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Execution
of youths under 18 subject of hearing
AUSTIN
-- Prosecutors recounted gruesome details of kidnappings and murders
committed by teenagers. Other witnesses declared that Texas is
notorious worldwide for allowing people under 18 to be executed.
Lawyers,
legal scholars, psychologists and religious groups weighed in with
opinions before the House Criminal Jurisprudence Committee today about
bills that would ban capital punishment for youths who were under 18
when they committed their crimes.
An
assistant district attorney from Harris County, which sends the
largest number of people to death row in Texas, told about a murderer
who committed his crime one day before turning 18.
"I
doubt that one day made any difference in his mental maturity,"
said prosecutor Don Smith.
State
law calls for 17 year olds to be considered adults in criminal court
proceedings.
But
Rep. Harold Dutton, D-Houston, a sponsor of one of the bills under
consideration, said a person under 18 can't vote, buy a house,
purchase alcohol or do many other things in society, including serve
in the Texas Legislature. So those youths shouldn't be considered
adults when it comes to capital punishment, he said.
University
of Texas law professor Jordan Steiker spoke in favor of the bills. He
said it has become rare, outside of Texas, for a juvenile to be
executed.
Fewer
than 24 such executions have been documented outside of the United
States in the past 15 years, and all in six countries: Iran, Iraq,
Pakistan, Yemen, Nigeria and Saudi Arabia, he said.
Texas
law should acknowledge the differences between adults and children,
Steiker said.
"When
we execute children, we communicate our sense that youth is not
special. We speak to all of our children, not just those who commit
crimes," he said.
Psychologist
Michael Lindsay of Dallas, who spoke in support of the bills,
testified about the physiological brain development of youths. He said
the part of the brain that governs decision-making is not completely
developed in adolescence.
However,
prosecutors from Harris, Dallas and Walker counties told of what they
said were premeditated murders committed by people under 18.
"What
our law does now is allow a jury to look at an individual," said
David Weeks, district attorney for Walker County. "Not all
17-year-olds are the same. That's why we have individual justice in
this state."
Prosecutor
John Rolater, representing the Dallas County district attorney's
office, told of the case of Toronto Patterson, who was executed last
year at age 24 for a murder he committed when he was 17. He was
convicted of killing a 3-year-old cousin at her Dallas home. Patterson
also was accused of killing two other people that day.
Among
the groups showing up to support the proposed legislation banning
executions of people under 18 were the Texas Catholic Conference;
Southwest Regional Juvenile Defenders Center; and Education Austin,
representing assorted teachers' groups.
A
spokeswoman for the Juvenile Death Penalty Initiative testified that
since the reinstatement of the death penalty in 1976, Texas has led
the nation with 13 executions of people who were under 18 when they
committed their crimes. Virginia is second with three, she said.
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