The state of Texas just did away with the last meals for death row inmates. After Lawrence Brewer, who was convicted of one of America’s most gruesome hate crimes, ordered this his final meal.
Texas was outraged by the size of the spread, and promptly ended the last meal convention.
Brewer, a white supremacist gang member, was convicted for the 1998 murder of a black man. Forensic evidence established that he and his accomplices had chained James Byrd to the back of a truck and dragged him for miles as the road ripped off his limbs and severed his head.
Brewer was given his lethal injection on September 21, the same day as Troy Davis, a black man from Georgia. The Davis case was world news: not for his final meal, but more for his final words — repeating, as he had done for more than two decades, that he was innocent.
Davis had been convicted for killing an off duty cop after a scuffle in a parking lot in 1989. He gave himself up after a massive manhunt was mounted. Partly because local drug dealers threatened his family: all the heat in the area as the police looked for Davis was hurting their business.
The Davis case had gone everywhere the law could take it, and all appeals were exhausted. What the state of Georgia was saying was that it had to eventually follow procedure. In this case, procedure demanded administering a lethal injection to a man who may or may not have been guilty.
Davis’ guilt was apparently established a long time ago. But subsequently, many of the testimonies (there was no clinching DNA or other scientific evidence) on which it rested were recanted or admitted to be false. Witnesses said later that they had implicated Davis under pressure from the police; that they had lied in their original testimony; one said he had heard another man admit to the killing.
On the directions of the Supreme Court, a special hearing was held in 2010 to evaluate the new evidence. But this court placed the burden of proof entirely on the defendant. “The burden was on Mr Davis to prove, by clear and convincing evidence, that no reasonable juror would have convicted him in light of the new evidence,” the judge said.
The judge, however, also made an awkward admission: “While Mr Davis’s new evidence casts some additional, minimal doubt on his conviction, it is largely smoke and mirrors”.
But in 2007, the Georgia State Board of Pardons and paroles had stayed the execution on the grounds that its members needed to be convinced that there was “no doubt” about Davis’ guilt.
Davis is now dead, but it would be reasonable to assume that, at the very least, the “additional, minimal doubt” the judge grudgingly didn’t give him the benefit of, lives on.
The US judicial system will have to live with the fact that it may have killed an innocent man.
How does this sit in the “collective conscience” of a nation? I use the phrase because it was a critical part of the Supreme Court of India’s reasoning when it sentenced Afzal Guru to death in the 2001 Parliament attack case.
The attack on Parliament was a rare and grave crime, whose consequences went well beyond the lives lost. It was seen as an assault on democracy. Two countries almost went to war over it. This doesn’t necessarily mean that the collective conscience of a nation will be satisfied if the wrong man hangs for it.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 30th, 2011.
COMMENTS (10)
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Another Arundhati Roy in the making. Swimming against the tide is unusual but commendable, when the context is right.
Avirook, you are wrong in so many ways.
India doesn't take death sentences lightly. Supreme court reserves it to 'rarest of rare' cases. And the same supreme court found Afzal Guru guilty.
Not even the most staunch critic of Afzal Guru, has ever doubted the involvement of Afzal Guru in Parliament attack. The only argument being extended is he may have been a non-serious co-conspirator. That's something like an 'innocent whore'.!!
There is no way anyone can be 100% sure, unless he saw a crime being committed by his own eyes, that a criminal did commit a crime. Judges only convict if the crime was proven beyond a reasonable doubt. Unreasonable doubts aren't entertained! Because it is impossible to be sure 100%. No case will merit a punishment with that exactness.
There is some case to be made out against death punishment. But, if it has to be made, it should also follow that if we don't award death, then the folks who are given that benefit, should also be made to suffer a fate that's worse than death. They should never be elligible for parole, release in their life. They shouldn't have any privileges that's afforded to other humans in the name of 'human rights'. They should be made to work really really hard for their livelihood in Jail for rest of their life.
None of these happen in Indian jails. Life Imprisonment are typically done within 14years. Folks with money, can afford reasonable comforts even within jail. Parols are given to murderers as a matter of routine!
Keeping a terror suspect in Jail for life has an added disadvantage that his associates may try to free him by holding others to ransom. Has happened before - Remember Masood Azar??
One fundamental reason why death punishment exists is because, State assures a person wronged that the retribution will be done by the state, so the individual need not seek personal retribution. That's part of keeping people 'civil'. If folks see murderers enjoying good life, and even walking free on parols or short imprisonment - then they'll take law in to their own hands.
As an Indian, and a right wing, BJP supporting one at that, I believe that a lot of what Avirook has stated is credible if not factual. I would certianly not let Afzal Guru hang - there is a lot of doubt in this case.
Do not kid yourself, Mr. Sen! If you spare any one from the gallows, you will have to imprison him for life. If he doesn't die on the gallows, a piece of him dies every day in solitary confinement. Your semantics kill him nevertheless. In the process, the nation has to shoulder enormous outlays for a useless piece of humanity. Mind you, you are the one who rendered him utterly useless!
Whatever .. I dont care ..
Aah! the pseudo-secular intellectuals. When Nathuram Godse doesn't ask for mercy, it's so because he's accepted the crime of killing Gandhi and doesn't believe it was wrong, But when Afzal Guru doesn't ask for mercy, it's because HE states he's innocent.
He should be taken out and hanged immediately. These terrorists tried to kill the top echelons of Indian democracy and government. There should be no leniency at all. If they don't, what is India telleing the terrorists?. There is no reprcussions to such henious acts!!!. It doesn't matter if it is a hindu, christian, sikh or muslim. It is a crime agnist the country. No mercy!
So this genius is questioning the collective wisdom of some of the most distinguished legal brains in India (supreme court judges) just because he is a Kashmiri muslim ? Whats up with this pseudo-intellectualism ?
India is already developing a tradition of implementing the death penalty as a last resort. I believe there have been a limited number of about 15 of actual executions that have been carried out in the last few decades. The actual carrying out of the execution of this particular individual even if he is guilty may produce further unnecessary divisions within Indian society. Death penalty executions reflect on the stage of evolution of society. And in this respect America and specially those states like Texas represent the unforgiving nature of Right Wing Christianity, much like the unforgiving nature of Right Wing Hindu nationalism or for that matter the extremists amongst the Muslims that do not have the same value for human life.