August 27, 2005
Death penalty opponents work to stop first Texas execution of black
woman
Tatyana Margolin, The Jurist
[JURIST] Supporters of Frances Newton [TX AG press release], slated to become
the first Black woman executed in Texas since the state took over executions
from county authorities in 1923, held protests Saturday while her attorneys
fight a last-minute battle to stop her death.
They have filed a request for clemency with the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles
[official website] and have asked a Texas court to stay the execution, scheduled
for September 14. Newton was convicted of killing her husband and two children
on April 7, 1987, to collect $100,000 in insurance.
In December 2004, Texas Governor Rick Perry [official website] stopped Newton’s
execution two hours before it was scheduled in order to probe deeper into questionable
forensics evidence.
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People [advocacy website]
and Amnesty International [advocacy website] are both working to stop Newton’s
execution. Amnesty International claims that she was convicted on circumstantial
evidence [AI press rel
ease] and did not have access to adequate legal representation. They also suggest
potential flaws in the DNA evidence. Reuters has more.
Source : The Jurist
http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/paperchase/2005/08/death-penalty-opponents-work-to-stop.php