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John Kitzhaber, Oregon Governor, Imposes Moratorium On Death Penalty For Rest Of His Term

Ore Governor Bans Death Penalty For Rest Of Term

JONATHAN J. COOPER   11/22/11 09:54 PM ET   AP

SALEM, Ore. — Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber on Tuesday imposed a moratorium on the death penalty for the remainder of his term, saying he's morally opposed to capital punishment and has long regretted allowing two men to be executed in the 1990s.

Kitzhaber's decision gives a temporary reprieve to a twice-convicted murderer who was scheduled to die by lethal injection in two weeks, along with 36 others on death row. It makes Oregon the fifth state to halt executions since 2007.

His voice shaking, the Democratic governor said he has repeatedly questioned and revisited his decisions to allow convicted murderers Douglas Wright and Harry Moore to be executed in 1996 and 1997.

"I do not believe those executions made us safer. Certainly I don't believe they made us nobler as a society," Kitzhaber said. "And I simply cannot participate once again in something I believe to be morally wrong."

Death penalty proponents criticized the decision, saying the governor is usurping the will of voters who have supported capital punishment.

Prison officials had been preparing for the Dec. 6 execution of Gary Haugen, who had voluntarily waived his remaining legal appeals in protest of a criminal justice system he sees as broken and vindictive. Haugen was serving a life sentence for fatally bludgeoning his former girlfriend's mother, Mary Archer, when he was sentenced to death for the 2003 killing of fellow inmate David Polin, who had 84 stab wounds and a crushed skull.

A typically cool and unemotional Kitzhaber fought tears as he said he spoke to relatives of Haugen's victims, saying they were difficult discussions and his "heart goes out to them." He declined to discuss them further, calling them "private conversations."

"We've been dealing with this since 1981," Ard Pratt, Archer's first husband, told The Associated Press. "It was almost over. And then he changes it because he's a coward and doesn't want to do it."

Kitzhaber is a former emergency room doctor who still retains an active physician license with the Oregon Medical Board, and his opposition to the death penalty has been well-known. In a news conference explaining his decision, he cited his oath as a physician to "do no harm." Kitzhaber was elected last year to an unprecedented third term as governor after eight years away from public office.

Oregon has a complex history with capital punishment. Voters have outlawed it twice and legalized it twice, and the state Supreme Court struck it down once. Voters most-recently legalized the death penalty on a 56-44 vote in 1984. Since then, two men have been executed. Both of them, like Haugen, voluntarily gave up their appeals during Kitzhaber's first administration.

"It is arrogant and presumptuous for an elected official, up to and including the governor, to say, `I don't care with the voters say, I don't care what the courts say,'" and impose his own opinion, said Josh Marquis, a death penalty proponent and the Clatsop County district attorney. Marquis has prosecuted several capital cases and written about capital punishment.

Kitzhaber said he has no sympathy or compassion for murderers, but Oregon's death penalty scheme is "an expensive and unworkable system that fails to meet basic standards of justice."

Over a three-decade political career, Kitzhaber has built a reputation for charting his own course, sometimes to the frustration of fellow Democrats and others to the chagrin of legislative Republicans.

Kitzhaber's moratorium means Oregon joins, at least temporarily, four other states that have halted executions, according to the Death Penalty Information Center, which opposes capital punishment. Illinois this year outlawed the death penalty after the discovery of wrongful convictions. New Mexico voters abolished it in 2009, two years after New Jersey's Legislature and governor did the same. A New York appeals court struck down a portion of the death penalty statute.

Politicians are often hesitant to discuss abolishing the death penalty for fear it will anger voters, said Richard Dieter, director of the Death Penalty Information Center. Kitzhaber's decision might give confidence to leaders in other states, he said.

Death penalty opponents are trying for a ballot measure to outlaw it in California next year, and others are hoping legislators in Maryland and Connecticut will do the same.

Oregon prison officials said last week that they'd spent $42,000 preparing for Haugen's execution, not including legal fees, including $18,000 spent on lethal drugs. Kitzhaber said he wanted to wait until the legal process played out before announcing his decision.

One of Haugen's lawyers, Steve Gorham, said Haugen was still committed to being executed as of Tuesday morning. Gorham said he hadn't spoken with the inmate since learning of the governor's decision.

"I'm sure he's not very happy right now. He was committed to exercising what he thought were his rights," Gorham said, noting that he was personally pleased with the governor's decision and calling it "courageous."

Prosecutors have long complained that death penalty cases take decades to make their way through the courts, but efforts to change the law have been stymied in the Legislature. Eight condemned inmates have been on death row since the 1980s.

"I cannot imagine, nor do I believe, that voters intended to create a system in which those convicted and condemned to death could determine whether or not their sentence would be carried out," Kitzhaber said.

Oregon's constitution gives Kitzhaber authority to commute the sentences of all death row inmates, but he said he will not to do so because the policy on capital punishment is a matter for voters to decide.

Kitzhaber's reprieve will last until he leaves office. His term ends in January 2015, and he has not said whether he'll run for re-election.

Kitzhaber said he hopes his decision will prompt a public re-evaluation of the death penalty in Oregon and said he will advocate for a ballot measure that would make it illegal. The governor said he prefers murderers be given a life sentence without the possibility of parole.

___

Follow AP writer Jonathan J. Cooper at http://twitter.com/jjcooper

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SALEM, Ore. — Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber on Tuesday imposed a moratorium on the death penalty for the remainder of his term, saying he's morally opposed to capital punishment and has long regret...
SALEM, Ore. — Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber on Tuesday imposed a moratorium on the death penalty for the remainder of his term, saying he's morally opposed to capital punishment and has long regret...
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03:59 PM on 01/20/2012
"It was almost over. And then he changes it because he's a coward and doesn't want to do it."

Oh yes. It is much more courageous to murder a human being in captivity with absolutely no way to defend himself. That speaks to courage about like shooting fish in a barrel.

A wrongful act does not become right simply because human beings feel a desire for revenge. Murder is the intentional killing of another human being according to most statutory definitions. It does not matter who the killer is, it simply requires motive, means and method. In state killing, all of those elements are present. If we do not want our citizens to kill people, we cannot model that behavior and then expect them to do otherwise.
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phrogge prince
12:07 AM on 11/24/2011
There is no murder more premeditated than the State putting to death someone convicted of a crime: captial punishment is NEVER justifiable. The act says to the convicted man (or woman), 'You have done something so terrible, so awful, SO heinous, that we are going to do exactly the same thing to you.' And then the State tells the convicted exactly the day and time of that day that the murder is to take place.
05:01 PM on 11/23/2011
How many people did Jesus kill or order to be killed.......Even hanging on the cross, he didn't order his followers to seek revenge.......Yet, we put people to death every day in the name of the Lord.......If you believe in the death penalty, you are not a follower of Jesus........
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03:13 PM on 11/23/2011
ANY one who WANTS to die rather than Costing the state of oregon or elsewhere HAS that Right MR> oregon is UNgovernel OUT of his own mouth before he QUIT last time I am working to get kitzhaulber IMPEACHED BECAUSE we the voters are the 1ST congress WE GET what we want BECAUSE we pay the taxes
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Kevin Walters
you can't fix stupid
03:10 PM on 11/23/2011
Okay folks, let's really be noble, let's outlaw war, and disband our Military forces, that will show the world just how heroic and wonderfully advanced we are. Lets all hold hands and get in a circle and sing....

ALL WE ARE SAYING...IS GIVE PEACE A CHANCE.... Oh yeah people, can't ya just feel the love....Let us beat our tanks into plowshare and our rifles into prunng shears....while we walk thru the vinyards and sing Michael rowed the boat to shore or Ain't gonna study War no more....

We don't kill'em because we want revenge, we kill'em to remove 'm from society because they've proven that they can't or won't live within the norms of society.....The penalty would be a deterrent, if it didn't take 25 years to be implemented...no one remembers what happened, nor the VICTIMS...ALL SYMPATHY GOES TO THE criminal because he's been living in a controlled environment doing nothing except gaining the sympathy of people who seem to live in an alternate reality
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daddycool 67
Socialist Infidel
04:17 AM on 11/26/2011
Well apparently here in Oregon, we now DON'T kill 'em ! ...... For ANY reason !
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UTHeretic
02:16 PM on 11/23/2011
meanwhile here in Utah our Governor pardoned a turkey.!
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smokeedaclown
Legalize it,tax it,regulate it
02:02 PM on 11/23/2011
Congratulations Oregon
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beckym1488
I have dislike for Libs
12:34 PM on 11/23/2011
Soon it'll be like CA. Over 700 on death row because people want to pay to keep these serial killers and murderers alive. It does make society safer. The piece of crap mentioned in the article went on to kill an inmate after already being sentenced for murder and inmates continue to call hits on the streets while still incarcerated. They do continue to harm other inmates, guards and people on the streets. I thought everyone knew that by now. Yesterday I read an article on HP about inmates using social networks to continue to harass their victims. It doesn't stop just because they are locked up.
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Kevin Goody
11:57 PM on 11/25/2011
and your point is what becky
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beckym1488
I have dislike for Libs
08:50 PM on 11/26/2011
If you didn't get the point then you should learn to read because every ponit I was making was put out there pretty clear. Which part don't you get?
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beckym1488
I have dislike for Libs
12:13 PM on 11/23/2011
Why is he the Governor of a state that has the death penalty if he doesn't agree with it? Execution is part of the job. He shouldn't have been in the position. I know the Liberals think this a huge victory, but pretty soon it'll be like CA over 700 on death row and still counting.
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03:16 PM on 11/23/2011
VERY well said LETS IMPEACH HIM
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beckym1488
I have dislike for Libs
05:39 PM on 11/23/2011
I'd help you with that but I'm a CA resident. I'm just saying, a governor of a state with the death penalty that won't execute is like a vegetarian working at a burger joint refusing to flip burgers. Ridiculous.
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Kevin Goody
11:58 PM on 11/25/2011
why because he has a conscience??
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The Accountant
The time for truth is now - always
11:52 AM on 11/23/2011
Its commendable this man has a conscience, feeling a moral obligation to do the right thing. It sets him apart from many in politics. There are so many cases of falsely accused and wrongly convicted, I don't know how anybody could support execution. Besides life in prison, no parole is really a greater punishment.
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Luke Armstrong
Your children will run this country one day.... st
11:41 AM on 11/23/2011
The death penalty kills more than just the purportraitor. It is good that one our leaders sees the bigger picture and is willing to risk his job to send a fair message to society.
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beckym1488
I have dislike for Libs
12:13 PM on 11/23/2011
Yeah, screw the victims.
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Kevin Goody
11:58 PM on 11/25/2011
oh im gonna enjoy flagging your comments
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Luuke
11:30 AM on 11/23/2011
Like Gandhi once said " I love your Christ but not so much the Christians"
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beckym1488
I have dislike for Libs
12:16 PM on 11/23/2011
Christians are far from the only religion that believes in execution. Why is it that the Christians are the only ones picked on for it? Muslims will execute people for being gay. There are several religions in history that have done the same.
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Luuke
02:09 PM on 11/23/2011
Becky don't get me wrong...It was just something I read about Gandhi....In reply to your comment , yes you are absolutely right all religions over time have been guilty of abuses but with Christians you can ridicule them or criticize them without the fear of retribution or being blown off....
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UTHeretic
02:14 PM on 11/23/2011
So that makes it OK?
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Luuke
11:27 AM on 11/23/2011
Sometimes I can't stand you libs dems but this decision I salute you Gov.
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Oregonian76
Just a guy from the PacNW
10:38 AM on 11/23/2011
The governor has a responsibility to abide by and enforce the laws passed by the state legislature or passed by the voters. He can be a man of the highest morals - he's simply not allowed to just set aside a law because he doesn't agree with it.

As governor, Kitzhaber has the power of commutation or pardon. He can make his beliefs known, but rather than a moratorium, I'd prefer he use the tools at his disposal - you know, the things we gave to him by electing him governor.

If he wants, he should encourage voters or the state legislature to re-vote on the death penalty. It's been a while since the last time Oregon voters made their wishes known; perhaps it's time to check in with us again.
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BeckyJustice
Stop the frickin Fracking. NOW!
12:35 PM on 11/23/2011
You are wrong. Every Governor in States with the death penalty has the right to commute a sentence. However, the governor did not commute the sentence of Mr. Haugen or any of the other death row inmates. He granted Mr. Haugen what he called a temporary reprieve. He asked the Legislature “to bring potential reforms before the 2013 legislative session” and he encouraged “all Oregonians to engage in the long overdue debate that this important issue deserves.”

You may want to read this, http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0777460.html
Interesting the company this country keeps.
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03:23 PM on 11/23/2011
You Remember ITS howdeedodeetime ?

The voters voted to have the death penalty WE PAY THE TAXES WE PAY his wage He should Not have EVER STOPED what Some one wants Less inmates Less taxes
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Oregonian76
Just a guy from the PacNW
06:25 PM on 11/23/2011
Uhh, I specifically said the governor has the power to commute a sentence.

What I'm saying here is that he should do exactly that. That's the power he was granted as governor. He doesn't get to just set aside a law (which is what he's choosing to do with a moratorium). He has a way around the law with commuting & pardoning. But grandstanding about a moral issue is NOT what we elected him for.
10:21 AM on 11/23/2011
Yes, killing is not our domain. Killing another human being doesn't serve anyone. Nature will care for that person in it's own time. We need to focus on the root cause of disease. It starts with caring for all people in society. Depriving a person of his or her dignity when young and not giving them the same opportunity as all children is shameful. Our own society breeds a killing mentality. We all share in the crime....