What's new
The Brexit And Political discussion Forum

Brexit may have begun but it is not over, indeed it may never be finished.

Despite clemency, Oklahoma may execute Julius Jones this week, an expert explains why

Brexiter

Active member
Just a few days following the horrifying last moments of John Marion Grant’s execution in late October, in a 3-1 vote, the Oklahoma State Pardon and Parole Board granted clemency to another death row inmate: Julius Jones, who’s been on death row for over 20 years.

Despite clemency and the fact that capital punishment is at an all-time low in the nation, Jones’ fate remains in the hands of Republican Gov. Kevin Stitt, who has yet to weigh in.

Jones is scheduled to be executed on Nov. 18, and as Robert Dunham, executive director of the nonpartisan organization Death Penalty Information Center told Daily Kos, clemency is rarely if ever granted.

We spoke with Dunham about Jones’ case and more. We wanted to learn about capital punishment and the death penalty and clear up the misinformation that surrounds the topic.

Campaign Action
Americans are conflicted in their feelings about the death penalty. Although more people in the nation favor than oppose it—60% of U.S. adults favor it for people convicted of murder, including 27% who strongly favor it, according to a new Pew Research Center survey—11 states have abolished the death penalty this century, and no new states have added it in that time.

“We now have 34 states that have either abolished the death penalty or have not carried out an execution in more than a decade,” Dunham tells Daily Kos. “Twenty-three states now prohibit capital punishment and another three states—in which it is lawful—have a gubernatorial moratorium on carrying it out. That's a majority of states and a majority of the U.S. population.”

Dunham adds that U.S. voters are also electing more reform prosecutors with promises never to seek the death penalty, or to use it much more sparingly than their predecessors.

“There is now no state in New England that authorizes the death penalty,” Dunham says. “In fact, you can now enter the country at the Canadian border of Maine and travel all the way to the Cumberland Gap; the border of Virginia and Tennessee, without entering a state that has the death penalty. And if you go down the Atlantic coast, that means from Maine to North Carolina, from the northern tip of Maine to the northern tip of North Carolina, there are no states that that still have the death penalty.”

But, of course, there are states that still employ capital punishment. And in those that do, Dunham says, there’s a clear line you can draw from slavery to lynching to Jim Crow segregation to modern mass incarceration. They’re states with the fewest procedural protections against wrongful capital convictions and wrongful death sentences. These are states that have significant racial disparities in capital charging practices and capital sentencing practices, and have courts that are more likely to refuse to review claims of unconstitutional trials or unconstitutional death sentences and instead impose procedural hurdles.

Since 1976, people of color have accounted for 43% of total executions and make up over half of the inmates who are currently scheduled to be executed. In Texas, Black people make up less than 13% of the population yet represent 44.2% of death row inmates. Nationally, Black Americans make up 42% of death row inmates.

“The Florida Supreme Court has systematically reversed protections that were available to capital defendants and death row prisoners. With a state attorney general who is actively fighting DNA testing for two death row prisoners who've asserted their innocence for 45 years,” Dunham says.

“In states and counties committed to fairness and criminal legal reform, the death penalty is largely abolished or not used. States that are the least committed to fairness have the longest history of the use of the legal system as an instrument of racial and social hierarchy and that’s where we see the death penalty most active,” he says.

Dunham doubles down on something that most opponents of capital punishment already know.

Based on 31 years of FBI data, on average, homicide rates were higher in states that had the death penalty than in states that didn't.

“We found that the rates at which police officers were killed were higher in states that had the death penalty than in states that didn't. But the trends in terms of murder rates going up or murder rates going down or murder rates being stable, the trends were virtually indistinguishable. So having the death penalty didn't did make it less likely,” he says. He added that “in states with the lowest rate of police killings tended to be states that had just recently abolished the death penalty.”

One question that Daily Kos was particularly interested in exploring was what Dunham would like potential jurors on a capital punishment case to know should they be selected to serve.

Dunham says that the jury selection process in and of itself tends to be a problem in the U.S., with most jurors of color, women, and people with strong religious beliefs against the death penalty being excluded from selection. Leaving juries primarily white and male.

“I say listen carefully to the evidence and separate it out from the rhetoric. Prosecutors will try to inflame the jury by attempting to dehumanize or demonize the defendant because it’s not natural to kill. Prosecutors attempt to paint the defendant as a deviant monster who needs to be put down. You have to recognize that that is a diversionary tactic. If the case warrants the death penalty, then it's something that a juror would consider without that kind of inflammatory rhetoric and a reason to doubt the prosecution's case.

“I would also say to the juror, take a look at all the evidence in the case and ask yourself, would you reach this same judgment if the defendant were a different race? And the victim was a different race,” Dunham says.

The day before Jones’ scheduled execution in Oklahoma, another man by the name of David Neal Cox is set to be executed in Mississippi. Cox, 50, pleaded guilty in 2012 to killing his wife, Kim, in 2010 in the northern Mississippi town of Sherman.

Dunham says this is the first execution in that state in nine years.

Cox has waived his appeal rights. ”Since the reinstatement of the death penalty in 1976 through 2019, at least 149 defendants have been volunteers—approximately 10% of all executions,” Dunham tells Daily Kos.

Mississippi is still facing a lawsuit filed in 2015 by the Roderick & Solange MacArthur Justice Center on behalf of two inmates. The suit argues that Mississippi's lethal injection protocol is inhumane.

Jones is currently being held in solitary confinement. Every second that goes by brings him closer to being executed for a crime he didn’t commit.
 
Back
Top