From this day forward, I no longer shall tinker with the machinery of death. I feel morally and intellectually obligated simply to concede that the death penalty experiment has failed. It is virtually self-evident to me now that no combination of procedural rules or substantive regulations ever can save the death penalty from its inherent constitutional deficiencies. Harry A. Blackmun, former U.S. Supreme Court Judge, (1) & (2) Callins v. Collins, 114 S.Ct.1127 (1994); (3) PBS Online NewsHour, 3/5/2004; (4) Herrera v. Collins 506 US 390 (1993).

Friday, 3 October 2008

GOOD NEWS!! Appeals court tosses death sentence for Ohio man

A federal appeals court on Friday threw out the death sentence of a man convicted of beating and raping a woman and dumping her body in an abandoned building in 1993.

A 3-judge panel of the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals issued a split-decision in the case of Maurice Mason.

The panel by a 2-1 vote held that Mason had poor legal help in the sentencing portion of his 1994 trial in Marion County in the death of Robin Dennis, 19, of Essex.

The appeals court said Mason's lawyers failed to interview his family and investigate "the obvious red flags" in state records suggesting that Mason's childhood was pervaded by violence and exposure to drugs in the home from an early age.

Prosecutors have six months to hold a new sentencing hearing, the court
said.

The state will review the decision and consider its options, which include
asking for a review by the full court, said Jim Gravelle, a spokesman for
the Ohio attorney general's office.

David Stebbins, who represented Mason on appeal, praised the ruling.

"Obviously we have been litigating this for a long time," he said. "Trial counsel had simply not done an investigation into his background and his entire childhood was not presented."

Stebbins said Mason's parents were drug dealers who sold drugs out of their home, Mason's father ran a prostitution ring and there was violence in the house - with Mason's mother once shooting his father in front of their children.

Judge Karen Nelson Moore, joined by Judge Eric Clay, delivered the 6th Circuit opinion that reversed a 2005 federal district court decision denying Mason's petition.

Chief Judge Danny Boggs dissented, writing that the opinion "sets an almost impossibly high bar for defense counsel in capital cases."

Dennis' body was found inside an abandoned building in rural Marion County on Feb. 13, 1993. An autopsy concluded that she was struck in the head and her skull was fractured. Mason was convicted June 18, 1994, in Marion County Common Pleas Court of rape and aggravated murder with a death penalty specification that the murder occurred during the commission of a rape.

On the Net: 6th Circuit: http://www.ca6.uscourts.gov

(source: Associated Press)

2 comments:

Unknown said...

You should be ashamed of yourself! My thoughts are with the victim as they should be!

Unknown said...

I grew up with her and her family. This man brutally raped and killed this woman. It was proven beyond doubt. You should be ashamed! Get the facts before you defend sick and twisted individuals!