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Your Vote for D.A. Could Save Lives


by: Justice

Wed Jan 16, 2008 at 08:26 AM CST


My name is Bill Aleshire.  I write to encourage those who oppose the death penalty, as I do, to withhold public support or contributions for any candidate for District Attorney who does not pledge to refrain from use of the death penalty.  Regardles of which candidate you end up voting for, death penalty opponents should be heard loud and clear in this Democratic Primary election by contacting the candidates and letting them know you oppose the death penalty.

This is a unique opportunity because the selection of the next District Attorney is practically confined to the Democratic Primary since there is no Republican candidate.  Although the death penalty maintains broad support statewide, Democratic voters in Travis County can elect a D.A. who would professionally and competently enforce the law without using the death penalty.

The death penalty is not mandatory.  The D.A. decides whether to seek the death penalty or not.  Death penalty opponents have been practically beaten into submissive silence by the notion that stopping this inhumane practice is not politically feasible.  Instead of debating an end to the death penalty, it has shifted to debating--can you believe it?--whether the death penalty should be administered "humanely."  That's the same Orwellian nonsense as making bombs "smart."

Don't give up.  The Democratic Primary voters could make a difference in how the next D.A. handles this issue.  The criminal justice system, even in this allegedly progressive community, is not perfect, and innocent people can be convicted, particularly if their ultimate fate on appeal is dependent on the likes of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals who would close their doors rather than give a death-row inmate 15 minutes extra to file an appeal.

If you oppose the death penalty, please don't publicly support a D.A. candidate who will use the power of that office to continue this vengeful, barbaric practice.

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Thank you for this post! (5.00 / 1)
We have a chance to make Travis County a death penalty free zone and in the process to put pressure on other counties and the Texas Legislature to follow suit with moratoriums in other counties or statewide.

I urge the Democratic clubs not to endorse in the DA race until one of the candidates takes a stand in favor of a moratorium. If the candidates hear from voters on the campaign trail that voters in Travis County support a moratorium on seeking the death penalty, then one or all of them will adopt that position.

In 2003, the Travis County Commissioners Court passed a resolution endorsing a moratorium on the death penalty, which made Travis County the first county government in Texas to urge a stop to executions. The next DA has a chance to put that earlier endorsement by the Commissioners into effect by putting into place a policy that at least during the first term in office of the next Travis County DA, there will be no new death sentences sought.

Jeanette Popp spoke at a press conference on the plaza of the Blackwell/Thurman Criminal Justice Center in Austin on Saturday, January 12. Popp urged the candidates for Travis County District Attorney to impose a moratorium on the death penalty in Travis County by not seeking the death penalty in any capital trials and instead using life without parole as an alternative to the death penalty.


The above video was recorded after the press conference.

Jeanette Popp's daughter Nancy DePriest was murdered in Austin in 1988.

March 4, 2008, the day of the primary in Travis County, would have been Nancy's 40th birthday.

Jeanette became intimately familiar with the many flaws of the Texas criminal justice system after two innocent men, Chris Ochoa and Richard Danziger, were wrongfully convicted of her daughter's murder and spent 12 years in prison. They were exonerated and released in 2001. The City of Austin settled separate lawsuits with Danziger and Ochoa for $9 million and $5.3 million respectively in 2003. Danziger also settled with Travis County for $950,000. The actual killer, Achim Marino, was convicted in October 2002.

We need to elect a progressive district attorney who will pledge to impose a moratorium on seeking new death sentences and a moratorium on setting execution dates for cases with existing death sentences. Certainly a DA candidate in Travis County who makes such a pledge will find a rich reward of votes in the Democratic primary.  


I strongly oppose the death penalty (5.00 / 1)
We should not elect a new DA who will promote this barbaric practice.  Texas has the absolute worst record of executions and plenty of those questionable, since we also have the worst system of indigent defense.  

DA (0.00 / 0)
Make Travis County a Death Penalty Free Zone

Is this an academic question? (5.00 / 1)
Do any of the candidates for Travis County DA oppose the death penalty?  Montford certainly doesn't.  I remember Gary Cobb saying that he supports a moratorium in places that have issues (presumably Harris County, Illinois, etc.), but that the Travis County office is ran in a fair and judicious manner.  I don't remember Reed or Lehmberg's answers.  Perhaps this issue is why we got a good number of "none of the above" responses on this race -- none of the candidates oppose it.

this was my thought (0.00 / 0)
I oppose the death penalty. It is barbaric & irreversable. But - are there any candidates in Texas who would state that they oppose it? Yes, we are the blue dot, the liberal oasis, etc - but this is still Texas, and I don't remember any candidate for anything ever saying that they are opposed to the death penalty. Not that I wouldn't be happy to hear it, I would. Just never have.

Hill Country Ride for AIDSmy HCRA Page

[ Parent ]
Does Your Support Matter? (0.00 / 0)
I don't know whether any of the D.A. candidates will take a stand against the death penalty if folks make this an issue, but they should.  I started this discussion thinking that if people who oppose the death penalty made this an issue, it might affect the position and action of the D.A. candidates.

Perhaps, Kedron, I'm wrong and we should just all retreat to our silent acquiescence of this horrible practice, even by our own Travis County D.A.  Or perhaps your right, BeckyH, and it's just not political feasible for the D.A. to oppose the death peanlty.  On the other hand, I worked for Sissy Farenthold many years ago and she was fond of saying, "We make our own political realities."

I hope there are brave people who will demand that the next D.A. to take a stand.  These candidates at least ought to tell us what is in their heart.  After all, these candidates aren't running statewide.  These candidates just have to satisfy the standards of the voters in the March 4th Democratic Primary.

What are those standards?


[ Parent ]
no need to get snippy :) (0.00 / 0)
I wasn't saying we shouldn't care.  I was genuinely asking whether any of the DA candidates are opposed to it, since the article didn't mention it.  Rereading my post, I shouldn't have used the term 'academic'.  Apologies.  I myself am ambivalent to the death penalty, but I fully respect those who have taken a moral stand against it.

[ Parent ]
Apologies for the Snip (0.00 / 0)
If my comment seemed snippy, I apologize to you.  Like some folks, I'm not ambivalent about this.  It hurts my heart that this county continues to contribute to this horrible action.  Good Democrats have promoted use of the death penalty, even bragged about how tough they were on the issue, but that don't make it right.

[ Parent ]
Stay tuned... (0.00 / 0)
I encourage all people and groups to hold off on endorsing in the DA race until we hear more from the candidates on this issue.

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