Texas's Failed Clemency Process
Yesterday evening at 6:18 p.m. CST, the State of Texas executed a man who posed no danger to society; a man who was universally understood to have undergone complete transformation and rehabilitation since his 1993 conviction for burglary and murder. Willie Earl Pondexter, executed two days shy of his 35th birthday, was a changed man.
Undisputedly, Texas did not execute the same violent, young person who committed his crime over 15 years ago. In the words of a corrections officer who had come to know Pondexter during his incarceration, he "could safely live out his days in a structured environment." The officer stated, "You would be hard-pressed to find anyone to say something bad about Pondexter."
Texas justifies its death sentences on a jury's finding that a convicted capital murderer will constitute a threat of future danger if not executed. In 1976, in Jurek v. Texas, the Supreme Court approved this sentencing scheme, stating that a jury's determination of future dangerousness is no "different from the task performed countless times each day throughout the American system of criminal justice." The Court cited bail as but one example. But while a wrong bail decision can later be modified if turns out a defendant is not a flight risk or risk to the public, there is no solution when it turns out a jury's determination of future dangerousness — and resulting death sentence — has proven wrong.
Texas law provides no formal mechanism for revisiting a jury's determination of future dangerousness — something that could well spare a condemned person who, like Pondexter, turns out not to be violent. That leaves the state's executive clemency process, the procedure the U.S. Supreme Court in Herrera v. Collins, called our criminal justice system's "fail safe."
But the fail safe utterly failed in Pondexter's case. The State of Texas thwarted the clemency process by reportedly harassing Pondexter's legal team. His attorneys sought to interview corrections officers and obtain statements that would affirm his transformation during incarceration. But according to published accounts and a lawsuit filed by Pondexter's attorneys, two Harvard law students who had sought to interview a corrections officer in Polk County, near Texas's death row, were reportedly directed by a sheriff's deputy to the sheriff's office, issued trespassing warnings, interrogated, told they likely would be jailed if they returned to the guard's property, and told to advise the sheriff's office before returning to the county. Other officers whom the defense team approached said they feared being written up or fired if they spoke with the defense team about Pondexter or signed an affidavit in his favor.
Without the information the guards had to impart about Pondexter, of course, neither the Texas Board of Pardons and Parole nor the Governor could make an accurate determination of whether Pondexter's extraordinary rehabilitation warranted sparing him the death penalty in favor of living out the rest of his days in prison. Pondexter had no meaningful access to the "fail safe" of clemency.
If Texas' process for determining who lives and who dies cannot be relied upon — and Pondexter's case clearly exposes that it cannot be — then the state should forfeit its right to execute anyone.








Mar 4th, 2009 at 7:02pm
Texas' process for determining who lives and who dies *can* be relied upon. A jury of his peers determined he should die, and he did. Texas law doesn't provide a formal mechanism...so the problem is (you think) that there needs to be a mechanism. Great, push for one. End of story.
Personally, I've never understood this huge distinction that's made between depriving someone of 20 years of their life and depriving them of the whole thing. Maybe it's a "God thing", which I'll also never understand. If the Christian God's (capitalized only because the language dictates so) going to give them what's coming eventually, why do they bother with punitive punishments?
Before you laugh too hard at "punitive punishments", execution is NOT punitive. It *is* a deterrent. It *is* a way of removing a negative element from society or the gene pool. Life in prison would be "punitive", but you really have to question the point...punishments are supposed to modify behavior, right? Well if they're never leaving jail, who cares?
Anyway, for a couple of other thoughts, look here: http://capnsurly.livejournal.com/14017.html
Thanks,
Chaz
Mar 4th, 2009 at 7:07pm
Oh, near as I can tell, there is no way to get notification of new comments on a post. Could this be enabled/added?
Thanks,
Chaz
Mar 4th, 2009 at 7:16pm
In God we trust IN GOD we trust
let us stand for what we Beileve In
Mar 5th, 2009 at 9:23pm
It is nice that he was reformed and everything. I am sure that makes all of the difference for the victim.
Suppose he was not executed, how long would he have stayed in prison?
Apr 2nd, 2009 at 8:25pm
Willie was rehabilitated. Good for him. He died with a clear conscious then. Can we bring back the victim? NO! He was executed for what he did and that is the way it should be. He should have thought twice before killing anyone and he would not have had to die by execution. He was scum and everyone knew it. Funny how they always rehab when caught and convicted.
Apr 15th, 2009 at 11:03pm
I ABSOLUTELY DISAGREE WITH THE DEATH PENALTY.I STRONGLY BELIEVE SO MANY INNOCENT PEOPLE LIVES HAS BEEN TOKEN.TWO WRONG DON'T MAKE A RIGHT SO WHO THE F*CK ARE YOU TO TAKE SOMEONE ELSE LIFE.I FEEL IF YOU DO A CRIME LET GOD HANDLE THAT PERSON.PERIOD.I'M VERY SADDEN ABOUT WHAT HAPPEN TO MR.POINTDEXTER HE PROBABLY WAS AN INNOCENT MAN:-(
May 20th, 2009 at 12:43pm
Seems deputies and sheriff of Polk county think they are GOD and that it's OK for them to "break the LAW". In this case reguardless of their opinion of this man , they violated the law and THEY should suffer punishment for it!!!!
May 20th, 2009 at 12:48pm
It's time that every time law enforcement breaks the law ther are punished instead of them being allowed to continueto do so!!! The law is suppose to be for everyone!!!!
Jul 14th, 2009 at 10:21am
I never understand how anyone can rely upon the statements of a desparate person. Pondexter would never say anything except in his defence. I am not interested in whether he has changed. How he goes to his end is his business.
Addutonally, I cannot understand the false comparison between Pondexter's crime and execution by the state. The penalty is not randomly applied. The state does not hide from guilt. The state seeks humanity rather than brutality. The state seeks justice. None of the crimes penalised by the death penalty meet any of these criteria. Those who allege similarity are not to be trusted.
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