Death Penalty Debate
167 Ohio inmates are awaiting execution, including 1 from the areaBy Brad Bauer, bbauer@mariettatimes.com
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Fact Box
Ohio's death row statistics
Current inmates: 166 men, 1 woman (86 African-American men; 72 Caucasian men; 4 Hispanic men; 2 Native-Americans; 2 Arab-Americans; 1 Caucasian female).
Ohio has put 373 convicted murderers to death to date, with 30 of those deaths coming since 1999.
Source: drc.ohio.gov
An unsuccessful attempt by Ohio prison officials to execute an inmate in September has led the state to grant at least four temporary stays of execution to other inmates on Death Row.
Marietta attorney Dennis Sipe represents one of the men, who without the stay, was set to be executed Nov. 10.
His client, Darryl Durr, 46, of Cleveland, was sentenced to die for abducting, raping and using a dog chain to choke to death 16-year-old Angel O'Nan of Elyria on Jan. 31, 1988.
Sipe, the only area attorney certified to represent individuals in death penalty cases, said he opposes execution for religious and personal reasons.
Ohio has put 30 men to death since it reinstated the death penalty in 1999. Of the 167 individuals in Ohio on death row, only one, Fred A. Mundt, is from the area.
Mundt, 35, of Monroe County, was sentenced to death in Noble County Common Pleas Court in 2004 for the rape and murder of 7-year-old Brittany Hendrickson. The state has yet to set a date for Mundt's execution.
Once a person is convicted and sentenced to the death penalty, the appeal process typically takes between 15 and 20 years.
Sipe said executions are not necessary because states can keep the worst offenders locked up for life. Also, he said, too many innocent people have been executed.
"Death isn't something we can take back," Sipe said. "We live in societies with prisons and jails... with an ability to incarcerate people. Yes, the Bible speaks of potential death penalties for various offenses, but those rules were put in place during a time when the people that received the instructions... were a nomadic group roaming the desert with no way to house prisoners."
In July, Sipe witnessed the death of another client, John Fautenberry, 45, of Oregon. Fauntenberry was a former truck driver who went on a multistate killing spree and was executed for the murder of a Cincinnati-area man who gave him a ride in 1991.
Sipe argued Fauntenberry had suffered brain injuries as a child and while serving in the U.S. Navy. He wanted Fauntenberry re-evaluated prior to his execution. It didn't happen.
"It is a very strange feeling to sit there and watch someone be put to death," Sipe said.
There were problems with Fauntenberry's execution, too.
"They had problems getting an IV in and he was bleeding, and it was interesting for me to watch as my client was laying there and trying to help them," Sipe said. "He was holding up his arm and trying to help them kill him."
Last week, Ohio lawmakers announced a plan to change the drugs and procedures for lethal injection in the state - an attempt to prevent future failures similar to the Sept. 15 attempt to kill Romell Broom.
Broom's execution team struggled unsuccessfully for two hours to insert intravenous shunts into his arms to administer the lethal cocktail of three drugs, prompting Gov. Ted Strickland to take the unprecedented step of stopping an execution.
The state says it will now only use one drug, rather than a three-drug cocktail it previously used. Also, when veins cannot be accessed a direct injection into muscles will be administered, officials said.
Former Washington County Prosecutor Michael Spahr said the last death penalty case in the county came in 1984.
Larry Lee was accused of killing his estranged wife and her friend at Colonial Terrace apartments in Marietta.
Lee was ultimately found guilty of both murders but the convictions came separately, after a jury hung on one of the counts.
"There was a juror who may have answered all of the questions appropriately to sit on the jury, but when it came time, she had a change of heart," Spahr said. "She said something like God had talked to her overnight, and really, I think she just had a change of heart about sitting on a death penalty case."
Lee, 62, was sentenced to life in prison and will first be eligible for parole in April 2020.
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rikrab
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11-23-09 9:01 AM
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And with that logic we can say…(Let me ask all of you that are so willing to put another in prison - "What about those that are innocent and have been wrongly convicted and sentenced to prison? There are cases of this found everyday and as technology improves, with more being uncovered. How would you feel if it was someone, you love, and care for that was actually innocent, yet sentenced to prison by a mob such as yourself?) Save the innocent close all prisons. NO fix the System and execute the murders!
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deerwatcher
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11-23-09 8:45 AM
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Rope, firing squad, or "old sparky" no problem. What about the "civil rights" of the victims? If there is overwellming evidence that there "civil rights" need to be taking away! I am sick of spending more on prisons than on schools! We need better schools.
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Parrothead
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11-23-09 1:54 AM
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Let me ask all of you that are so willing to put another to death - "What about those that are innicent and have been wrongly convicted and sentanced to death? There are casses of this found everyday and as technology improves more are being uncovered. How would you feel if it was someone you love and care for that was actually innocent, yet sentanced to die by a mob such as yourself?
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Roscoe
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11-22-09 9:53 PM
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"cruel and unusual punishment" I wonder if those on death row gave two cents about that when they committed their heinous crimes. Wonder how cruel they themselves were.
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Darby1952
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11-22-09 6:37 PM
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Irish27,,, you must be politician,, you avoided everyones remarks back to you about bringing race into this..... just like pro
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armybrat
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11-22-09 6:27 PM
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Dream on, Rocker.
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rocker
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11-22-09 5:52 PM
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The best way to avoid the death penalty is to become a responsible, productive citizen and never commit these heinous crimes.
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Irish27
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11-22-09 1:02 PM
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Why I oppose capital punishment: 1. Capital Punishment is not a deterrence. 2. Capital Punishment violates the 8th Amendment of the constiution that prohibits cruel and unusual punishment ( unusual because it is not applied equally, whether it be divided out by race, sex, wealth, or the simple fact that someone one person is better looking than the next. This argument can be made for any criminal proceeding and subsequential sentencing. However, there is no other punishment that is irrevocable.) 3. It is the only punishment that is irrevocable. 4. I'm a conservative, I'm a Catholic, and I am apalled by abortion. A life is a life. We are not God.
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rocker
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11-22-09 11:46 AM
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I just knew before long someone would bring race into comments on the death penalty. Irish27, since you brought race into this, why don't you and people like you start addressing the HUGE problem in this country with black crime? The last time I checked FBI figures, blacks represent approx. 12% of the population, but commit 42% of all violent crimes(i.e rape,robbery and murder). And over 90% of those crimes are black on black crimes.
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rikrab
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11-22-09 10:39 AM
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Capital Punishment and the Bible Robin Calamaio - Copyright 2004 w w w.freelygive-n.c o m/uploads/Capital_Pun_and_the_Bible_-_Imbed_Links.p d f
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rikrab
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11-22-09 9:32 AM
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(Code of Hammurabi) 5. If a judge try a case, reach a decision, and present his judgment in writing; if later error shall appear in his decision, and it be through his own fault, then he shall pay twelve times the fine set by him in the case, and he shall be publicly removed from the judge's bench, and never again shall he sit there to render judgement. (Code of Hammurabi) You will never see this today!
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armybrat
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11-22-09 9:23 AM
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Come on Orchardfarmer, there are alot of Christians who believe in the death penalty. A statement like you just made about Atheists is so wrong. You have just called every judge in this country an Atheist, think about it.
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Orchardfarmer
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11-22-09 7:13 AM
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As the Catholic Justice Scalia said, it is only the atheist who truly has a rational basis for the death penalty. To the Christian, there are many worse punishments that can be inflicted. The innocent goes to heaven, forgiven by God. The unrepentent is still condemned.
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bulldog
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11-21-09 11:28 PM
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Bleeding heart liberals It is ok to murder a baby but not a hardend criminal. You people have issues. Please stop the racist remarks like "the disparities in death sentences between whites and blacks are astounding, and unacceptable." That card has been played out find a new one.
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saintiaint
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11-21-09 11:06 PM
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sipe better keep dreaming brain damage as a child then again in the navy and becomes a truck driver i know the old faithful line its just a misunderstanding its the only phrase you learn in law school now we misunderstand the bible only when you! re a victum will you get it straight
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Darby1952
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11-21-09 10:11 PM
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Irish27, you sound like Rev. Al,, or brother Jesse. You really need to get your facts straight before pulling out the much too often used race card. Since 1976 through November 19, 2009 there have been 411 black and 663 white convicts executed in the U.S. This is according The Death Penalty Information Center. This is a group that is against the death penalty.
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rikrab
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11-21-09 8:57 PM
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For the victims... prodeathpenalty . c o m
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Irish27
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11-21-09 7:58 PM
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McCleskey v. Kemp ***********law.cornell.edu/supct/html/historics/USSC_CR_0481_0279_ZS.html
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Menglish
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11-21-09 7:27 PM
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Not that I want to make this an issue about race, but someone else brought it up... If you do your research you will find that the number of white/black inmates on death row is proportionate to the number of white/black inmates over all. Statistics will show there are more black inmates in prision, which is why it stands to reason there would be more black inmates given the death penalty. For those of you who don't support the death penalty, what do you propose we do with them? Give them 3 squares and a comfortable place to lay their heads each night for all of eternity? There are so many people living on the streets (who did NOT commit crimes) that can't even have that much. How many INNOCENT people have been put to death - that's been proven to be innocent?
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armybrat
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11-21-09 7:23 PM
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The percentage of innocent people who get the death sentence is very small. The prisons are to full of people who have life without parole, they should have received the death sentence instead of us tax payers having to pay to keep them. A life sentence should also be a death penalty sentence, that would help the overcrowding in this country. Don't have them sitting on death row for over six months.
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Irish27
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11-21-09 4:10 PM
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Capital Punishment is arbitrary and discriminatory. Let alone the innocent individuals that are sometimes put to death, the disparities in death sentences between whites and blacks are astounding, and unacceptable.
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bulldog
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11-21-09 3:57 PM
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Hang them. Rope is reusable and you do not have to be a Rocket scientist to use it.
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EJEJEJ
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11-21-09 3:34 PM
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So, the nomads couldn't house the prisoners? Ok by them, I'm sure. They also couldn't own property. They ended up saving all of that money to beef up their coffers, subsequently became money changers, jewel merchants, and bankers. Since we're not nomads for the most part, we law-abiders get to pay for the criminals. I say the state confiscate all of their property, and all of their families' property to pay for the incarceration and legal assistance. If the argument is used "innocent" people have been excecuted, why prosecute anyone? Besides, "innocent till proven guilty" only applies to the judge and jury.
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rikrab
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11-21-09 2:17 PM
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Oh, bleeding hearts unite…poor murders. We need more Lawyers who favor execution for religious and personal reasons. The Judges, Lawyers, Politicians, and Law Enforcement have power over the Criminal Justice System. The System is broken and full of corruption. Most of those who have caused the System to fail have some special judicial immunity and will never have to answer for it. Why fix it when it makes them lots of money. "Justice will only be achieved when those who are not injured by crime feel as indignant as those who are." - King Solomon
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Menglish
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11-21-09 2:11 PM
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Why don't we let the people who don't believe in the death penalty take care of these animals. They can feed them, pay for their support and medical expenses... I'd rather have my tax dollars go for the support of someone truely in need... Not some animal who committed such a heinous act. Remember, the death penalty is reserved only for the most horrendous of offenses...
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