On June 2, 2009, the 200th execution authorized by governor Rick Perry (pictured) will take place in Texas. Protests are scheduled from Huntsville to Paris to denounce the death penalty situation in the southern US state.
Terry Hankins is scheduled to be executed at the Huntsville, Texas penitentiary on June 2, 2009 at night.
Another killing by lethal injection, the execution will be the 200th approved by Rick Perry, who succeeded George W. Bush as governor of Texas.
Texas governors do not have the final word when it comes to executions. The law states that they can grant a 30-day stay on any execution warrant. But longer reprieves or commutations need to be approved by the Board of Pardons and Paroles [whose members are appointed by the governor and who do what the governor asks]. However, the governor can give the green light to an execution even if the Board recommended a stay or a commutation.
Within the limited scope of his powers, Rick Perry has always gone for the strictest application of capital punishment.
Number of death sentences halved in 5 years
Texas is thus the US state with the largest number of executions, although the number of death sentences has gone down by 50% in the last 5 years, in line with the national trend.
The current governor has also repeatedly defended Texas's death penalty system, despite its many flaws.
For example, strong arguments have been made that Texas wrongfully executed Cameron Willingham in 2004. His conviction was based on scientific evidence that was later proven to be inaccurate. This information was presented to Governor Perry before the scheduled execution but did not lead to a stay.
Other death row inmates were cleared before their execution when their innocence was proven. Yet Rick Perry insisted in January 2009: "By and large, we have a system that is fair, that works well, that is open to correcting errors that are made."
He has been rejecting the arguments put forward by international abolitionists, whom he likened to 17th-century European colonists in comments made in 2007.
Mentally ill inmates on death row
According to World Coalition member organization Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty (TCADP), 12 inmates with strong claims of severe mental illness have been executed since 2001. Yet the US Supreme Court banned the execution of the mentally ill in a 2002 ruling.
TCADP and Amnesty International USA organized a special 200-minute vigil on April 30 and have released an organizing packet to help activists multiply activities on June 2. In addition, TCADP's international branch is calling a protest on June 3 at 6pm on Place de la Concorde in Paris, where the US embassy is located.
The organization also calls on citizens to write a letter of protest to the US ambassador in their country.
Source: World Coalition Against the Death Penalty, June 1, 2009
Terry Hankins is scheduled to be executed at the Huntsville, Texas penitentiary on June 2, 2009 at night.
Another killing by lethal injection, the execution will be the 200th approved by Rick Perry, who succeeded George W. Bush as governor of Texas.
Texas governors do not have the final word when it comes to executions. The law states that they can grant a 30-day stay on any execution warrant. But longer reprieves or commutations need to be approved by the Board of Pardons and Paroles [whose members are appointed by the governor and who do what the governor asks]. However, the governor can give the green light to an execution even if the Board recommended a stay or a commutation.
Within the limited scope of his powers, Rick Perry has always gone for the strictest application of capital punishment.
Number of death sentences halved in 5 years
Texas is thus the US state with the largest number of executions, although the number of death sentences has gone down by 50% in the last 5 years, in line with the national trend.
The current governor has also repeatedly defended Texas's death penalty system, despite its many flaws.
For example, strong arguments have been made that Texas wrongfully executed Cameron Willingham in 2004. His conviction was based on scientific evidence that was later proven to be inaccurate. This information was presented to Governor Perry before the scheduled execution but did not lead to a stay.
Other death row inmates were cleared before their execution when their innocence was proven. Yet Rick Perry insisted in January 2009: "By and large, we have a system that is fair, that works well, that is open to correcting errors that are made."
He has been rejecting the arguments put forward by international abolitionists, whom he likened to 17th-century European colonists in comments made in 2007.
Mentally ill inmates on death row
According to World Coalition member organization Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty (TCADP), 12 inmates with strong claims of severe mental illness have been executed since 2001. Yet the US Supreme Court banned the execution of the mentally ill in a 2002 ruling.
TCADP and Amnesty International USA organized a special 200-minute vigil on April 30 and have released an organizing packet to help activists multiply activities on June 2. In addition, TCADP's international branch is calling a protest on June 3 at 6pm on Place de la Concorde in Paris, where the US embassy is located.
The organization also calls on citizens to write a letter of protest to the US ambassador in their country.
Source: World Coalition Against the Death Penalty, June 1, 2009
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