Bush hits the pause button
By granting a reprieve to a convicted murderer, Bush highlights
the first part of "compassionate conservative." Will voters be
impressed?
By Matthew Cooper and Viveca Novak
June 5, 2000
Web posted at: 4:46 p.m. EDT (2046 GMT)
You can learn a lot about candidates who must preside over an
execution while campaigning for the presidency. Voters got a
snapshot of Bill Clinton when he interrupted his New Hampshire
stumping to fly back to Little Rock, Ark., in 1992 and oversee
the death of a brain-damaged prisoner convicted of murder. Some
saw it as the best smell test of Clinton's ruthlessness, others
as affirmation that he really wasn't a bleeding-heart liberal.
George W. Bush interrupted his own campaigning last week to make
a decision that is also likely to shape voters' perceptions.
After presiding over 131 executions--about one-fifth of all the
executions since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976--Bush
for the first time issued a 30-day stay of execution. The lucky
man: Ricky Nolen McGinn, who had been sentenced to die for the
1993 rape and murder of his 12-year-old stepdaughter. Some may
see Bush's move as the best evidence that he too will do whatever
it takes to get elected, others as a sign the Texas Governor puts
the compassionate into "compassionate conservatism."
Bush mulled over his choices for 10 days, but when he finally
decided to take this unprecedented step, he moved quickly. On the
way to a New Mexico event to talk about military policy last
Wednesday, communications chief Karen Hughes told the Texas
Governor that a state court had barred new DNA tests for
McGinn--removing one of the last roadblocks to his execution the
next day. As they rolled along under the hot Southwest sun, Bush
called his legal counsel, Margaret Wilson, to review the matter.
He peppered her with questions: Was DNA relevant? Could it prove
whether McGinn had raped his stepdaughter? It would be
conclusive, said Wilson. That was important: if McGinn was guilty
of only murder but not rape, then under Texas law he would not
necessarily have committed a capital crime. Bush went through
with his military speech and then called Wilson back. He would
probably recommend a reprieve. The word soon went out to
reporters. Message: I care. McGinn, who has long insisted he is
innocent of both crimes, was pulled away from the execution
chamber half an hour before he was scheduled to die and not too
long after he'd eaten what he thought was his last meal: a double
cheeseburger and a Dr Pepper.
Bush's decision came in the middle of the most turbulent season
in the history of the death penalty since it was restored by the
Supreme Court in 1976, a season marked by the strange political
marriages it has created. There was a time when only a few
liberals and a small group of clergymen fretted over the fairness
of the death-penalty system. But ever since famed defense lawyer
Barry Scheck and his Innocence Project gained national exposure
with their successes in freeing death-row inmates with DNA
evidence, a number of prominent conservatives have come forward
with their doubts about the reliability of the judicial process.
These doubts have also turned up in the polls. "I don't know if
McGinn is innocent or not," said Scheck, who has signed on as a
volunteer in the McGinn case. "But the DNA will tell us. And with
DNA data banks, you can not only exonerate someone but find the
person who really committed the crime."
Illinois Governor George Ryan, a Republican, triggered the first
major shift in death-penalty politics last January, when he
declared a moratorium on executions in his state after no fewer
than 13 death-row inmates were freed when new evidence cast doubt
on their guilt. Then came Pat Robertson, the religious
broadcaster, who called for a national moratorium. Next
Wednesday, Democrat Patrick Leahy of Vermont and Republican
Gordon Smith of Oregon will introduce a major bill in the Senate
that would compel states to use DNA testing in all relevant
cases. Also next week a highly touted study led by a Columbia law
professor will report an "appalling rate" of error in the capital
justice system and make a claim to documenting it state by state.
This sense of unease about a mistake-prone system is also
beginning to surface among voters. Although a majority still
support capital punishment, the number is down to 66%, from a
high of 80% in 1994. But fully 92% support making DNA testing
available to those convicted before its widespread use. At the
moment, only two states, New York and Illinois, insist on giving
inmates on death row access to the new technology. Why the shift?
Part of it may be the legacy of the country's lower crime
rate--even though murder stats have registered a slight uptick in
a few major cities (see box). The flurry of sentences overturned
on the basis of DNA evidence is also driving public opinion. Such
genetic fingerprints have led to the freeing of 72 inmates,
including eight convicted of capital crimes. Other factors
include racial and economic disparities in sentencing. In Texas,
for instance, two-thirds of those sentenced to die are black or
Hispanic, though they make up only one-third of the state
population. Then there's bad lawyering: this week attorneys for a
Texas death-row inmate, Calvin Burdine, will argue in federal
appeals court that he was deprived of due process when his first
lawyer slept through much of his trial.
These kinds of judicial atrocities have led to some remarkable
conversions. Former Virginia attorney general William Broaddus, a
Republican, used to prosecute capital cases. "It was part of our
heritage and culture in Virginia," he says. Now he opposes them,
after spending time with a death-row inmate he represented in
1996: "When you shake someone's hand, you start thinking." John
DiIulio, the conservative crime scholar, has also changed his
mind. His beef is that death row is a crapshoot because there is
no logical relationship between those who commit capital crimes
and those who end up facing death. Of the roughly 600,000
homicides committed in the U.S. since 1976, only 639 convicts
have been executed. "It's become a lottery as to who gets
killed," he says. "Do the math."
American support for the death penalty has varied. There were
1,289 executions in the 1940s and 715 in the 1950s, and the
number fell to 191 by 1976. In 1966 support for capital
punishment reached an all-time low, 42%. And the Supreme Court
began a series of decisions limiting the scope of the death
penalty, effectively outlawing it in 1972. When the court
reinstated the penalty in 1976, it mandated that certain
procedures, such as separate deliberations for determining guilt
and sentencing, were to be followed.
The issue of fairness in the death penalty in Texas--and under
Bush--is particularly relevant because of the sheer number of
people who have been executed on his watch. (Vice President Al
Gore also favors the death penalty, but he has the advantage at
the moment of not having to manage a death row.) The nation's
largest state, California, has had eight executions since 1976.
In the nation's second largest state, Bush has six scheduled this
month alone. And even among Texas Governors Bush stands out:
during the four years Ann Richards, Bush's predecessor, was
Governor, 51 Texans were executed--about half of Bush's
just-under-two-a-month pace. While Texas' notoriously weak
governorship puts certain constraints on Bush (he lacks, for
instance, the power for a sweeping moratorium), he's got some
discretion when it comes to the death penalty: he can stay
executions, and most important, he appoints Texas' powerful
18-member parole commission. All the current members owe their
jobs to him. Until this week, Bush showed no inclination to
temper his state's death-sentencing culture. He has scuttled a
bill that would have spared the mentally challenged and vetoed
one that would have provided better lawyers for indigent
defendants. His justice department's website lists prisoners
killed as well as their last meals.
"What Bush has to do is appear reasonable and not bloodthirsty,"
says a Bush adviser. "That puts him just where most Americans
are. And that's what he did this week." But the race is likely to
be decided in a bloc of the Great Lakes states where the death
penalty is not a major civic tradition. Michigan, for instance,
has no death penalty, and the state's Republican Governor, John
Engler, opposes capital punishment. So does Minnesota Governor
Jesse Ventura. There's been one execution in Ohio since 1976,
three in Pennsylvania. "The hang-'em-high culture of Texas
doesn't play in the Midwest," says pollster Geoff Garin. And
among Roman Catholics, considered a swing group, support for
capital punishment is lower than among other groups, at least in
part because of the church's aggressive stance against it.
This month Bush will face another questionable case, and it could
be a tougher call for the Governor. That's because, like the vast
majority of criminal cases, it does not involve DNA evidence.
Convicted murderer Gary Graham is scheduled to be executed,
largely on the basis of a sole eyewitness in a case where there
was no physical evidence tying Graham to the crime. Does Bush let
the man die on such slim proof? Bush may be able to grant a stay,
but when it comes to the shifting politics of the death penalty,
there's no reprieve. --With reporting by Hilary Hylton/Austin,
Mitch Frank/New York and James Carney/Washington
JAMES RICHARDSON, 32
Convicted of killing a liquor-store attendant during an armed
robbery in 1986. Two co-conspirators were given life sentences
EXECUTED May 23, 2000
RICHARD FOSTER, 47
Convicted of killing the owner of a supply store during a
robbery in April 1984, he managed to escape briefly from prison
in 1986
EXECUTED May 24, 2000
JAMES CLAYTON, 33
Convicted of abducting a 27-year-old woman from her home,
killing her in 1987. He left her body at the side of a rural road
EXECUTED May 25, 2000
ROBERT CARTER, 34
Convicted of the 1992 stabbing and shooting deaths of his
four-year-old son and five of the boy's family members. Carter
was a prison guard
EXECUTED May 31, 2000
RICKY NOLEN MCGINN, 43
Convicted of the rape and murder of his stepdaughter, he was
granted a 30-day stay last week by Governor Bush
Scheduled: June 1, 2000
THOMAS WAYNE MASON, 48
Convicted of the shooting deaths of his mother-in-law and her
90-year-old mother in October 1991, following the breakup of
his marriage
Scheduled: June 12, 2000
JOHN ALBERT BURKS, 44
Convicted of murdering the owner of a tortilla factory in January
1989. A co-defendant got 40 years for robbery and burglary
Scheduled: June 14, 2000
PAUL SELSO NUNCIO, 31
Convicted of the strangulation of a 61-year-old woman in December
1993. He had broken into the woman's home to steal items to sell
for drug money
Scheduled: June 15, 2000
GARY GRAHAM, 38
Convicted of murder and robbery, Graham was identified by only
one eyewitness, and no physical evidence has linked him to the
scene
Scheduled: June 22, 2000
JOE LEE GUY, 28
Convicted of robbing a grocery store and murdering the owner with
five gunshots; he was implicated by one of his accomplices
Scheduled: June 28, 2000
JESSY CARLOS SAN MIGUEL, 28
While robbing a Taco Bell, San Miguel shot four employees dead,
including a pregnant woman. Caught fleeing the scene
Scheduled: June 29, 2000
WILLIAM MURRAY, 31
As a 29-year-old auto mechanic, he confessed to raping and
murdering a 93-year-old woman after police gave him a polygraph
Scheduled: July 11, 2000
CARUTHERS ALEXANDER, 51
Convicted of raping and strangling waitress Lori Bruch as she
left the club at which she worked. He had served time for arson
and manslaughter
Scheduled: July 12, 2000
ORIEN CECIL JOINER, 50
Found guilty of brutally stabbing two women to death. Police
arrested him when he gave conflicting accounts of finding the
bodies
Scheduled: July 12, 2000
DAVID OLIVER CRUZ, 33
Convicted at age 22 of raping an Air Force staff member and
stabbing her to death. His co-defendant testified against him
and received 65 years
Scheduled: July 19, 2000
JUAN SALVEZ SORIA, 33
At only 18, he was convicted of robbing and murdering a
17-year-old lifeguard with the help of a juvenile accomplice
Scheduled: July 26, 2000
|