Alyeska wrote:His lawyer was acknowledged to not be the most competent of the bunch.
By whom? Who acknowledged this, other than some random website and the desperate appellate defense? Had
any court agreed with this sentiment then he would have received a new trial.
Access to consular legal resources would undoubtedly have had an impact on the case. He was denied access to legal resources even after it became known of his status. Just going by statistics alone, access to more legal resources will improve his defense. He is statistically more likely to get a lesser sentence.
That was not the finding of the Federal district court that specifically examined that issue, and their judgment wasn't questioned by either the Circuit Court of Appeals nor the Supreme Court.
Alyeska wrote:Just because the defendant makes it difficult doesn't make it right to ignore the law.
Ummm... actually, when parties in judicial proceedings fail to assert their legal rights it often serves as a waiver of those rights.
Criminals are well known for making it difficult to convict them. We should be willing to expend the resources to properly identify a criminal depending on the severity of the crime. Murder would certainly qualify. If the concern is about the criminal manipulating the court, you can easily remedy the situation. Charge the suspect with evading identification. Hell, make it a felony to evade identification in a capital case. Its already illegal to tamper with a jury.
That'll discourage capital defendants. "Yeah, I raped, murdered, and cannibalized six people, but I'll be damned if I have to pay a fine for concealing my identity!"
There are legal remedies that do not involve trampling over international treaties or proclaiming "But its too hard!!! (whiney kids voice)"
Actually, even the ICJ recognizes that the treaty obligation is extremely difficult for the benefit it confers, and only asked for a Texas court ruling (as opposed to the
Federal court which
did explicitly rule on this issue) that the alleged breach of rights did not prejudicially influence the trial.
Alyeska wrote:Do you wear a seat belt? Are you a safe driver? So why wear a seat belt? Because the unexpected can happen. You follow procedures and rules because even when you are damned sure someone is guilty as sin, it protects the system. Police and prosecutors have been damned sure someone is guilty and they manufacture evidence in order to ensure this criminal scum will spend the rest of their lives behind bars. And guess what, the DNA testing 30 years later showed this criminal scum was innocent. Even people who admitted to murder, who confessed, have been exonerated by DNA testing.
Alyeska, in what possible way would it "protect the system" to require state law enforcement with no expertise (indeed, no
ability) to evaluate immigration to have to leap through additional hurdles in a capital case? The guy was treated in precisely the same way that an American citizen would have been--the alleged failure was in not providing him an
additional right that he never asserted and that law enforcement reasonably did not recognize that he had.
You're also completely ignoring the flipside of the argument: if procedure is so crucially important to you, then why do you assign no weight at all to its expediency? Surely speed and practicability should have
some influence on what rights we choose to extend, and in this case the state has an obligation to pursue a speedy execution.