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October 26, 2007
TX Judge Decides to Allow Execution Instead of Giving a 20 Minute Extension
From NYTimes.com: The presiding judge of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals is the target of a rising national outcry a month after turning away the last appeal of a death row inmate because the rushed filing was delayed past the court’s 5 p.m. closing time.
The inmate, Michael Richard, was then executed for a 1986 sexual assault and murder — the last person to die in Texas while the US Supreme Court reviews the constitutionality of lethal injection.
The judge, Sharon Keller, has said she did not know that Mr. Richard’s defense lawyers in Houston were having computer problems when they asked the court for 20 more minutes to deliver their final state appeal to Austin hours before the scheduled execution on Sept. 25.
Without a definitive ruling from the state court, the lawyers could not properly appeal to the United States Supreme Court to block the execution.
Judge Keller, a Republican who was elected to her second six-year term last year, declined through her office this week to comment.
The court does not accept computer filings, although one of the court’s judges, Tom Price, said in an interview this week, “We’re reviewing all our procedures and policies.”
Rest of Article. . . [Mark Godsey]
October 26, 2007 in Capital Punishment | Permalink
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