Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Wishing Merry Christmas to Kerry Lyn !!!


I could not be with my dear sister this Christmas, (we had the last three together, locked in the small attorney room at CCWF, and it was a privilege to spend the holiday with Kerry!)  Many of us sent her cards and prayers this year. Thank you to all of you who love Kerry Lyn and sent her your good wishes this Christmas, you have helped make her time on Death Row a little cheery and easier to endure. She sends huge thank yous to each of you and sends her blessings upon you & your families.
We all look forward to the day Kerry comes home and can share Christmas and all other days with us!! 

 Kerry Lyn has pen pals (friends) in several other countries, these dear friends sent this e-card : 

http://www.jacquielawson.com/viewcard.asp?code=4543430452230&source=jl999&utm_medium=internal_email&utm_source=pickup&utm_campaign=receivercontent


 Kerry sent us this card

Our family sends our prayers to all the women on the Row at CCWF, we send you our love and will continue the work to restore human dignity to each of you through reform of the justice system and by acknowledging that
every human being is a gift who deserves compassion, 

and working to end the practice of the Death Penalty.
Merry Christmas to you all:
Rosie, Dora, Socorro (special condolences to your family for their recent lose of a family member), Celeste, Cynthia, Kerry Lyn, Susan, Veronica, Maureen, Michelle, Valerie, Tanya, Sandi, Angelina, Brook, Mary, Cathy, Janeen, Catherine, Manling


Here's a beautiful song for all of us :
Diana Ross, We Shall Overcome

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CnzmPrsLXn8

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Conservatives join the work to end the death penalty

Drew Johnson: Capital punishment inconsistent with conservative views

Drew Johnson…”cited the many exonerations (142 since 1972) from death row as another reason to challenge capital punishment: "Life is too precious to rely on mistake-prone processes like the death penalty." He noted that the Tennessee Comptroller's Office's found capital trials to be 48% more expensive than life-without-parole trials….
"My view of limited government is not giving the state the power to kill American citizens. There is nothing limited about that authority....
t's time that conservative Tennesseans begin to look at the death penalty to consider whether it's consistent with our view of the role of government and decide if retribution and revenge is worth sacrificing our principles, freedoms and liberties."
read complete article by clicking this link:

http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/new-voices-another-conservative-leader-challenges-death-penalty


Conservatives Concerned About the Death Penalty

Info from Conservatives Concerned About the Death Penalty :



Innocent Lives in the Balance:

The real risk of executing the innocent


Since 1973, over 140 people have been freed from death row after evidence of innocence revealed that they had been wrongfully convicted. That’s almost one person exonerated for every ten who’ve been executed. Wrongful convictions rob innocent people of decades of their lives, waste tax dollars, and re-traumatize the victim’s family, while the people responsible remain unaccountable.

Cameron Todd Willingham was executed in Texas in 2004 for setting fire to his home, killing his three children. Experts now say that the arson theories used in the investigation are scientifically invalid. Willingham may very well have been executed for an accidental fire.

Gary Gauger was sentenced to die in Illinois for the murder of his parents. Police questioned him for 18 hours, depriving him of sleep, food, or drink. They convinced him that he had blacked out and that’s why he didn’t remember killing his parents. He was sentenced to die on the basis of this “confession.” An unrelated investigation later uncovered the people who actually committed the crime, and Gauger was exonerated.

We’ve learned a lot about the death penalty in the last 30 years. We now know that innocent people are sentenced to die. When a life is on the line, one mistake is one too many. Can we afford the risk?

more info:

http://conservativesconcerned.org/why-were-concerned/innocence/


The Death Penalty in 2013: Year End Review from Death Penalty Info Center

click the link below to watch the 2 minute video 
summarizing their report:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f6eHXJLBt68




State-by-state data illustrate the decline in death penalty use this year:
  • Two states, Texas and Florida, were responsible for the majority (59%) of executions nationwide. Texas had 16 executions and Florida had 7.
  • For the sixth year in a row, Texas had less than 10 death sentences, a stark contrast from 1999, when it recorded 48.
  • Prominent death penalty states, including South Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, and Louisiana, had no death sentences in 2013.
  • California had about 30% of the country’s death sentences, though the state has not carried out an execution in seven years.

Monday, November 25, 2013

October 26th, 2013, visiting Kerry Lyn Dalton



Update for Kerry's appeals process:  Her case was fully briefed 2009. We are waiting to be summoned for Oral Arguments, then the court will consider the documents filed and issue a grant or denial for appeal.
This is the direct appeal level for Kerry Lyn's case.
She was convicted March 1995.
Over 18 years later, her case has yet to be heard.

Below are some highlights of the process, remember - Kerry's case is still in stage one of the five level process.


1.  The Direct Appeal

The direct appeal is an automatic appeal given to everyone sentenced to death.  The appeal is made to the state’s highest court in which someone can seek an appeal from a conviction and death sentence. In some states, this appeal is mandatory but in others, it is optional for the defendant.
The direct appeal is limited to issues from the trial.  Typically, the prosecutor and the defense file briefs and oral arguments are held before a panel of judges.  After reviewing the case, the judges can affirm the conviction and sentence, reverse the conviction, or reverse the death sentence.
The direct appeal for federal cases is also limited to issues from the trial, but is handled by federal courts, rather than state courts.
Either losing side can then petition for a writ of certiorari with the U.S. Supreme Court,  requesting a review of federal constitutional issues.

2.  State Post-Conviction
3.  Federal Habeas Corpus
4.  The U.S. Supreme Court
5.  Executive Clemency

the educational material used in this article for the Capital punishment appeals process
was found at :

http://www.capitalpunishmentincontext.org/
     This is a very useful site, prolific with examples, resources, and educationally structured. 

Understanding some of the issues with Kerry's case:

False Confessions

False confessions contributed to wrongful convictions in 15% of the exonerations examined by researchers at the University of Michigan (Gross, et al., 2005). The most common factors that contribute to defendants admitting to crimes they did not commit are directly related to the confessors’ mental state at the time of their confession.  Individuals with mental disabilities may falsely confess to accommodate or appease figures of authority.  An impaired mental capacity due to drugs, alcohol or mental illness may also lead to false confessions.

Informant Testimony

According to the Center on Wrongful Convictions, testimony given by co-defendants or other individuals seeking special treatment or the dropping of criminal charges against them is a common factor in wrongful convictions and death sentences. A survey by the Center found that informant testimony played a key role in sending a number of innocent people to death row for crimes they did not commit.

Prosecutorial Discretion at the State Level

State prosecutors have sole discretion whether to pursue the death penalty against a defendant. The financial resources available in a jurisdiction, the views of constituents and the local political climate, and the prosecutor’s own views can affect the likelihood a defendant will face the death penalty. These factors can result in disparities in how often, and for what crimes, the death penalty is sought within a state.


Understanding Jury Instructions

It can be very difficult for ordinary citizens to understand the abstruse legal framework that the courts have constructed around the death penalty. Craig Haney, a prominent psychologist in California, found that even well-educated people misunderstood the instructions to the jury. His research indicated that:
    California’s entire penalty instruction is very poorly understood by upper-level college students, that these problems are not clarified in actual cases through attorney arguments, and that jurors who had served in actual capital cases were plagued by fundamental misconceptions about what the instructions meant.

The Issue of Innocence in the Anthony Porter Case

Anthony Porter came within 50 hours of execution and was exonerated from death row nearly 15 years after he was convicted of two counts of murder.  There was no physical evidence that linked Porter to the shootings, and he was convicted primarily on the basis of eyewitness accounts that placed Porter in the park at the time of the shooting.

Questions for Further Analysis:
  • If Porter had been executed and his case not assigned to a group of students, would the truth ever have been made known?
  • How prevalent are abusive police tactics? How can they be controlled?  Would video or audio taping all interrogations help?
  • Illinois has a moratorium on the death penalty because of innocence cases like Porter’s.  Should other states follow suit?
  • What is meant by police or prosecutors having “tunnel vision” in pursuing a case?  What could cause this? Are capital crimes particularly likely to produce an atmosphere in which law-enforcement personnel develop “tunnel vision”?

http://www.capitalpunishmentincontext.org/   Capital Punishment in Context


Damien Echols and Jason Baldwin Talk about Their Release





excerpt from Mirror article:  NOVEMBER 20, 2013

Freedom without justice

By Leigh Tauss

Imagine a concrete box called home, orange mystery slop meals, shuffling in chains until you forget how to walk without them, consistently being beaten sometimes to the point of urinating blood and denied sunlight until nearly blind.
Let’s face it: Most of us couldn’t make it one day in solitary confinement on death row in a supermax prison, but Damien Echols spent 18 years there –- all for a crime he did not commit.
“From the moment you wake up you’re furious, thinking, ‘These people have no right to do this to me. I’m not supposed to be here,’” said Echols, describing his first few years incarcerated.
Echols, his wife Lorri Davis and attorney Stephen Braga ‘78 closed out The Regina A. Quick Center’s Open Visions forum for the fall semester with a panel discussing the corruption of the criminal justice system, the brutality of prison conditions and what life Echols has forged since being set free.

Read the whole article, more about the trial, death row, justice, freedom, and aftermath here:


http://fairfieldmirror.com/2013/11/20/freedom-without-justice/

Monday, November 11, 2013

For the First Time, Prosecutor Being Jailed for Withholding Evidence in Conviction of Innocent Man


By David Harris-Gershon    November 9, 2013

Excerpts...  
" Today in Texas, former prosecutor and judge Ken Anderson pled guilty to intentionally failing to disclose evidence in a case that sent an innocent man, Michael Morton, to prison for the murder of his wife. When trying the case as a prosecutor, Anderson possessed evidence that may have cleared Morton, including statements from the crime’s only eyewitness that Morton wasn't the culprit. Anderson sat on this evidence, and then watched Morton get convicted. While Morton remained in prison for the next 25 years, Anderson’s career flourished, and he eventually became a judge.

In today’s deal, Anderson pled to criminal contempt, and will have to give up his law license, perform 500 hours of community service, and spend 10 days in jail. Anderson had already resigned in September from his position on the Texas bench."

Michael Morton, wife and son. He lost 25 years in prison - wrongfully convicted because of Ken Anderson withholding exculpatory evidence; then a prosecutor, now a judge.



" ...In Illinois, two police officers whose improperly grueling interrogation techniques led to the wrongful conviction of Juan Rivera and others were not penalized when their 3rd degree tactics came to light. Rather, they were recently hired at taxpayer expense to teach interrogation courses to other police officers around the state. A recent study found prosecutorial misconduct in nearly one-quarter of all capital cases in Arizona. Only two of those prosecutors have been reprimanded or punished."

read the complete article :

http://www.alternet.org/speakeasy/tikkundaily/first-time-prosecutor-being-jailed-withholding-evidence-conviction-innocent

"...In order for such misconduct to be curbed, meaningful punishments for such gross criminal actions will need to become the rule, rather than the exception. For as my students now understand, stealing someone’s innocence, and years of their life, is just about the most heinous crime possible to commit. It’s about time we treat it as such."

By David Harris-Gershon    November 9, 2013

The case of Kerry Lyn Dalton has these same issues (among many others): the prosecutor withholding exculpatory evidence - but the courts have not reviewed her case yet - sentenced March 1995. 
How long does justice take?

Please look up the case, the trial, the appeals, and read CAGES, the documented true story of her case quoted from the trial transcripts. (click the banner at the top of the page to get more info on CAGES)

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Spokane performs the Dead Man Walking One-Act Play

Sister Helen Prejean, leading national advocate for
Death Penalty Abolition and Bestselling Author of
Dead Man Walking


Sister Helen Prejean visited Spokane, October 11th, 2013, to watch the performance of the Dead Man Walking and speak with community members and legislators about ending the death penalty in
Washington State.

Former WA State Superintendent of Prisons Speaks

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

The Journey Toward Justice

 Posters from the program Fellowship Of Peace created for the Spokane community. Sponsors were Gonzaga University and S&JA/WCADP campaign to repeal the Death Penalty in WA State.
The top poster is signed by Sister Helen Prejean, she wrote:
"To Victoria, Corin & Adriel & Adam- let us work until Kerry Lynn is FREE!       Helen Prejean"

The bottom poster is also signed by Sr. Helen: "To Kerry Lynn- my sister. I respect your precious life. Love & prayers, Helen Prejean"

The Journey Toward Justice was a program presented October 11th, 2013, created and organized by Fellowship Of Peace. major sponsors were Gonzaga University and S&JA campaign to repeal the death penalty in WA State. The event began with Fr, Frank Case (Gonzaga V.P. of Mission) welcoming the public, then introducing Bishop Blase Cupich, who was to offer the invocation over the evening. Next was the performance of the one act version of the play Dead Man Walking, with a cast of local students from Gonzaga Univ., Whitworth Univ., EWU, WSU) and Rogers High, along with several community members.
Following the play Sr.Helen Prejean addressed the audience on the subject of abolition.
Over 400 people crowded into the Globe Room at Gonzaga campus, a couple of hundred postcards were filled out to notify law makers their constituents want repeal. Folks crowded into lines to get books signed by Sr. Helen afterwards. (Prior to the program, Sr. Helen met with the cast who were very moved by here presence and the experience they received by participating in the play. Sr. Helen was asked to pose for a group photo and signed their posters as she chatted with each cast member. )
It was a success and a blessing toward repeal!
Thank you Sr. Helen for your tireless work and deeply compassionate heart for those on the Rows. May your strength and example be energized and continue to flow so we will all learn it's past time to end this Death Penalty.  With sincerity and hope ~ Fellowship Of Peace, and the Spokane community.

Read the article covering the program at Spokane FAVS     http://spokanefavs.com/2013/10/12/sr-prejean-visits-spokane-speaks-death-penalty/

Monday, October 14, 2013

Fellowship of Peace Foundation Presented DMW Play Oct. 11, 2013

October 11th's Dead Man Walking Play was co-sponsored by Gonzaga University and Spokane community members.

The primary cast of the Dead Man Walking play (Spokane college students and community members) with Sister Helen Prejean before their performance 
Rehearsing the part of Matthew Poncelet with student actor Patrick Ostrander. Victoria Thorpe directed the play.

Sister Helen Prejean with the staff of Fellowship of Peace Foundation: Victoria Ann Thorpe, Adriel , Corin, and Adam.

Monday, September 30, 2013

Prosecutorial accountability is needed


Hopefully the decision to bring charges over the unlawful conduct of the prosecutor in the Michael Morton case will set a precedent for others and stimulate the actions needed to hold prosecutors accountable for purposeful misconduct.

The court will charge  former County Distr. Att. Ken Anderson with unlawful conduct involved with the conviction which cost Mr. Morton 25 years of his life. 


New article from the Innocence Project:


Prosecutor in Michael Morton Case Resigns

Kirk Odom prepares to speakFormer Williamson County District Attorney Ken Anderson, who faces criminal contempt and tampering charges for failing to turn over evidence pointing to the innocence of Michael Morton, has resigned from his post as Williamson County District Judge. Michael Morton spent 25 years in prison after being convicted of the murder of his wife before DNA testing of crime scene evidence proved his innocence and identified a convicted offender in the national DNA databank as the perpetrator.
At the behest of the Innocence Project, the state convened a Court of Inquiry to investigate whether Anderson committed criminal acts by failing to turn over evidence pointing to Morton’s Innocence. In April, a Texas judge ruled there was probable cause to believe Anderson violated three criminal laws, and he was charged with the offenses. The Texas Bar Association also brought ethical charges against Anderson. A trial on those charges was scheduled to begin today but was adjourned for a month.
Read more here:

Saturday, September 21, 2013

Peace Journey; Final Videos

September 21st

Peace Journey Interview at Courthouse Steps with Magdaleno Rose-Avila

September 21st, 2013, International Day of Peace

Interviewing Students Along the Peace Journey

Tri-Cities; Victoria interviewing Eduardo while Fernanda Lopez (from NBC Right Now) and Josh Peterson (ABC) film

Peace Journey Walk to the Courthouse in Olympia on the International Day of Peace

September 21st, 2013

Peace Journey Day Eighteen 1/2

Join the Peace Journey at the Washington Supreme Courthouse steps in Olympia. They completed 190 miles when they reached the courthouse.

Washington Supreme Courthouse

September 21st, International Day of Peace




Legislative building (directly across from the courthouse)
International Day of Peace Fair, Olympia

Group photo
Friends coming together to end the death penalty and celebrate peace






New friends, Emily and John

New Friends

Friends, Jason Baldwin and Holly Ballard

Peace Journey Tribute to Kerry on day 18


September 20th, 2013 marking the 185 mile mark on the Peace Journey

Peace Journey Day Eighteen

Walked 10.2 miles, bringing the total up to 185.4 miles for the Peace Journey.

Tacoma











Tacoma





















Friday, September 20, 2013

Peace Journey Day Seventeen

175.2 total miles walked.


Federal Way

Federal Way


It's Puyallup fair time
Auburn

Auburn


Seeking shade in Auburn

9/19

Auburn

Seattle
Seattle