NEW VOICES: Law Enforcement Officers and Judges Address California Death Penalty
"California's Death Penalty is Broken"
On
March 28, 2008
two letters were sent to the California
Commission on the Fair
Administration of Justice--one
from members of the law enforcement community and the other from
judges, raising concerns about the state's death penalty.
Thirty
law enforcement officers,
including current and former prosecutors, police chiefs and other
officers, signed a letter stating that “California’s death penalty
is
broken.” The letter cites multiple reasons why the state’s death
penalty system is not working, such as the excessive costs of capital
cases, the risk of wrongful convictions, and the stress placed on
victims’ families. The signers noted,
By pursuing life without parole
sentences instead of death, resources now spent on the death penalty
prosecutions and appeals could be used to investigate unsolved
homicides, modernize crime labs, and expand effective violence
prevention programs.
Signatories included San Francisco Sheriff
Michael Hennessey, the Police Chief of Newark Ray Samuels, former
Director of the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation
Jeanne Woodford, former Deputy Attorney General John Duree, and eleven
current and former Deputy District Attorneys from counties across
California.
In addition, seventeen
current and former judges
signed a letter to the Commission stating:
We write to express our
concerns about the current application and administration of the death
penalty in California.
The letter points to the incredible strain
capital cases have put on the entire judicial system in
California. The letter concludes:
Any attempt to reform
California’s death penalty
must be comprehensive, and must ensure a means of providing sustained
and sufficient resources for the entire system. We urge the Commission
to consider recommending a moratorium on the death penalty in
California until systemic reforms are implemented.
The signatory
judges served on the California Supreme Court, Courts of Appeal, and
Superior Court in California.
The California
Commission on the
Fair Administration of Justice was created in 2004 to investigate
wrongful convictions, and to recommend reforms to make California’s
criminal justice system “just, fair, and accurate.” The letters were
delivered for the Commission’s third and final public death
penalty hearing in March.
(“47 Members of
Law Enforcement from California Cite Problems with the Death Penalty
and Call for Reforms,” Death Penalty Focus Press Release, March 27,
2008)
