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Rachel Farris

Rachel Farris

Posted: October 5, 2009 01:10 AM

Welcome to Texas: The Death Penalty State

What's Your Reaction?

You know those billboards you see on the side of freeways advertising new subdivisions built in rural areas outside of town? "If you lived here, you'd be home by now."

Someone needs to throw up a similar one next to the "Welcome to Texas" signs you hit when coming in on I-10.

"If you'd done what our Governor has done, you'd be executed by now."

As the case against Cameron Todd Willingham, executed in 2004, sinks like a rock, the truth has started to float to the top and the rats are streaming out from all sides, led by none other than Texas Governor Rick Perry. Perry has reason to be running - his office denied clemency to Willingham just before he was executed, despite the fact that new information was submitted from arson experts stating that "no evidence of arson" was found (see Dare Devils: Governor Rick Perry and the Texas Death Panel).

This is the same Rick Perry - as a native Texan who voted for the Democrat in that election, I feel honor-bound to remind you - who won with only 39% of the vote in 2006. Even Texans know that at best this makes him unpopular. It also means that our Governor, his hair a-glaze, has his work cut out for him in his re-election race.

So it should come as no surprise that Perry is now pawing the ground like a cat in a litter box, covering his tracks. Inconveniently for him, the stink remains. As the state's Forensic Science Commission, which was set up to investigate the Willingham case, was preparing a report on the validity of the arson investigation, Governor Perry decided to replace three of the nine members appointed to the commission. The chairman of the commission was replaced with Williamson County District Attorney John Bradley, who the Dallas Morning News calls "one of the most conservative, hard-line prosecutors in Texas." The timing, according to the Dallas Morning News, disturbed the former chairman, Austin lawyer Sam Bassett. "In my view, we should not fail to investigate important forensic issues in cases simply because there might be political ramifications," Bassett said.

But political ramifications, particularly to a professional politician who's been called everything from a "cyborg" to "Tricky Ricky," are exactly what keeps our Texas Governor up at night, not the death of innocent people, under-funded public schools, teen pregnancy rates or children without health insurance.

For the rest of us, Willingham's final words are a chilling reminder echoing in the news around the world this week nearly six years after his execution: "I am an innocent man convicted of a crime I did not commit. I have been persecuted for twelve years for something I did not do."

But, ultimately, Governor Perry's statement regarding his not-so-covered cover up says it better than anything I could ever write. In one moment at a press conference this week, he took all that was taken from Cameron Todd Willingham - a breath of life, a beat in his heart, an air of innocence - and said, straight faced, that his decision to replace the board members was, simply, "Business as usual."

Welcome to Texas.

Take action: If you would like to sign a petition to Governor Rick Perry and the State of Texas to acknowledge that the fire in the Cameron Todd Willingham case was not arson, therefore no crime was committed, please click here. As of this posting, there were 1,967 signatures.

 

Follow Rachel Farris on Twitter: www.twitter.com/MeanRachel

 
 
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07:12 AM on 12/08/2009
Ms. Farris:

I hope, next time, you learn a little more about the subject, prior to writing an article.

On the Willingham case.

http://homicidesurvivors.com/categories/Cameron%20Todd%20Willingham.aspx

and on innocents executed:

"The Innocent Executed: Deception & Death Penalty Opponents"
http://homicidesurvivors.com/2009/10/08/the-innocent-executed-deception--death-penalty-opponents--draft.aspx


"The Death Penalty: More Protection for Innocents"
http://homicidesurvivors.com/2009/07/05/the-death-penalty-more-protection-for-innocents.aspx


A Death Penalty Red Herring: The Inanity and Hypocrisy of Perfection, Lester Jackson Ph.D.,
http://www.tcsdaily.com/article.aspx?id=102909A
03:33 AM on 10/14/2009
Here's a thought. Why are we waiting for Texas' next threat to "secede from the Union." Can we just cut to the chase and give it back to the Mexicans? No strings attached. Just build that big ol' border fence right along the northern border of Texas. Win, Win!
07:25 AM on 10/07/2009
Someone who probably is in accordance with Justice Scalia regarding 'actual innocence' not being an impediment to pursuing an execution, and whose main aim is a back covering exercise rather than the prevention of the execution of innocents has me gravely fearful for Linda Carty - presently on Death Row in part thanks to the plea-bargaining of the 'beyond reasonable doubt' guilty and the incompetence of a defence lawyer.
09:51 AM on 10/05/2009
Before the shakeup of the Texas Forensics Science Commission, the testimony of Dr. Craig Beyler was scheduled to be heard. He analyzed the methods used in the arson against Cameron T. Willingham and wrote a 64 page report.

He's been silenced, but you can read his report at
http://www.scribd.com/doc/20603037/Analysis-of-the-Methods-and-Procedures-Used-in-the-Cameron-Todd-Willingham-Arson-Case
09:35 AM on 10/05/2009
"Other states are abolishing the death penalty. My state is putting in an express lane"--Ron White

After hearing that Texas would reject the appeals of anyone on death row if there were at least 3 credible witnesses

I'm actually in favor of the death penalty, if used properly and investigations are done correctly, but that rarely if ever happens
photo
DonJM
The narrower the mind, the broader the statement.
08:52 AM on 10/05/2009
I can have no respect for a state that elects a man like this as its governor.
10:03 AM on 10/05/2009
DonJM, only 39% of Texans voted for Perry. He still ended up Governor of the opposing 61%.

I've tried to work with him. First, by adding his favorite word "reconstitute" to my vocabulary. When I found a state agency straying from its mission and in the throes of malfeasance, I asked him to "reconstitute" them. However, documents from the agency and the governor's office show that he may have been behind their actions. Across Texas you can find state agencies doing the will of Perry at the expense of all else.

Perry's right. It is "business as ususal."