a check to:

Texas Death Penalty Education and Resource Center
3616 Far West Blvd, Suite 117, Box 251
Austin, Texas 78731

Texas Death Penalty Education and Resource Center is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization, so donations are tax-deductible.

We are making a difference! After ten years of organizing the Annual March to Abolish the Death Penalty, we have convinced many people to change their minds from supporting to opposing the death penalty. Just this week, former Texas Governor Mark White announced he has changed his mind about the death penalty.

Former Gov. Mark White, who was involved in the executions of 20 condemned criminals, says it may be time for Texas to do away with the death penalty. The death penalty is no longer a deterrent to murder, and long stays for the condemned on death row shows justice is not swift, White said. More than anything, he said, he has grown concerned that the system is not administered fairly and that there are too many risks of executing innocent people. White said the state needs to take a serious look at replacing the death penalty with life without parole. “There is a very strong case to be made for a review of our death penalty statutes and even look at the possibility of having life without parole so we don't look up one day and determined that we as the state of Texas have executed someone who is in fact innocent,” said White.

If you live outside Texas and can not attend the march Saturday, please call Governor Perry and leave him a voice mail saying that you are participating by telephone in the 10th Annual March to Abolish the Death Penalty. Tell him to stop covering up the execution of an innocent man. Tell him to admit Todd Willingham was innocent. Tell him to Stop Executions before he executes another innocent man.

Gov. Rick Perry's Voice Mail - 512 463 1782.

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Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Featured Prison: Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Prison

The Georgia Diagnostic and Classification State Prison houses Georgia's death row inmates, otherwise known as inmates under death sentence or UDS inmates. It is also home to the death chamber, where inmates are executed via lethal injection. Most recently, Mark McClain.

The prison opened in 1968 in Jackson, Georgia and has a capacity for 1785 maximum security or UDS inmates. It is the largest prison in the state of Georgia. It serves as the diagnostic center or processing center for the Georgia Department of Corrections.

This is also where Troy Anthony Davis is housed, a death row inmate who has maintained his innocence since his conviction in 1991. After his conviction, a vast majority of the prosecutions witnesses recanted their testimonies and further evidence supporting the theory that someone else committed the crime surfaced. This past August, the Supreme Court ordered a hearing in Troy Davis' case.





To submit a little known fact about this or any other prison, or to suggest a prison for next week's featured prison, please email me at vlu777@gmail.com

Archive of all Featured Prisons on Genpop.org

|| Georgia Department of Corrections ||

Georgia Diagnostic and Classification State Prison - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Georgia Diagnostic & Classification Prison - Prison Talk

Hard Time | Photos | - National Geographic Channel

Maximum Security: American Justice | Programmes | National Geographic Channel

Troy Davis case - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Troy Anthony Davis

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Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Mark White: Review the Death Penalty

From Plain Error at the Innocence Project of Florida:
As Texas Governor Rick Perry shamelessly insists on plowing ahead with the October 27th execution of Reggie Blanton (for a good article on the Blanton case go HERE), former Texas Governor Mark White is urging for a review of the death penalty in Texas following the recent hullabaloo surrounding Perry’s actions relating to the 2004 execution of Todd Willingham. A Houston Chronicle article today quoted the former Governor as saying he believes the “system is so unreliable it creates an unnecessary possibility that an innocent person would be executed in Texas.” Well, kudos to Governor White, but he only got it partially correct. The system he refers to is so unreliable that it does not merely create the possibility that an innocent person would be executed in Texas, it in fact permitted an innocent person to be executed in Texas. His name was Todd Willingham. While Perry appallingly refuses to come to terms with (or even speak somewhat honestly about) Willingham’s execution, Governor White (who presided over the execution of twenty individuals during his time in office) has some more intelligent things to say, e.g.
There is a very strong case to be made for a review of our death penalty statutes and even look at the possibility of having life without parole so we don’t look up one day and determined that we as the state of Texas have executed someone who is in fact innocent
Read the rest: Former Texas Governor Calls for Review of Death Penalty in Texas | Innocence Project of Florida

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Thursday, October 15, 2009

Was Perry Briefed Before Willingham Died?

Just 88 minutes before the February 2004 execution of Cameron Todd Willingham, Gov. Rick Perry's office received by fax a crucial arson expert's opinion that later ignited a political firestorm over whether Texas, on Perry's watch, used botched forensic evidence to send a man to his death.

In a letter sent Feb. 14, three days before Willingham was scheduled to die, Perry had been asked to postpone the execution. The condemned man's attorney argued that the newly obtained expert evidence showed Willingham had not set the house fire that killed his daughters, 2-year-old Amber and 1-year-old twins Karmon and Kameron, two days before Christmas in 1991.

On Feb. 17, the day of the execution, Perry's office got the five-page faxed report at 4:52 p.m., according to documents the Houston Chronicle obtained in response to a public records request.

But it's unclear from the records whether he read it that day. Perry's office has declined to release any of his or his staff's comments or analysis of the reprieve request.

A statement from Perry spokesman Chris Cutrone, sent to the Chronicle late Friday, said that “given the brevity of (the) report and the general counsel's familiarity with all the other facts in the case, there was ample time for the general counsel to read and analyze the report and to brief the governor on its content.”

wrongful-convictions: Perry's office quiet on expert's arson report
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Shackling Female Inmates During Labor

This grossly torturous practice is finally being condemned:
I’m not sure if this has been posted here yet, but its been all over the web recently. Earlier this month, in a 6-5 decision, an en banc 8th Circuit Court of Appeals overturned last year’s decision by a three judge panel for the Circuit and held that constitutional protections against shackling pregnant women during labor had been clearly established by decisions of the Supreme Court and the lower courts. The full decision is available HERE.

The Americn Civil Liberties Union, which represented the prisoner who brought the complaint, recently issued a Press Release, described the facts of the case as follows:

[Shawanna] Nelson was a 29-year-old non-violent offender who was six months pregnant with her second child when she was incarcerated by the Arkansas Department of Corrections (ADOC) in June 2003. Three months later, after going into labor, she was taken to a local hospital where correctional officers shackled her legs to opposite sides of the bed. Nelson remained shackled to the bed for several hours of labor until she was finally taken to the delivery room.

The shackles caused Nelson cramps and intense pain, as she could not adjust her position during contractions. She was unshackled during delivery, but was immediately re-shackled after the birth of her son. After childbirth, the use of shackles caused her to soil the sheets of her bed because she could not be unshackled quickly enough to get to a bathroom.

8th Circuit Court of Appeals Rejoins Humanity and Condemns Shackling Of Pregnant Prisoners In Labor | Innocence Project of Florida
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Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Featured Prison: Northeast Correctional Center

The Northeast Correctional Center in Bowling Green, Missouri, opened in 1988 and has a capacity of 1,975 high - medium security inmates.

In 2008, inmates and filmakers collaborated on several projects including:
dt_3916_web.jpgThe single-channel video Time and Time Again was produced during an extended collaborative project with inmates at Northeast Correctional Center (NECC), a close-security men’s prison in Bowling Green, Missouri. The script is written as a long list of common clichés, proverbs, and other familiar sayings about time, arranged to create a through-line as it progresses. Filmed inside the prison, the phrases are recited by a group of 20 actors from NECC and are edited into quick succession. The language is by nature generic and overly familiar, phrases we have heard over and over, but who is speaking them makes all the difference to their meaning.

Jan Estep » Time and Doing Time
Recently, NECC has been in the news because an inmate at the facility threatened to kill President Barack Obama in a letter. The inmate, Josh Randall McCallum, faces federal charges that could land him five more years in prison.

Missouri inmate charged with threatening to kill President Obama in letter mailed from prison

MO Department of Corrections - Northeast Correctional Center

Northeast Correctional Center - Missouri - Profile - Prison Talk

Alberici Enterprises: State of Missouri Northeast Correctional Center

Northeast Correctional Center

To submit a little known fact about this or any other prison, or to suggest a prison for next week's featured prison, please email me at vlu777@gmail.com

Archive of all Featured Prisons on Genpop.org

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Friday, October 9, 2009

Prison Book: 4,000 Days by Warren Fellows

http://covers3.booksamillion.com/covers/bam/0/31/225/364/0312253648.jpg4,000 Days: My Life and Survival in a Bangkok Prison. Alright, so this book isn't about the American Prison system but it's a fantastic read anyway. Warren Fellows is an Australian who was imprisoned in Thailand for drug trafficking. Fellows was locked up for 11 years, or 4,000 days, along with professional rugby player and former Olympian, Paul Hayward. While in prison in Thailand, Fellows became addicted to the very drug he had been trafficking. His conviction was overturned on appeal and he received a royal pardon in 1989.

The book, 4,000 Days is a journal of Warren Fellows' time in Thai prison. It is extremely unpleasant, horrifying and shocking. By the time you put the book down, you find yourself wondering how any human being can go through that and come out relatively alright. For those of you who have seen the movie Brokedown Palace, this is 200 times worse. I read this book before my return to Thailand 3 years ago and I couldn't help but think about it the whole time I was there, about 3 weeks or so. A spectacular trip otherwise, I kept thinking about the fact that there were prisons in this country that treat people the way I read about in that book. Haunting to say the least.

4,000 Days is a fantastic read and a definite recommendation to anyone wanting to know about prisons and justice systems around the world.

To suggest a book to be featured on Genpop, please email me: vlu777@gmail.com

Click here for the archive of all prison books.

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Thursday, October 8, 2009

The High Cost of the Death Penalty

On Tuesday I had an argument with @Imajyn about the cost of the death penalty. I caught this tweet:
I'm not talking about the death penalty. I <3 the death penalty. WAY cheaper than life in prison. I'm talking about eugenics (http://twitter.com/Imajyn/status/4664075202)
And I thought I ought to educate the fellow. Some of the things that were said in the ensuing argument would have been amusing had we not been talking about a life or death issue. It got me thinking about how amazing it is to me that people still believe in this myth, that the death penalty costs less than life in prison. Even when you stop to think about it, it doesn't make sense, and yet people insist it is true. I suppose none of them are really stopping to think about it.

Regardless, I was looking for some good facts to sling his way and prove my point, when I came across this excellent article in the New York Times:
... keeping inmates on death row in Florida costs taxpayers $51 million a year more than holding them for life without parole. North Carolina has put 43 people to death since 1976 at $2.16 million per execution. The eventual cost to taxpayers in Maryland for pursuing capital cases between 1978 and 1999 is estimated to be $186 million for five executions.

Perhaps the most extreme example is California, whose death row costs taxpayers $114 million a year beyond the cost of imprisoning convicts for life. The state has executed 13 people since 1976 for a total of about $250 million per execution. This is a state whose prisons are filled to bursting (unconstitutionally so, the courts say) and whose government has imposed doomsday-level cuts to social services, health care, schools and parks.

Read more: Editorial - High Cost of Death Row - NYTimes.com
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DNA Exoneration Project Gets Federal Grant Funds

The newly-created Colorado Justice Review Project, which will review 5,000 rapes, murders and manslaughters to ascertain if defendants were wrongly convicted, has received $1.2 million in federal grant funds.

The DNA project will be administered by the Colorado Attorney General's Office and the Denver District Attorney's Office.

Under the program, some people previously convicted of felonies can apply to have DNA testing performed in their case, according to the Colorado Attorney General's Office.

"DNA is one of law enforcement's most effective tools for convicting the guilty and exonerating the innocent," Colorado Attorney General John Suthers said in a release. "These grant funds will allow us to use DNA to ensure that no Coloradan has been wrongly convicted."

Suthers said that in addition to working with the Denver District Attorney's Office, he will work with several other organizations, including the University of Denver College of Law, the Colorado Bureau of Investigation and the Colorado Public Defender's Office.

The organizations will help run the program and select which cases will be reviewed.

Read more : wrongful-convictions: DNA exoneration project gets $1.2 million
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Support the Innocence Project of Florida

Wilton Dedge’s Bike Blast | Innocence Project of Florida
This weekend, October 10-11, 2009, the Annual Bike Blast will take place in Titusville, FL. This event is very special to us because it is coordinated by Wilton Dedge, who was exonerated in 2004 after DNA testing proved he did not commit the rape for which he was convicted and imprisoned.

Wilton owns a great biker bar in historic Titusville called the Southern Room (345 S Washington Ave) which will be the epicenter of the the event. They expect there to be as many as 5,000 bikes at this 2-day event.

The best part is that they will be having a Poker Run to raise money for the Innocence Project of Florida, which will assist our efforts to find and free the wrongfully convicted. You can view the Poker Run flier and register for the Poker Run. If you would like to be a vendor at the Bike Blast, you can see vendor information and fill out this vendor form.

Come to this great event and support Wilton and the Innocence Project of Florida. For more information, click here.
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Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Featured Prison: Southern Ohio Correctional Facility

http://i.cdn.turner.com/trutv/trutv.com/graphics/photos/serial_killers/partners/coleman/Southern-Ohio-Correctional-.jpgA maximum security prison in Lucasville, Ohio, Southern Ohio Correctional Facility is home to Ohio's death house, where they execute death row inmates.

The prison opened in 1972 has about 1350 inmates and 671 staff. On site, it runs a farming program and the harvested crops are donated to a homeless shelter.

In 1993, a riot broke out at Southern Ohio Correctional Facility, during which the prison was controlled by 450 inmates. Several factors contributed to causing the riot, including overcrowding and "discontent in the general population that the authorities were going to force Muslim prisoners to undergo tuberculosis vaccinations in violation of their religious beliefs. During negotiations, the inmates did not feel they were being taken seriously, and voted as a group to kill an Officer in retaliation. They handcuffed Officer Vallandingham, who they had taken hostage, and killed him by strangling him with a dumbell from the prison weight room. During those eleven days, representatives from the Sunni Muslims, Aryan Brotherhood, and Gangster Disciples met every day in an improvised leadership council." (Wikipedia). $40 million dollars in damage is said to have been caused by the riot. Since the riot, the prison is said to be haunted.

As the home of Ohio state executions, this prison has been in the spotlight lately. The state of Ohio has halted executions until the lethal injection procedure is overhauled in an attempt to avoid another botched execution. Last month, Ohio botched the execution of Romell Broom, making it the first time in modern American history that an execution has been abandoned after it began. A grueling, painful two hours after it began.

Southern Ohio Correctional Facility - Ohio DRC

Southern Ohio Correctional Facility/Prison-Lucasville, Ohio - Prison Talk

Southern Ohio Correctional Facility

Haunted Southern Ohio Correctional Facility

Southern Ohio Correctional Facility Riot

Another week to live: Ohio delays execution of Romell Broom after officials can't find inmate's usable vein | Mail Online

To submit a little known fact about this or any other prison, or to suggest a prison for next week's featured prison, please email me at vlu777@gmail.com

Archive of all Featured Prisons on Genpop.org

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Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Cameron Todd Willingham Meeting Post-poned

Looks like Governor Perry of Texas doesn't want it confirmed that he killed an innocent man:
A well-placed source has confirmed to TIME that Perry ignored the written pleas from several members of the Texas Forensic Science Commission, including two of his own appointees, to reappoint the board's well-respected chairman, Austin lawyer Sam Bassett. Bassett's departure has resulted in a delay in an important investigation of evidence in a death-penalty case that critics say will prove an innocent man was executed on Perry's watch.

...

Much of the case for Willingham's innocence rests on the conclusions of two prominent forensic arson experts including Craig Beyler, who was scheduled to testify before the commission last week. But Perry's new forensics chairman, Williamson County district attorney John Bradley, a well-known, tough-on-crime prosecutor, cancelled last week's meeting on Willingham, saying he needed time to get up to speed on the commission's work. Beyler's testimony in the Willingham case has now been put off until Bradley sets a hearing, and he has not indicated when, or if, he will, saying he needs to talk to state leaders about the role of the commission. So far, leading Democrats in the state senate who pressed for the creation of the commission are praising Bradley's integrity, but say they will call a hearing in a few weeks to hear what his plans are.

Read more: Texas Forensics Board Gutted Ahead of Death-Penalty Case - TIME
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Executions Halted in Ohio

There's something fundamentally wrong with the logic that it's totally humane to kill so long as the victim feels no pain. But if the possibility of pain is going to stop the state of Ohio from killing, so be it.
syringe 3The governor of Ohio has halted executions in the state three weeks after a prisoner was subjected to a gruelling two hour attempt to kill him by lethal injection.

The governor, Ted Strickland, issued reprieves for two murderers facing imminent execution after a court blocked further attempts to put to death Romell Broom who endured "torture" as nurses repeatedly sought to insert needles into his arms and ankle, puncturing muscle and hitting bone.

Yesterday, a federal court put Broom's execution for the rape and murder of a 14-year-old girl on hold at least until after a hearing on 30 November. Another court temporarily delayed Thursday's execution of Lawrence Reynolds after his lawyers argued that Ohio's state executioners are incompetent.

Strickland then called off the executions of Reynolds and Darryl Durr at least until next spring while Ohio reviews its procedures for using lethal injections, the second time it has had to do so in the past three years. The state is considering using lethal injections into the bone marrow or muscles of inmates as alternatives to the traditional intravenous procedure.

The governor said he is prepared to halt the execution of a third prisoner, scheduled to be put to death in December, if the problems have not been resolved.

Read more: Ohio governor halts executions
Of course, there has never been anything humane about lethal injection (http://www.ocucc.org/DeathPenalty/Problems.htm) whether you believe in the death penalty or not.

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I'm back!

Moving two countries away is not easy, but I did it again. With a dog. And a baby. Im not quite sure how I did it, but apparently I did as I am here now in chilly Vancouver, BC. Tanless, be-socked and exhausted.

Anyway, in the midst of moving puppies on planes and driving from Calgary and shopping at Ikea every ten minutes to fill up our new space, I didn't have any time to read any news or keep up to date on what's happening in the criminal justice world. So send me some stories, tell me what's happened in the last month and maybe I'll post some of your suggestions. Tweet me @vlu77 or email me at vlu777@gmail.com

Also, be sure to stay tuned this week for the return of the Featured Prison and Prison Book Review

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