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- <title>
- Apr. 02, 1990: The Politics Of Life And Death
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Apr. 02, 1990 Nixon Memoirs
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 18
- The Politics of Life and Death
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As California prepares to use its gas chamber for the first time
- in 23 years, candidates call for more executions
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Jonathan Beaty/Los Angeles and
- Jay Carney/Miami
- </p>
- <p> They are getting the gas chamber at San Quentin ready again.
- It has been 23 years since an inmate was put to death in the
- prison that overlooks San Francisco Bay. Now eight volunteers
- from among the guards are rehearsing mock executions.
- Inspectors are checking the plumbing to ensure that the systems
- are working smoothly. If all goes as planned, the airtight
- steel door of the green chamber will open on April 3 to admit
- Robert Alton Harris, 37, then close behind him.
- </p>
- <p> Harris is the kind of killer who can seem like a walking
- argument for capital punishment. On July 5, 1978, just six
- months after he completed a 2 1/2-year prison term for beating
- a man to death, Harris and his brother Danny decided to rob a
- bank in San Diego. Looking first for a getaway car, they
- spotted two teenage boys parked at a fast-food restaurant.
- Harris forced the youths to drive to a nearby reservoir, where
- he shot and killed them. Later, he calmly ate their unfinished
- hamburgers. Danny testified against his brother and served
- three years in federal prison.
- </p>
- <p> The brutality alone of Harris' crime would make him
- notorious. A conjunction of place and time has made him
- something more: a symbol of the future for the nation's more
- than 2,200 death-row inmates. If Harris goes to the gas
- chamber, California will join the relatively short list of
- states that have carried out executions since the Supreme Court
- declared the death penalty constitutional in 1976. And it will
- do so at the very moment that the death penalty has become a
- hot campaign issue around the U.S. "There is almost a mob
- attitude in California, a frenzy being fed by politicians,"
- frets Robert Bryan, chairman of the National Coalition to
- Abolish the Death Penalty. "It's sure to increase public
- pressure throughout the country for the death penalty."
- </p>
- <p> In the past 13 years, 121 executions have been carried out
- in the U.S., most of them in Texas, Florida, Louisiana and
- Georgia. The prospect that the Southern "death belt" will be
- joined by California has opponents of capital punishment
- worried. "California is the key state in the death-penalty
- debate," says American University law professor Ira Robbins.
- "If a fairly moderate-to-liberal state can execute someone,
- then states such as Ohio and Pennsylvania might be next."
- </p>
- <p> With polls showing most Americans strongly in favor of
- capital punishment, politicians have been feeling the heat--and in some cases fanning the flames--to prove how tough they
- are. Especially in California, Florida and Texas, three large
- states where the Governor's office is up for grabs this
- November, the new look in campaign commercials is to feature
- the candidate doing everything short of throwing a giant
- electrical switch:
- </p>
- <p>-- During the Democratic gubernatorial primary in Texas
- early in March, former Governor Mark White and state Attorney
- General James Mattox boasted of the number of successful
- executions they had furthered. Though state Treasurer Ann
- Richards also supports the death penalty, she had to labor
- under the disadvantage of having been endorsed by editors of
- a newspaper produced by death-row inmates at the state prison
- in Huntsville. With Mattox and Richards set to face each other
- again in a runoff election in April, the issue is sure to loom
- large. "Maybe the next step will be scratch-and-sniff ads, so
- voters can sample the smell of the death chamber," complains
- Richards' campaign spokesman Mark McKinnon.
- </p>
- <p>-- In Florida embattled Republican Governor Bob Martinez has
- been appearing in campaign commercials that show the face of
- serial killer Ted Bundy while Martinez takes credit for signing
- 90 death warrants in his first term.
- </p>
- <p>-- Even former Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young, the nonviolent
- disciple of Martin Luther King Jr., has repudiated his longtime
- opposition to capital punishment in his campaign to become
- Georgia's first black Governor. Says Young: "The state has to
- have the right to put mad dogs to death."
- </p>
- <p>-- Nowhere is death-penalty politics more powerful than in
- California, where former San Francisco Mayor Dianne Feinstein
- faces state Attorney General John Van de Kamp in a race for the
- Democratic nomination for Governor. Feinstein's campaign was
- considered all but hopeless until recently, when she began to
- run a television ad proclaiming her approval of both abortion
- rights and capital punishment. Almost overnight, she rocketed
- up 19 points in the polls, grabbing the lead from Van de Kamp,
- an opponent of capital punishment. Now Van de Kamp has unveiled
- his own TV spot, complete with footage of the gas chamber, in
- which he boasts of how many prisoners he has dispatched to death
- row as attorney general.
- </p>
- <p> Although Republican Governor George Deukmejian is not
- running for re-election, he has adroitly played the death issue
- to maximize the discomfort of the Democrats. After Harris
- petitioned for clemency, Deukmejian decided to conduct the
- hearing himself, denying Van de Kamp a high-profile role that
- ordinarily would have been his. That led Harris to withdraw his
- request for a hearing, complaining he would never get a fair
- one from Deukmejian, who as a state legislator helped draft
- California's death-penalty law. The Governor has now agreed to
- hear a telephoned plea for clemency from Mother Teresa.
- </p>
- <p> Because of the lengthy, complicated appeals process, the
- average delay between conviction for a capital crime and
- execution is more than seven years. That drawn-out process may
- soon be shortened. In a pair of decisions last month, the U.S.
- Supreme Court, which has been increasingly inclined to uphold
- death sentences, created nearly insurmountable procedural
- obstacles for death-row inmates seeking to have their appeals
- moved from state to federal courts. Congress is also
- considering several proposals to streamline the appeals process,
- including one issued by a commission headed by former Supreme
- Court Justice Lewis Powell that would give each state prisoner
- a single chance to litigate all claims in federal court.
- </p>
- <p> Later this year the Senate will also take up legislation to
- guide the use of the death penalty as a punishment for about
- a dozen federal crimes, espionage, and bank robbery or
- kidnaping resulting in death. But Massachusetts Senator Edward
- Kennedy has tacked on an amendment that would require federal
- prosecutors to produce "clear and convincing evidence" that
- race is not a factor in any death sentence. Since 1976, not a
- single white killer has been sentenced to death for the murder
- of any black victim, while 33 blacks have been executed for
- killing whites. Opponents of Kennedy's amendment, led by South
- Carolina's Strom Thurmond, say it would outlaw the death
- penalty altogether, since it would force prosecutors to develop
- race-based evidence to prove they were not discriminating.
- "This would allow vicious killers to get off by talking about
- race," says Thurmond.
- </p>
- <p> For Harris, such controversies may soon be moot. Unless some
- unexpected hitch develops, at about 2:45 a.m. on April 3, the
- execution squad will escort Harris, wearing a new pair of jeans
- and a denim work shirt, into the gas chamber and strap him into
- one of the two seats. Fifteen minutes later, the chamber will
- fill with cyanide gas. Harris will inhale, slump over and,
- within minutes, die.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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