THE OFFICIAL COLLEGE OUTREACH ARM OF THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY
Alberto Gonzalez Must Go
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Alberto Gonzales and the death penalty:
A time for candor. A time for fairness.

By Diann Rust-Tierney
Two years ago, as Attorney General Alberto Gonzales faced confirmation hearings, the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty stressed that the nationâ??s chief law enforcement officer â??must demonstrate the highest commitment to fairness, due process and equal protection under the law.â??

We based our opposition to Gonzalesâ?? confirmation on our belief that his track record on death penalty cases in Texas failed to meet this challenge. Time and again the legal analysis he provided to then-Gov. George W. Bush on the eve of executions failed to include any discussion of the most salient issues, including severe mental retardation and mental illness, abysmally poor legal representation and, in more than a handful of cases, even credible claims of innocence.

With the recent revelations that differences regarding the death penalty played a role in the dismissal of at least three U.S. attorneys, our fears, sadly, have been justified.

Then, as now, Mr. Gonzales placed Bushâ??s political agenda above honesty, integrity , and commitment to fairness. In Texas this took the form of cursory review â?" and then denial in every single case but one â?" of clemency applications as President Bush parlayed his â??tough-on-crimeâ?? persona into a successful run for the Republican presidential nomination.

Today, Mr. Gonzalesâ?? failed priorities have contributed to a politicized federal death penalty system instead of one based on fairness and integrity. Consider:

At least three U.S. attorneys â?" Paul Charlton of Arizona, Margaret Chiara of Michigan, and Kevin Ryan of California â?" were dismissed after clashing with the Justice Department over death penalty policy. Although the final decision has always rested with the U.S. Attorney General, a U.S. attorneyâ??s recommendation that death should not be sought has traditionally been given great deference â?" until recently.

During the six years that President Bush has been in office (a span of time marked by Mr. Gonzales and his predecessor, former Attorney General John Ashcroft) the federal death penalty was sought 95 times, or about 16 times a year. Thatâ??s twice as often as the 55 times it was sought during the eight years of the Clinton Administration, roughly seven times a year.

Ominously, the Bush Department of Justice has sought the federal death penalty in states where voters, through their elected representatives, have rejected capital punishment. These jurisdictions include Iowa, Massachusetts, Michigan, North Dakota, and Vermont, as well as Puerto Rico and Washington, D.C. (New York, a state without a functioning state death penalty, has a stunning 51 potential federal death penalty cases in the works.)

Perhaps the most telling statistic: The size of federal death row has tripled since Bush took office, while state death sentences and executions are down sharply from their historic highs in the late 1990s. Three federal death row inmates already have been executed under the Bush administration; another four federal death row inmates are nearing the end of their appeals.

What does it say that the federal death penalty under Gonzales is inconsistent with state trends, which show capital punishment is on the wane? It says, simply, that the Bush Administration has chosen to politicize the death penalty. That is wrong.

Both death penalty proponents and opponents agree on this: Fairness and integrity must be present at the highest levels of our criminal justice system, especially when a personâ??s life is in the balance. That is why, increasingly, groups such as murder victimsâ?? family members, religious groups, and leaders in the law enforcement community are calling for fairness.

Mr. Gonzales promised fairness in 2005 when he faced confirmation hearings. He was not candid about his record on the death penalty then and he is not candid today. It is past time for General Gonzales to tender his resignation, for the President to nominate, and for the Senate to confirm an Attorney General who will â??demonstrate the highest commitment to fairness, due process and equal protection under the law.â??

Rust-Tierney is executive director of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty

This article was reprinted with permission.

Reader Comments
  
Just another example
By Jolene42 Apr 2nd 2007 at 7:01 pm EDT
of Bush thinking God speaks to him, therefore he knows who should live and who should die.

When Gonzales was nominated some, including Obama, felt that he was too much the "President's Lawyer" to be able to bring the high standards of objectivity and fairness to the office of Attorney General.

This article just reinforces that premise. He has always been Bush's lawyer and nothing else. Perhaps in the long run all of this could be brought to light and speed up the understanding that the death penalty truly must go.
  
Hmmm...
By Angel Apr 3rd 2007 at 1:13 am EDT
I think that the only reason he hasn't been impeached is to avoid creating a precedent that all government officials would go through an impeachment process when they are in an opposing party's crosshairs.
Re: Hmmm...
By Daniel Kennedy Apr 3rd 2007 at 9:57 am EDT
The presidency is not the only federal office to be impeached; Said action would not cause a precedent per Article II Section 4 of our Constitution. As far as Gonazalez merely being in cross hairs, I'd say he did enough to draw attention away from the war for a while. He's got a long list of reasons to be canned imho.
  
And now on to our children...
By Linda Tuininga Apr 3rd 2007 at 10:59 am EDT
Alberto Gonzales is now on a mission "to protect the children." Talk about using anything and anyone for political purposes. Gonzales in now using the abuse of children as something to hide his smarmy pseudo-legal self behind. I have researched Bush's actions as governor of Texas with regard to the death penalty. The Innocence Project was appalled at the actions taken by Bush. According to The Inncoence Project, in order to prevent appeals and future investigations being initiated into death penalty cases, Bush made an executive order that evidence in such cases would be destroyed by law enforcement immediately after the initial appeals process in any case ran its cycle. His plan was that groups like The Innocence Project couldn't operate effectively in Texas if all the original evidence in a case had been destroyed. This was information I received from several attorneys who worked with The Innocence Project in the southwest.