WLRN documentary Florida's Death Penalty in Limbo (Epilogue)
Despite a scathing critique of the Florida Supreme Court’s decision about how Hurst should apply to already sentenced inmates, his subsequent appeal of that decision was denied on May 10.
Unless a federal appellate court steps in, it looks like Lambrix’s death sentence will stand untouched by all the changes brought about by the Hurst decision.
“I think it’s yet another example of politics trumping the administration of justice and once again exposes the moral corruption of our highest courts,” wrote Lambrix after the Florida Supreme Court decided he would not get a chance at a new sentence.
He is confident that the U.S. Supreme Court will take up the issue of how the state interpreted the Hurst decision to apply only to some Death Row inmates, but is not confident that will happen this iteration of that petition for review.
“The real question is how many more of us will be illegally executed before the U.S. [Supreme Court] gets around to telling the [Florida Supreme Court] it was wrong again?” writes Lambrix.
“The truth of the matter is that I do struggle with feelings of anger and contempt towards our politically corrupt judicial system, and I don’t like that. It’s been my philosophy to not allow the negativity of my experience to become part of who I am. I’ve seen far too many here grow angry and bitter as the years pass and it eats them up like a form of cancer--and that’s not who I want to become,” Lambrix writes.
He says when he is rescheduled for execution--he is pretty sure it will happen sooner or later--“there’s nothing I can do about it, except choose how I will respond,” writes Lambrix.
He says he plans to hunger strike if his death warrant is signed again.
Read the article and listen to Mike here
And in Mike's own words, written on May 29, 2017:
Every
day now I anxiously wait to see whether they'll come to take me back
down to "death watch" with a new date of execution set. Mentally, I'm
already there, as I have no doubt that they are coming. On May 10, 2017
the Florida Supreme Court denied reconsideration of their earlier
decision denying all relief, even refusing to allow DNA testing of
evidence that if tested would substantiate my consistently plead claim
of innocence.
I
thought they would come for me on Monday May 22, as on that date the
United states Supreme Court issued it's order declining review of the
State's attempt to challenge the Florida Supreme Court's own decision in
Hurst v State that for the first time declared that an unanimous jury
vote was necessary before a death sentence could be imposed. Florida's
Attorney General Pam Bondie took that ruling personally. She built her
career on prosecuting capital cases and sending many to death row,
although more recently she's made national headlines for allegedly
accepting a 25 thousand dollar political contribution from one of Donald
Trump's organizations and just coincidentally dropped her office's
investigation into trump's University alleged fraud shortly after
reviewing that generous "political contribution".
Bondi
argued to the US Supreme Court that the Florida supreme Court went too
far in legally requiring an unanimous jury vote on death - she argued
that the US Supreme Court never said unanimous jury votes are
constitutionally required, although it's undisputed that almost all
other states have long required an unanimous jury vote as a condition to
impose death.
Had
the Supreme Court accepted review, then it would have effectively put a
hold on all Florida executions until that issue was resolved as what it
comes down to is the constitutionality of the Florida death penalty.
But the court declined review, and now executions can resume.
So
I've been spending a lot of time going through what personal property I
have, throwing out the unbelievable amount of stuff that has accumulated
since I came off "death watch" in early February, 2016. it doesn't seem
that it's already been 15 months (almost 16) since I was last scheduled
for execution. But in that time a lot of now irrelevant legal papers,
magazines, and personal letters have piled up. I'm alright with throwing
out unnecessary legal papers and give away the pile of magazines that
have accumulated, but I draw the line at throwing out personal letters
that still hold special meaning to me as when I'm really missing someone
I go back and reread those letters so that at least in that moment, I'm
there once again.
But
I know when they do come to get me and take me back down to the death
watch area adjacent to the execution chamber, the guards will pack my
property up and if they think I've accumulated too much "crap", they
will decide what to throw out. So, I'd rather thin it out myself and
keep whats important to me.
And
as I sort out my property, what weighs most heavily on my mind is that
I'm doing this with the expectation that once again I will face that
final count down to my own death...and this will be the fourth time that
I've had an execution date set, and once again i know that i will come
close as that's how it is - only too often the courts will sit on the
case until you're close to that scheduled execution. That's how our
legal system plays the games.
But
I think that I will survive this latest date with death, as I do still
have a number of appeals yet to pursue, any one of which could stop the
execution.
However,
I cannot assume that the courts will do the right thing for good
reason, I have no faith in the integrity of our courts. I do think the
legal system in this country is to be admired as It does attempt to
instill fairness. But the problem is that while in principle our process
is a model of what a legal system should be, in actual practice it is
too easily exploited by those with their own political ideology and
agenda.
too
often, judges at the highest level of our legal system will simply lie
to justify their intent to deny relief, and few people will ever know
that they are deliberately lying as unless you know the facts of the
case, there would be no way for the average person to know these judges
lied.
Take
for example the most recent denial of relief in my case before the
Florida Supreme Court. Our primary issue was that state law required
that we be allowed to have evidence potentially substantiating my plead
claim of innocence subjected to DNA testing. You would think, even
assume, that the Florida Supreme Court justices would at least have the
integrity to be honest, especially when making a conscious decision to
take a human life. But if they followed the letter of the law, then they
would have had to allow DNA testing of this evidence, and then I might
be exonerated - and they don't want that.
So,
they denied our request for DNA testing by simply lying - the Court
claimed that DNA testing had already been done on this evidence. Now,
even if this was an inadvertent mistake in their March 9, 2017 decision,
my lawyers did specifically bring this to the court's attention in a
Motion for Rehearing filed on April 4, 2017 (Lambrix v State, FSC Case
no SC16-08 page 20, "This court's assertion that DNA testing was
performed on Bryant's panties" is blatantly false.There has never been any DNA testing conducted on any item in this case), then the courts would have corrected this mistake on rehearing.
But
they didn't correct this "mistake" because it wasn't a mistake - the
knew exactly what they were doing and they also know that the only way
their deliberate lie can be further addressed is if the United States
Supreme Court accepts review - and this will now be brought to the
Supreme Court.
This
is why I've often said that people out there just don't realize how
completely corrupt our legal system is. We have laws and constitutional
protections that are the envy of the world, but our legal system is
politically corrupt and dependent upon judges motivated by their own pro
death penalty ideology and only too often they will lie and there's
nothing anyone can do about it, and so innocent people can be put to
death.
And
now I will once again face execution for a crime that I'm innocent of
because the justices on the Florida Supreme Court don't have the
integrity to tell the truth. But we will still pursue other appeals and
take the case to the Supreme Court. And so while I have nothing but
contempt for those who took a vow before God and country to administer
justice honestly and fairly, I do still believe that there are other
judges and Supreme Court justices who have not abandoned all pretense to
prevent the execution of an innocent person.
but
it sucks that I must now go through the death watch process again,
knowing that if the Supreme Court refuses to intervene, then I may very
well be executed for a crime I did not commit.
1 comment:
Jeeze Louise, can you pls stop with the boring court stuff and get back to writing about life inside the can.
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