Posted on 08/04/2008 4:46:20 PM PDT by Dawnsblood
The state of Texas urged the Supreme Court on Monday to allow it to go ahead on Tuesday with the execution of Mexican national Jose Ernesto Medellin, arguing that he has several times received all of the review of his case that American or international law requires. But, the state added, if there are other foreign nationals in Texas who have not had the same review of their treaty-based claims, the state will join in to make sure that it happens.
Medellins lawyers have asked Justice Antonin Scalia, as Circuit Justice for the area that includes Texas, to postpone his execution until the Supreme Court can act on new appeals by his counsel. Scalia has the authority to act on his own, or to share the decision with his colleagues.
The Medelllin case has gained high visibility as a running dispute between Texas, the government of Mexico and the World Court over the states duties toward death-row inmates under the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations. In two filings on Monday (found here and here), the state insisted that proceeding with Medellins execution fully complies with international law. Medellin is scheduled to die by lethal injection for his part in a gang rape and murder of two teenaged girls in Houston in 1993.
In both of the states Monday filings, Texas said that it acknowledges the international sensitivities presented by a 2004 World Court ruling that Texas failed to provide Medellin and other Mexican nationals accused of crime in that state with access to a diplomatic officer from their home country.
The state also noted that Justice John Paul Stevens, in the most recent of two Supreme Court rulings in the Medellin case, had commented that it would be only a minimal cost to Texas to obey the World Court ruling.
Because of both of those considerations, the state said, in future proceedings involving Mexican nationals covered by the World Court ruling who have not had review of their cases as required by that decision, the state would support any such inmates plea for review in federal court. The State of Texas will not only refrain from objecting, but will join the defense in asking the reviewing court to address such an inmates claim that violation of Vienna Convention consular rights caused legal prejudice during his prosecution, the state said.
As for Medellin, the state argued, he has had that review, several times, and no court has yet accepted his argument that his case was prejudiced by the violation of his Vienna Convention rights.
Medellins lawyers have argued, and continue to do so, that he has never had the kind of review the World Court decision mandates. State courts, they noted, have refused to consider his Vienna Convention challenge because he did not raise it while his case proceeded in state courts, but did so only after being convicted. The state Court of Criminal Appeals gave that reason last Thursday in refusing to put off Medellins execution and in declining again to require review of his Vienna claim.
The state of Texas has been under some pressure from Bush Administration officials to take steps to assure that Medellin and other Mexican nationals obtain the review required by the World Court.
In addition, last Friday, Democratic leaders of the House Judiciary Committee urged Texas to delay Medellins execution to give Congress time to consider proposed new legislation to implement the World Court decision. Their letter to Texas Gov. Rick Perry, provided to the Supreme Court Monday by Medellins lawyer, can be found here.
The states top legal officers, who filed responses opposing both Medellins petition for certiorari (docket 08-5573) and his petition for an original habeas writ (docket 08-5574), as well as his request for a delay of execution, contended that the Court should not postpone the execution merely because one member of Congress had introduced proposed legislation.
Nothing in the Constitution, statute, or case law, the officials argued, authorizes relief based on legislation that has been introduced but not enacted especially not where Congress has taken no action in the over four years since [the World Court decision], and where there is no remote, let alone reasonable, expectation that both Houses of Congress will approve the legislation. Nor does any rule of law exist to determine how much 9more) delay is needed to further confirm that no action is indeed forthcoming.
To hold otherwise, they argued, would be to license a single member of the House of Representatives to enjoin the administration of criminal justice by a sovereign State. The Court has already held that the President of the United States, alone, cannot give domestic legal effect to [the World Court decision] and override Texas law. A fortiori, one member of the House of Representatives cannot do so.
Medellin should have been dead long ago.
This is very troubling to me. It seems to acknowledge a reasoned expectation that Texas must bow to international pressure, specifically the World Court.
If Texas is acknowledging that duty in other cases, it might prejudice the court against this execution until it meets the standard Texas intends to implement in future cases.
Big mistake IMO. Let's hope I'm wrong.
The SCOTUS held firm before. If this execution does get delayed, it will be on these merits, again IMO.
Hang ‘em high bump
Need an executioner? I’m available!
I somehow think that they're probably asking the wrong guy on this...!
Those poor families. I know what they are going through. It took 13 years for the scum bag who murdered my grandmother to be executed. I wish they had let us bring in some champagne when we were in the viewing chamber!
ping
Maybe it’s just me, but if some U.S. citizen went to Mexico and raped and murdered a couple of women, I’d hardly be protesting his impending execution.
At last, some good news.
Even with a hurricane bearing down on us and threatened power outages, we’ll keep the lights on in Huntsville for this. :)
I think this is the case which Bush & Co. tried to interfere in and had me calling the White House to throw Ramos and Compean in his face again.
A gang of five or six spend hours raping, sodomizing, beating, kicking, stomping, ultimately murdering a sixteen-year-old and a fourteen-year-old--America's women raped and murdered by Mexican invaders and the president was on the wrong side.
Does the Republican Party need to be reminded why it's a minority party?
Behold the glories of comprehensive immigration reform, i.e., amnesty.
Look at the percentages, and the crime and prison impact is just one facet.
Well I hope it is Phil. This guy deserves to pay for what he did to those young women. And the World Court should be told in no uncertain terms, screw off.
bttt
Thank you.
Perry’s not perfect, but he’s sure right on this one.
This one will be flushed down where he belongs tomorrow!
Whoops!
Lost track of time.
It’s past midnight, so he’ll be flushed later on today. :)
yep!
Just hours away now...
bttt
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