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The Associated Press
JEFFERSON CITY | A coalition consisting mainly of death penalty
critics called for a moratorium on Missouri executions Wednesday in
order to study the current system.
The resolution, in condemning the state’s execution system, states
the system has been used capriciously against the poor, minorities
and those with bad lawyers. The proposed study of Missouri’s
execution system would focus on the cost of using the death penalty
and ways to ensure it is used fairly.
The group, called Moratorium Now!, has gathered support from roughly
300 churches, businesses and private organizations. It plans to
deliver a petition pushing for the death penalty moratorium to Gov.-
elect Jay Nixon and legislative leaders.
Alvin Brooks, the former mayor pro tem of Kansas City, said he wants
the death penalty to become a higher-profile issue and hopes that a
new administration in the governor’s office could help.
“When you talk about pro-life, this is pro-life also,” Brooks said.
Nixon, a Democrat who currently is attorney general, has said
previously that he backs the use of the death penalty, and a
spokesman said Wednesday that Nixon doesn’t support a moratorium.
“If a jury of Missourians decides that the ultimate penalty is
appropriate, then the families of victims deserve closure and justice
without never-ending delays,” Nixon spokesman Oren Shur said.
But Rep. Bill Deeken said that shouldn’t stop Nixon from offering
support for a moratorium on executions. Deeken, a Jefferson City
Republican, also supports the death penalty but has filed legislation
in past sessions to stall executions to allow for the completion of a
study. He said the call for the moratorium is not about the death
penalty but focuses on ensuring that the system is fair and executes
only those who are guilty.
“Do we have the right person?” he said. “Are we putting someone to
death who was not responsible for this?”
Many of the ideas from the Deeken-sponsored legislation are included
in the petition.
Missouri has 49 people awaiting execution. All are men; 28 are white
and 21 are black.
The last person to be executed in Missouri was Marlin Gray in October
2005. Gray was one of four men convicted in the deaths of 21-year-old
Julie Kerry and her 19-year-old sister, Robin. Police say the sisters
and their male cousin were forced to jump 80 feet into the
Mississippi River from the Chain of Rocks Bridge in St. Louis.
Since Gray’s execution, Missouri’s use of the death penalty has
prompted considerable legal wrangling. A federal judge in 2006 halted
all executions, declaring Missouri’s lethal injection process
unconstitutional after the surgeon who previously oversaw the state’s
executions testified he was dyslexic, sometimes transposed numbers,
and operated without written procedures or supervision.
Earlier this year, the same federal judge upheld written protocols
that the Missouri Department of Corrections drafted and implemented
after the 2006 ruling. Missouri’s last execution was in October 2005.
The Missouri Supreme Court in October heard arguments in a lawsuit
challenging whether the Department of Corrections followed the proper
steps in developing its new execution procedures.
http://www.kansascity.com/news/breaking_news/story/899427.html