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Man executed despite lawyer’s
negligence, substance abuse
Compiled by Brendan Conley
Asheville, North Carolina, Aug. 31— North
Carolina prison officials executed a man early today whose lawyer
admitted he drank 12 shots of rum a day during the penalty phase
of his murder trial. Death penalty opponents throughout the
state protested the execution and vowed to continue their campaign
against capital punishment.
With all legal avenues exhausted, North Carolina
Gov. Mike Easley rejected Ronald Wayne Frye’s appeal for clemency
Thursday night, saying there was no doubt that “the defendant
senselessly and brutally killed and robbed an elderly, innocent
man.”
Earlier Thursday, the US Supreme Court denied
a stay of execution. State and lower federal courts had turned
down Frye’s numerous requests for a retrial.
He was executed by lethal injection at Raleigh’s
Central Prison.
Frye, a 42-year-old construction worker, robbed
his landlord in 1993 and stabbed him to death with a pair of
scissors. There is no doubt he committed the crime, but during
the penalty phase of his trial, Frye’s lawyer presented little
evidence of a nightmarish childhood that might have swayed a
jury into sparing his client’s life.
The court-appointed lawyer, Tom Portwood, admitted
he was drinking heavily during the case, downing nearly a pint
of 80-proof rum every afternoon. He also revealed he was in
a car wreck around the same time and was found to have a near-lethal
blood alcohol level of 0.44 — at 11 am.
“This case completely violates our sense of fairness,”
said Stephen J. Dear, executive director of People of Faith
Against the Death Penalty, a North Carolina group calling for
a death-penalty moratorium. “This man essentially didn’t have
a lawyer, and if we think that’s a fair trial then our death-penalty
system is completely out of control.”
Frye’s is the latest case to raise troubling questions
about the impact of poor lawyers in death-penalty trials. Earlier
this month, a federal appeals court overturned the murder conviction
of a Texas death-row inmate because his court-appointed attorney
slept through substantial portions of his trial.
Frye’s lawyers said he would not have been sentenced
to death had the jury known the full story of his upbringing.
When Frye was 4, his alcoholic parents gave him away at a diner.
His new father beat him with a bullwhip, leaving such severe
scars that police still use the pictures at child-abuse seminars.
Frye started sniffing glue at age 10, then turned
to cocaine. He was shuffled from family to family, six changes
in all, before he dropped out of high school. He was a crack-addicted
construction worker when he stabbed his 70-year-old landlord
in the chest in a Hickory, NC, trailer park. He owed the landlord
money and was facing eviction.
The US Supreme Court has ruled that a defense
lawyer has the responsibility to present “mitigating” factors
about a client’s background — child abuse, drugs, an especially
tough environment — that might persuade a jury to spare the
defendant’s life.
No one from Frye’s family was called to the witness
stand. A psychologist did testify but shared little about Frye’s
childhood.
People of Faith Against the Death Penalty is organizing
throughout the state against capital punishment. The Asheville
chapter will host a membership meeting and “open space gathering”
on Sunday, Sept. 9, from 2pm to 6pm, at Beth Israel Synagogue.
The statewide coalition will host the “NC Journey
of Hope,” from October 5-18, a speaking tour of murder victim
family members who support alternatives to the death penalty.
The National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty
will hold its annual conference in Raleigh from October 18-21.
Sources: Los Angeles Times, People of Faith
Against the Death Penalty.
For more information: PFADP Asheville, Pam
Beattie, 828-665-7940; PFADP statewide, Angie Wigodsky, 919-933-7567.
Environmental groups oppose
draft permit for Blue Ridge Paper
Statement of Dead Pigeon River Council, Clean
Water Fund of NC, American Canoe Assoc., Dogwood Alliance, and
Western NC Alliance
A week before the scheduled September 6 public
hearing in Waynesville on the permitted discharge of Blue Ridge
Paper Products to the Pigeon River, environmental and recreational
groups, which three months ago worked with the company on a
joint study of bleaching improvements for the mill, announce
that they must oppose the Division of Water Quality’s (DWQ)
“low expectation” permit provisions for discharged color.
“Again and again, we’ve been told that this time
was going to be different”, says Bobby Seay of the Dead Pigeon
River Council, who has fought the Mill’s discharge for over
two decades, “but North Carolina has NEVER voluntarily reduced
the discharge. This tiny amount of reduction isn’t even worth
talking about. It’s long past time for the mill to meet NC water
quality standards.”
Seay and other downstream activists have been
part of a coalition of environmental groups that co-contracted
this spring with Blue Ridge Paper for a study of water quality
benefits from oxygen based pulping and bleaching.
“We really wanted this study to be the beginning
of getting cooperatively through this permit cycle,” said Scot
Quaranda of the Asheville-based Dogwood Alliance. “Blue Ridge
was saying all the right things about environmental stewardship
... they said that they wanted to meet NC water quality standards
by the end of the coming permit, so we were very hopeful. We
want to work together on creative solutions for forest stewardship
and air quality problems as part of a continuing effort with
the new employee-owners. DWQ has badly undercut the communication
with this draft permit.”
The draft permit appears to call for a minimum
of 19% reduction in effluent color to the river. Because the
mill is already well below current permit limits, the net reduction
could be even less than this. Even the apparent 9,000 lb/day
reduction is far short of what is needed to remove the long-standing
and highly controversial color variance to the state color standard
the Mill has had since the late ‘80s. North Carolina has a narrative
in-stream color standard, calling for “no objectionable color”
to be discharged into state waters, but EPA’s interpretation
of that standard has been 50 color units, not very strict, according
to Scott Jackson, Research Director for Clean Water Fund of
NC.
Perhaps most important in setting limits for this
permit is the commitment made in a 1997 Settlement Agreement
by all parties to continue reducing color “at the quickest possible
pace”, and the long history of downstream distrust perpetuated
by still visible color even 40 or more miles downstream in Tennessee.
In 1996, after DWQ called for a final limit of over 98,000 lb/day
of color for Champion’s permit, citizen groups, towns and the
state of Tennessee contested the permit and forced an EPA negotiated
settlement.
“If it hadn’t been for the 1997 Settlement Agreement,”
said David Jenkins, Conservation Director for the American Canoe
Association, “the Pigeon River would be fully twice as dark
as it is right now. The Agreement set aggressive color reduction
goals that were achievable and effectively reduced color throughout
the permit. This new DWQ drafted permit represents a dramatic
departure from that proven approach and ignores a real chance
to end the variance by the end of this permit term.”
EPA was forced to take over the Champion permit
in 1987, and called at that time for reducing color in the Pigeon
River to 50 color units just below “the pipe” within five years.
Despite major technology improvements to the Canton Mill, driven
by continuing activism, it is still not meeting that standard
14 years later. “What DWQ has done is tragic”, says Hope Taylor-Guevara
of Clean Water Fund of NC, “this permit hearing should have
been a celebration of a new era of high expectations and collaboration.”
Drug policy expert Sanho
Tree to speak in Asheville
By Nicholas Holt
Sanho
Tree (pictured right) is the director of the Drug Policy Project
at the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington, DC. He will
be speaking about drug policy reform and American involvement
in the Colombian civil war this Tuesday at Jubilee! (for more
information see Resource Guide).
AGR: Who is using illegal drugs in the
United States?
Sanho Tree: It’s across the board, across
all classes and races.
AGR: The United States has long used, what
IPS [Inter Press Service] literature refers to as “a punitive
and coercive social control model of drug policy.” What have
been the effects of this strategy of drug control?
ST: The results of this punitive model
have been, naturally, disastrous.
There are three major indicators the federal
government itself uses (to examine the drug trade): price, purity
and availability, and those are at, or near, record levels of
failure. The prices are lower than ever, they’re more pure than
ever on the streets, and they’re more available than ever, when
it comes to hard drugs.
In terms of use rates, sometimes they fluctuate
a little bit, but that’s within a certain range.
The prison population, however, has absolutely
exploded. We now incarcerate 2 million people in this country....we
have one twenty second of the world’s population and we have
one quarter of the world’s prisoners.
And, of those 2 million, almost a half million,
a quarter of them, are there for non-violent drug offenses.
So, put another way, we incarcerate more people
for nonviolent drug offenses alone, than the entire European
Union incarcerated for all offenses combined.
And the European Union has a 100 million more
people than we do.
If you look at it as a criminal justice problem,
rather than a public health problem, then your solutions are
very limited.
If, however, you look at this as a public health
problem, one that has social and economic consequences, then
it opens a whole new range of solutions.
Prop. 36 in California that just passed last year
is a landmark... For the first two nonviolent drug offenses
you cannot be sentenced to prison. You’re given the option of
treatment, the treatment being broadly defined for the first
time.
You receive counseling if you are in an abusive
relationship.
If you can’t read you can get literacy help.
For the first time, it starts to look at some of this [as a]
holistic thing, fixing peoples lives rather than punishing their
behaviors.
I would submit that the drug war now causes more
harm than the drugs themselves. And that, in my opinion, is
the definition of bankrupt policy.
AGR: It seems to a lot of people that the
negative effects of the drug war are obvious. Why, would you
speculate, has our government, for so many years, continued
to maintain this attitude towards drug control?
ST: As you said, I think the people are
well ahead of the politicians. Whenever it’s been put to the
general public, in terms of state referenda, or public opinion
polls, 3/4 of the American people believe the drug war is a
failure.
But the politicians are usually the last people
to get it, and what they’re afraid of (is) a fifteen second
negative attack ad during campaign season.
So, all things being equal, they tend not to vote
against anything with the word “anti-drug” in it for fear of
being labeled soft on drugs.
AGR: Could you give us some back ground
on the relationship between Colombia and the US drug trade?
ST: Right now Colombia supplies the majority,
maybe up to 90 percent of the US heroin on the East Coast and
something like 70-80 percent of the cocaine. The drug warriors
have declared a crisis in Colombia, but it’s important to note
that, in terms of our policies in the rest of Latin America,
we’ve squeezed, in the past couple of years, very hard on countries
like Bolivia and Peru, and the drug warriors (in the) State
Department say these are success stories.
Well, what happened, is that we squeezed very
hard on those countries, at great social cost...particularly
in Bolivia, where its caused tremendous upheavals. That has
basically pushed the cultivation of coca leaf from those two
countries into southern Colombia.
Instead of Plan Colombia this year it’s called
the Andean Regional initiative. We’re giving money to Colombia,
to Ecuador, Peru and Brazil, and Venezuela and all these other
countries to basically try to rein in all the drugs we’re trying
to chase out of Colombia. It’s the same old game; we’re pushing
it around from one place to the next, from one continent to
the next.
AGR: Since Plan Colombia has been implemented,
has there been any change in the amount of cocaine and heroin
that’s been making its way into the US from that area?
ST: In terms of the price, purity, availability
in the United States streets, there’s been virtually no change.
AGR: Could you elaborate on the roles of
the guerrillas, the paramilitaries and the Colombian army in
the drug trade?
ST: The drug trade is an equal opportunity
corrupter. All sides in this conflict have been involved in
the drug trade. The most famous, in this country is, of course,
is the FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia), the guerrillas,
and that’s what a lot of our US assistance is targeting, coca
cultivation in southern Colombia, areas which the FARC controls.
However, the paramilitaries are even more deeply
involved in the drug trade, by their own admission. Carlos Castana,
one of the heads of the paramilitaries, has gone on national
television and admitted that he gets 70 percent of his revenues
from the drug trade. However, we’re not really going after him.
The Colombian military itself has historically
been very corrupt.
Last year there were a number of famous busts
involving Colombian Air Force planes and lots of cocaine being
intercepted in Miami.
And this reaches right into the US embassy. Last
year, Col. James Hiett and his wife were busted for using the
diplomatic pouch to send heroin back to the United States.
And he was in charge of our counter-narcotics
down there.
As long as we have this mechanism of drug prohibition
that creates this wealth, we’ll have the conflict go on and
on down there. The paramilitaries and the guerrillas can continue
to arm themselves and fight their war, and fund themselves through
this drug trade. They no longer need a Washington or a Moscow
or Beijing to back their insurgencies. They can do it themselves
now.
Right now we don’t have enough public support
to commit US forces down there in the drug war. So one of the
ways that they’ve been able to get around this is the use of
private military contractors. A lot of these are former military
people. A lot of people call these people mercenaries. In many
ways they are just that. When a mercenary, when a contractor
gets killed down there, you don’t have these flag draped coffins
coming into Dover Air Force Base. There’s very little media
scrutiny of this in the past. A number of these pilots working
for a company called DynCorp...have been killed already.
But they’re listed as US citizens who died in
the line of work. They’re not US service personnel. Now that
there’s so much media attention focused on this, its only a
matter of time before one of these pilots or a helicopter full
of these people gets shot down and killed or captured. And then
we’ve really got a problem because...there isn’t public support
to commit US forces and if they do get shot down or captured,
then suddenly Congress has to decide, are we going to retaliate
and escalate this war?. Or are we going to turn the other cheek
and forget it happened? Or are we going to tuck our tail between
our legs and run away?
My guess is that we’ll retaliate. And this could
lead us into a back door (like) the kind that got us into Vietnam.
So this back door, privatized escalation of the war is a very
dangerous thing.
AGR: That was the Clinton administration
that managed to push through plan Colombia.
ST: Oh yeah. This is a bipartisan mess.
I suspect one of the main reasons the Clinton administration
pushed for this last year so hard was to inoculate Al Gore and
the Democratic Party. The conjunction of the Colombian aid vote
and the election year was a terrible coincidence.
And now we’ve committed to this course and we
should listen to the first rule of holes -- when you find yourself
in one, stop digging.
Miriam DesHainais assisted greatly in the editing
of this interview.
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