by Lee Camp
What’s one more human being? What’s it matter if this country murders one more innocent person? The USA has murdered millions of innocent people around the world in the past quarter century, so what’s one more? We’re an empire built from our founding days on genocide, so what’s one more guy?
And this particular guy actually had some sort of legal proceeding before the state of Oklahoma decided they’d put him on their murder schedule. The state of Oklahoma has a bunch of folks they plan to murder this year, and they’d really like to get moving. …But something is a little different with this one. In this rare case the state of OK is actually asking the Supreme Court to stop them from murdering the man. Even the Attorney General Gentner Drummond has confessed errors and seeks to vacate the conviction. (But then again, the Attorney General’s name is “Gentner,” so how much can you trust him? That’s not a name and he knows it.)
The soon-to-be victim’s name is Richard Glossip, and basically the state destroyed key evidence before his retrial so that he could not use it in his defense and DNA testing could not be done to prove him innocent. Despite the Attorney General asking that Glossip be spared, the Governor Kevin Stitt (also not a name) has said, “Let the chips fall where they may. If we murder him, we murder him. Who gives a tip of turd?” …He didn’t actually say that, but that’s how he’s acting.
So now we’re waiting to see whether the Supreme Court will save the life of a man who even the guy who convicted him said should be released. In the uniquely brutal “justice” system of the US empire, this case is even more disturbing than normal, which says a lot. It’s like saying the Zodiac killer was really kinda harsh this time around.
But in many ways, it doesn’t matter who this particular wrongly convicted man is, the entire capital punishment system is utterly insane. Let me count the ways (eleven to be precise):
It murders innocent people often.
Cameron Todd Willingham, Troy Davis, Carlos DeLuna and countless others have been murdered by the death penalty despite being innocent. Then there’s 190 people since 1973 who have been sitting on death row waiting to be killed when they were exonerated and finally freed.
It’s racially biased in multiple ways.