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Grim milestone looms for US death penalty: 1000th execution
AFP via Yahoo ^ | November 30 2005

Posted on 11/30/2005 4:04:31 AM PST by cloud8

The United States will likely reach this week the grim milestone of 1,000 executions of convicts since 1976, although capital punishment is declining with fewer juries choosing death sentences.

A convicted murderer was put to death by lethal injection in Ohio on Tuesday, making him the 999th executed inmate since the Supreme Court reinstated capital punishment 29 years ago.

John Hicks, 49, was killed by lethal injection in the prison of Lucasville, Ohio, state prison authorities said.

Hicks was sentenced to death over the 1985 murder of his mother-in-law and five-year-old step-daughter. He was under the influence of drugs during the killings.

According to a copy of his final statement before his execution, Hicks said: "First I'd like to thank my Heavenly Father for forgiving me of these crimes I committed and to the victims who lost their love ones, I know it has been 20 years of pain and hurt."

"Y'all endured the pain each day. I hurt too. I cared and loved them too. God has forgiven me. I'm sorry and I wish I could bring them back," he said.

"The real me began with a syringe in my arm and now today I have a needle in my arm. I have come full circle. I'm at peace with it," he said.

An execution was scheduled in Virginia for late Wednesday, but on Tuesday, Virginia Governor Mark Warner issued an eleventh-hour reprieve for Robin Lovitt, commuting his death sentence to life in prison without parole.

The governor explained his decision by the fact that evidence from Lovitt's trial was destroyed by a court employee, even though the state of Virginia was legally obligated to maintain physical evidence until a defendant has exhausted every legal post-trial remedy.

The grim milestone is now likely to be reached on Friday as North Carolina and South Carolina both have executions scheduled for that day.

"The impending milestone occurs at a time when the country is sharply moving away from the use of the death penalty," according to the Washington-based Death Penalty Information Center (DPIC).

"The 1000th execution is a significant event in the nation's 30-year experiment with capital punishment, but it is not indicative of an expanding or strongly endorsed use of capital punishment," said DPIC director Richard Dieter.

"To the contrary, there is a wealth of evidence that the country is pulling back from the death penalty," Dieter said.

Statistics show a 50 percent decline in the number of death sentences since the late 1990s and a drop of 40 percent in executions since they peaked at 98 in 1999. There were 59 executions last year.

Moreover, the number of inmates on death row -- the prison wing for prisoners awaiting execution -- has declined each year since 2001.

Last month, a Gallup poll showed that 64 percent of Americans remain in favor of capital punishment, although 80 percent backed it in the 1990s.

The death penalty has also come under fire since inmates facing execution have been found innocent after their convictions, unmasking flaws in the judicial system. In the last 32 years, 122 death row inmates have been released.

Former Illinois governor George Ryan triggered a heated debate in January 2003 when he cleared the state's death row after learning of various cases in which innocent people were sentenced to die.

"More and more people understand that the death penalty makes mistakes, disproportionately affects the poor and people of color, doesn't deter crime, and is expensive, arbitrary, and immoral," according to 1000executions.org, an Amnesty International website.

The Supreme Court court barred executions of people with mental illness in 1986, people younger than 16 at the time of the crime in 1986 and people with mental retardation in 2005.

This year, it forbade capital punishment for people who were under 18 at the time of the crime.

The death penalty is currently on the books in 38 US states, but many seldom or never use it. The vast majority of executions take place in southern states.

More than half of all executions take place in three states: Texas has executed 355 people, Virginia has put to death 94 and Oklahoma another 79.

The US government also has the death penalty for federal cases, but it rarely uses it.

The most prominent US execution in recent years was that of Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh. He was executed in 2001 after a federal trial over the attack of a federal building in 1995 in which 168 died.

The first person executed after the Supreme Court's 1976 ruling was Gary Gilmore, who was killed by firing squad in Utah in 1977. It was the first execution in 10 years.

Gilmore was immortalized in American author Norman Mailer's "The Executioner's Song."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: deathpenalty; deathrow; execution; markwarner; us
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To: kittymyrib

Actually if you look at the executions per capita by state, you'll see that Texas is 3rd in the country, with Delaware being first and Oklahoma second.


21 posted on 11/30/2005 5:05:29 AM PST by Tarkin (Janice Rogers Brown to the SCOTUS)
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To: YouPosting2Me
Thanks for the focus on the innocent and not the convicted felons.

That is one of the most disgusting things about liberals... They want to kill the innocent and protect the guilty. Man, that's bizarre.

22 posted on 11/30/2005 5:06:11 AM PST by Pusterfuss (Proud member: Minnesotans for Global Warming)
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To: atomicpossum

And how many victems could be alive today, had many of these 1,000 murderers been executed for their first murder?


23 posted on 11/30/2005 5:06:39 AM PST by F.J. Mitchell (Okay, bring our troops home. But don't feign suprise when the terrorists tag along.)
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To: cloud8
Look at the rediculous and specious arguments for Tookie Wilson.

I guess writing children's books brings the 4 dead people he was convicted of killing (and the countless others he and his gang were NOT convicted of) back to life. And the families are made whole and the years of suffering by those families are erased.

24 posted on 11/30/2005 5:06:44 AM PST by freedumb2003 (Let's tear down the observatory so we never get hit by a meteor again!)
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To: cloud8

Can we work it out so TOOKIE gets to be Mr. 1000. PLEASE!!!!!! and then Make Mumia 1001!


25 posted on 11/30/2005 5:08:03 AM PST by commish (Freedom Tastes Sweetest to Those Who Have Fought to Preserve It)
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To: cloud8

OOOpps

Tookie WILLIAMS, not Wilson.


26 posted on 11/30/2005 5:09:27 AM PST by freedumb2003 (Let's tear down the observatory so we never get hit by a meteor again!)
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To: cloud8
And why should we keep these people alive? They killed people some small children and raped and brutalized and tortured them before they killed them. The only question I have is why is it taking so long to kill them. And I feel they should be killed the same way they killed their victim.
27 posted on 11/30/2005 5:10:24 AM PST by YOUGOTIT
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To: goldstategop

True, for example as of July 1st 2005, PR of California had 648 people on death row (and only 11 executions since 1976), Pennsylvania had 233 people (and only 3 executions), and Tennessee had 108 people (and only 1 execution).


28 posted on 11/30/2005 5:10:40 AM PST by Tarkin (Janice Rogers Brown to the SCOTUS)
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To: cloud8

Once againg P.J. O'Rourke's 'alternate inaugural address' springs to mind, the one in which he proposed President Bush not try to 'bring the country together' because 'the country is divided by jerks'.

Late in it he would have had the President say, "Jerks are in favor of abortion, but opposed to capital punishment. Now it's easy to imagine someone so full of the milk of human kindness as to oppose both. It's easy to imagine someone so callous and utilitarian as to support both. But it takes a real jerk to be opposed to killing a serial murder, and favor killing a perfect innocent."


29 posted on 11/30/2005 5:11:23 AM PST by The_Reader_David (And when they behead your own people in the wars which are to come, then you will know. . .)
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To: cloud8
More like a Mile-Pebble. Since 1976 there have been approximately 35,000 homicides a year in America that we know about. That's a total of over 101,000 people killed by murderers most of whom would be found guilty of first degree murder in a sane world. In return society killed a measly 1,000. Some justice!

And we wonder why the death penalty does not deter.
30 posted on 11/30/2005 5:11:34 AM PST by R.W.Ratikal (-)
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To: YOUGOTIT

Ditto.


31 posted on 11/30/2005 5:12:12 AM PST by F.J. Mitchell (Okay, bring our troops home. But don't feign suprise when the terrorists tag along.)
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To: cloud8

TOOKIE! TOOKIE! TOOKIE! TOOKIE! TOOKIE! TOOKIE! TOOKIE!


32 posted on 11/30/2005 5:21:22 AM PST by Kenton (Muslims want to play by their own version of "girls' rules")
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To: garylmoore

China executes more innocent people every week than we execute guilty people every year.


33 posted on 11/30/2005 5:22:47 AM PST by Bogey78O (<thinking of new tagline>)
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To: cloud8

It is not a grim milestone.

It is a triumph of good vs evil.
It is a triumph of justice.
It is a triumph of wisdom over ignorance.


34 posted on 11/30/2005 5:25:28 AM PST by bert (K.E. ; N.P . Peta girls end up as spinsters)
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To: cloud8

"Push the button, Max!"


35 posted on 11/30/2005 5:31:56 AM PST by Redleg Duke (9/11 - "WE WILL NEVER FORGET!")
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To: cloud8

""The impending milestone occurs at a time when the country is sharply moving away from the use of the death penalty," according to the Washington-based Death Penalty Information Center (DPIC).

"The 1000th execution is a significant event in the nation's 30-year experiment with capital punishment, but it is not indicative of an expanding or strongly endorsed use of capital punishment," said DPIC director Richard Dieter.

"To the contrary, there is a wealth of evidence that the country is pulling back from the death penalty," Dieter said.

Statistics show a 50 percent decline in the number of death sentences since the late 1990s and a drop of 40 percent in executions since they peaked at 98 in 1999. There were 59 executions last year.

Moreover, the number of inmates on death row -- the prison wing for prisoners awaiting execution -- has declined each year since 2001.

Last month, a Gallup poll showed that 64 percent of Americans remain in favor of capital punishment, although 80 percent backed it in the 1990s.

The death penalty has also come under fire since inmates facing execution have been found innocent after their convictions, unmasking flaws in the judicial system. In the last 32 years, 122 death row inmates have been released.

Former Illinois governor George Ryan triggered a heated debate in January 2003 when he cleared the state's death row after learning of various cases in which innocent people were sentenced to die.

"More and more people understand that the death penalty makes mistakes, disproportionately affects the poor and people of color, doesn't deter crime, and is expensive, arbitrary, and immoral," according to 1000executions.org, an Amnesty International website.

The Supreme Court court barred executions of people with mental illness in 1986, people younger than 16 at the time of the crime in 1986 and people with mental retardation in 2005.

This year, it forbade capital punishment for people who were under 18 at the time of the crime.

The death penalty is currently on the books in 38 US states, but many seldom or never use it. The vast majority of executions take place in southern states.

More than half of all executions take place in three states: Texas has executed 355 people, Virginia has put to death 94 and Oklahoma another 79.

The US government also has the death penalty for federal cases, but it rarely uses it."

Notice no quotes coming from anybody who supports the death penalty. God I hate the AP.


36 posted on 11/30/2005 5:33:15 AM PST by NapkinUser ("Our troops have become the enemy." -Representative John P. Murtha, modern day Benedict Arnold.)
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To: cloud8

YAAYYY!

NC has a chance to have the 1000th scuzzbag executed!


37 posted on 11/30/2005 5:33:51 AM PST by Adder (Can we bring back stoning again? Please?)
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To: cloud8

TX has done over 1/3 of all the executions. Don't mess with TX.


38 posted on 11/30/2005 5:35:32 AM PST by TXBSAFH ("I would rather be a free man in my grave then living as a puppet or a slave." - Jimmy Cliff)
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To: cloud8

On a Washington D.C. radio station last night, I heard that the real reason Gov. Warner issued an eleventh-hour reprieve for Robin Lovitt is for his own political ambition. He plans to make a run at the democratic 2008 presidential nomination. It would not look good on his resume to have the milestone 1000th execution heppen under his watch.
But he had no problem with the previous 11 executions that took place during his 4 years as governor.


39 posted on 11/30/2005 5:36:34 AM PST by JimmyMc
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To: Redleg Duke

"The Great Race"


40 posted on 11/30/2005 5:39:00 AM PST by Gort_Klaatu
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