March 13, 2003 6:04 AM

Justice delayed is not necessarily justice denied

Supreme Court Stops 300th Texas Execution

For one day, at least, frontier justice takes a seat. It's just too bad that it took the Supremes to inject some common sense into this state's bloodthirsty justice system.

WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court on Wednesday stopped Texas from executing its 300th inmate since capital punishment resumed in the United States in 1977, granting a dramatic last-minute stay to condemned killer Delma Banks....

His lawyers told justices that he was poorly represented at trial, that prosecutors improperly kept blacks off the jury, and that testimony from two prosecution witnesses was shaky. Banks is black, his victim was white and the jury was all-white.

The court issued the stay, without comment, about 10 minutes before the 44-year-old was to be put to death for the 1980 murder of 16-year-old Richard Wayne Whitehead, a co-worker at a restaurant. Banks shot Whitehead "for the hell of it" after a night of drinking, according to testimony Banks gave at his trial.

Banks has been on death row 22 years, longer than Whitehead was alive.

One of the three former federal judges supporting the Supreme Court intervention was former FBI Director William Sessions, who submitted a brief to the high court in which he cited "uncured constitutional errors" in Banks' case.

The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals this week refused to block Banks' execution, and the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles would not hear his plea because it was filed too late.

The unpleasant and sick reality is that the state of Texas is more concerned with process and technicalities than it is justice. Banks was 10 minutes away from dying for a crime that he never was allowed the opportunity to mount an effective defense against. Those who would accuse the Texas criminal justice system of being a death mill could use the Banks case as ample evidence. In this case, it would appear that the only thing the state was interested in was carrying out "justice" at any cost.

Banks may or may not be guilty of murder. Regardless, he deserves the opportunity to amount an effective defense. Perhaps now he will have that opportunity.

blog comments powered by Disqus

Technorati

Technorati search

» Blogs that link here

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Jack Cluth published on March 13, 2003 6:04 AM.

Live by the sword... was the previous entry in this blog.

Your (Ted Rall) moment of Zen is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Contact Me

Powered by Movable Type 5.12