|
DEATH PENALTY-U.S.:
Mexico Could Not Stop Execution
of Serial Killer Immigrant
Diego
Cevallos
MEXICO CITY, (IPS) - The
southern U.S. state of Texas
executed a Mexican immigrant
Tuesday night after rejecting
expert medical opinions that the
condemned man was mentally
incompetent, and ignoring
appeals from the Mexican
government to spare the man's
life.
"Any execution is a failure of
justice, and so was this one.
Everything possible was done to
prevent it, but the efforts were
in vain," Alfonso García,
spokesman in Mexico for the
human rights watchdog group
Amnesty International, said in
an interview with IPS.
Mexican immigrant Ángel Maturino
died by lethal injection at a
prison in Texas, where he had
been held since 1999. He was
condemned to death for the 1998
murder and rape of doctor
Claudia Benton.
Maturino was also implicated in
14 more homicides committed in
the 1990s in Texas, California,
Florida, Georgia, Kentucky and
Illinois. All the victims were
slain close to railways, earning
him the nickname the "railroad
killer."
The Mexican foreign ministry
released a statement deploring
the execution and stating that
it "was carried out in spite of
medical evidence that he
suffered severe mental
disturbance, which in principle
should have rendered him
ineligible for the death
penalty."
Maturino's execution, originally
set for May 10, was postponed so
that psychiatric and
psychological tests could be
performed. He claimed to be
"half angel and half man," and
said he had been impelled to
murder by an "evil force," and
at the same time by "the will of
God."
Last week judge William Harmon,
of the 178th district criminal
court in Houston, Texas, heard
the medical evidence. Although
four of the five experts were of
the opinion that Maturino was
insane, the judge ruled that he
was "sufficiently competent" and
would not be spared the death
penalty.
The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled
that convicts who are "mentally
incompetent" shall not be
executed.
"Maturino's case was a very
difficult one because he had
committed so many brutal crimes,
although we maintain the
position that he was not
mentally fit," said Amnesty
International spokesman García.
The administration of Mexican
President Vicente Fox lodged a
series of appeals with the U.S.
justice system attempting to
prevent the execution, and even
convinced the Inter-American
Court of Human Rights, based in
Costa Rica, to ask the United
States to postpone the execution
until all available legal means
had been exhausted.
But neither these actions, nor a
telephone call from Mexican
Foreign Minister Ernesto Derbez
to Texas Governor Rick Perry,
pleading for clemency, had any
effect.
The Mexican foreign ministry's
communiqué said that it had
"monitored the case promptly and
continuously from the start, and
had resorted to every possible
domestic and international
recourse to preserve Mr.
Maturino's life, according to
our country's staunch commitment
to defend the human rights of
its citizens abroad, and its
absolute opposition to the death
penalty."
Maturino was the sixth Mexican
to be executed in the United
States since it restored the
death penalty in 1976, when the
Supreme Court lifted the ban on
capital punishment that the
court itself had imposed four
years earlier. The death penalty
remains illegal in 12 of the 50
states in the U.S.
The last Mexican to be put to
death by the U.S. legal system
prior to Maturino was Javier
Suárez, executed in Texas in
August 2002. "The failure in the
Maturino case will not end our
efforts to stop the use of the
death penalty in the United
States and other countries,"
human rights activist García
said.
Maturino, who before his arrest
was on the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) Top Ten Most
Wanted List, asked for the death
penalty during the trial, rather
than a life sentence.
He was born in a small town in
Puebla, a state near Mexico
City, and grew up virtually as a
street child. He was 14 when he
first entered the United States
as an undocumented immigrant.
He was arrested 16 times in the
United States for minor robbery
and other crimes, and deported
eight times. However, he kept
returning to the U.S.
Unlike the cases of other
Mexican immigrants in which the
failure of the authorities to
notify the Mexican consulate of
their arrest served a key role
in the legal strategy of their
defence attorneys, this
requirement was duly fulfilled
after Maturino was arrested.
The International Court of
Justice in The Hague ruled in
late March 2004 that the United
States had violated the rights
of 51 Mexican nationals by
sentencing them to death without
having provided them with the
opportunity for consular
assistance at the time of their
arrest and trial.
Thanks to this ruling, in 2004
the execution of Mexican
immigrant Osvaldo Torres in
Oklahoma was prevented, and his
death sentence commuted to life
imprisonment.
The other immigrants sentenced
to death, and who did not have
the benefit of consular
assistance, are awaiting review
of their cases.
Amnesty International maintains
that "the death penalty is the
ultimate cruel, inhuman and
degrading punishment," and
constitutes "a violation of the
right to life."
"The death penalty is
irrevocable and can be inflicted
on the innocent. It has never
been shown to deter crime more
effectively than other
punishments," the organisation
states.
There were 2,148 known
executions in 2005 -- 94 percent
of them took place in China,
Iran, Saudi Arabia and the
United States. In 2004, 7,395
people in 64 countries were
sentenced to death, according to
Amnesty International.
|
|