On March
9, 2011, Quinn signed the bill which abolished the death penalty in Illinois.
On signing the bill, Quinn stated, "It is impossible to create a perfect
system, one that is free of all mistakes, free of all discrimination with
respect to race or economic circumstance or geography. To have a consistent,
perfect death penalty system, I have concluded, after looking at everything
I’ve been given, that that’s impossible in our state. I think it’s the right
and just thing to abolish the death penalty."
REALLY? PAT QUINN? If there is a
problem with the system, what you must do is to fix it. There are more
miscarriages of justice when you fail to put the evildoers to their deserved
deaths. To add insult to injury, I wonder why you support abortion when it does
nothing but kill innocents. There were innocent men exonerated from Death Row
and they were not executed, when the death penalty gets abolished, more
innocent people will die without it. If you don’t believe it, Homicides in Chicago soared by 60 percent in the first three months of 2012, continuing a
troublesome trend that began late last year. Non fatal shootings also rose
sharply in the first quarter, Police Department statistics show.
These two high profile cases will also be lessons learn from abolishing the death penalty:
The murder of Jitka Vesel.
The murder of Kelli O'Laughlin.
Remember
Edmund Burke once said, “Nothing turns out to be so
oppressive and unjust as a feeble government.”
Immanuel
Kant will be disappointed with you; he once said that a society
that is not willing to demand a life of somebody who has taken somebody else's
life is simply immoral.
Here are two more quotes to lecture
you:
We need a brave
leader like the current Thai Deputy Prime Minister, Chalerm Ubumrung! We need someone who stands up for the public and not
getting manipulated by those abolitionists!
Please remember the following
murdered victims and their families whom justice was denied in Illinois:
Rachel
Sloop White whose 12-year-old Lonna, was murdered
by Daniel Ramsey of Keokuk, Iowa, in 1996 near Burnside. Ramsey had not one but
two murder trials, and was sentenced to death for shooting Lonna Sloop and
Laura Marson of Basco to death after both trials (the first was overturned on a
technicality). He is one of 15 people on Death Row in Illinois. Illinois has a
moratorium on the death penalty, so Ramsey will sit on death row for the rest
of his life unless the moratorium is lifted.
"There
are different circumstances, but in mine, it did happen. They know he (Ramsey)
did it, he knows he did it. He deserves to die," says White, who survived
being shot in the head on that horrible day in July 1996. "It's not fair
to my sister. She didn't even get to have kids, to go to prom and to graduate
from high school, to make a living.
"It's
not fair. I would definitely tell them that."
Governor Pat Quinn signed the bill
which abolished the death penalty in Illinois on Wednesday 9 March 2011: But such feelings were not shared by
Rachel Williams, who still has bullet fragments in her skull from the night in
1996 when Daniel Ramsey shot her in the head, killed her 12-year-old sister,
raped and killed her best friend, and wounded two toddlers.
Williams
was so determined to see her former boyfriend receive the death penalty that
she relived the gruesome details of the shooting before a jury twice — the
second time after the Illinois Supreme Court ordered a new trial. On Wednesday,
Williams said she was reliving that night all over again, knowing that Ramsey's
life would be spared while her sister's was not.
"Nobody
knows what it's like to hear your sister say, 'Don't shoot me,'" said
Williams, 32, of Peoria. "Why should he be able to sit there in prison
until he turns over and dies? It's not fair."
Jim
Dudovick
whose daughter, Dawn Dudovick was murdered by Williams Peeples on 1988 in
Illinois.
CHICAGO -- When Gov. George Ryan For the former member of
the Canadian House of Commons, see George Ryan (Canadian politician).
Surely there would be no question about the fate of her killer, William Peeples, who burst into Dawn Dudovick's Schaumburg apartment in 1988, stabbed her more than 30 times and left her to die.
Peeples not only left a trail of blood between his apartment and hers, but DNA tests confirmed that the blood in Peeples' sink was hers.
But now, Jim Dudovick and the relatives of scores of other murder victims find themselves fighting once again for what they thought they had won long ago: a death sentence for the killers.
"I thought the hell of all this was over and we could heal," Dudovick said. "Now it seems like we're fighting for justice for my daughter all over again."
Surely there would be no question about the fate of her killer, William Peeples, who burst into Dawn Dudovick's Schaumburg apartment in 1988, stabbed her more than 30 times and left her to die.
Peeples not only left a trail of blood between his apartment and hers, but DNA tests confirmed that the blood in Peeples' sink was hers.
But now, Jim Dudovick and the relatives of scores of other murder victims find themselves fighting once again for what they thought they had won long ago: a death sentence for the killers.
"I thought the hell of all this was over and we could heal," Dudovick said. "Now it seems like we're fighting for justice for my daughter all over again."
Jamie
Tsambikou whose sister, Bridget Drobney was murdered by
Robert Turner on 1985 in Illinois.
"I tell you what this
means if this happens," said Jamie Tsambikou, whose family will attend the
clemency hearing for Robert Turner who was sentenced to death for the 1985
slaying of her sister, Bridget Drobney. "It means what little justice my
sister got will be undone. That will be the legacy of Governor Ryan."
Crystal
Fitch
whose sister, Felicia Lewis was raped and murdered by Anthony Brown in 1994 in
Illinois. Brown also murdered Reginald Wilson, Lewis’s boyfriend.
For people like Crystal Fitch, the hearings will be
unlike anything they've been through during the years of trials, motions and
appeals.
"There's no new evidence, nothing new," Fitch said of the case against Anthony Brown who was convicted of raping and murdering her sister, Felicia Lewis, and killing Lewis' boyfriend, Reginald Wilson, in 1994.
"This is not one of those cases where DNA evidence could exonerate him. DNA tests confirmed he did it. He knows it, we know it," she said.
"There's no new evidence, nothing new," Fitch said of the case against Anthony Brown who was convicted of raping and murdering her sister, Felicia Lewis, and killing Lewis' boyfriend, Reginald Wilson, in 1994.
"This is not one of those cases where DNA evidence could exonerate him. DNA tests confirmed he did it. He knows it, we know it," she said.
Dawn Pueschel, whose brother and sister-in-law were
beaten to death in Chicago in 1983.
"The
horror of this is that everything was done by the book," said Dawn
Pueschel, whose brother and sister-in-law were beaten to death in Chicago in
1983. "There were no mistakes, everything pointed to them (two brothers
convicted in the slayings) and still this is happening."
Andrea
Covert, whose sister, Mimi Covert, 30, was abducted raped
and murdered in 1985 by DeWayne Britz in Illinois.
"If
they can drop them from death row, they can drop anything," said Andrea
Covert, whose sister, Mimi Covert, 30, was abducted raped and murdered in 1985
by DeWayne Britz. Britz not only confessed, he led police to her body.
Roger Schnorr whose sister
Donna was a 27-year-old nurse from Geneva when she was killed by Brian Dugan in
1984. Dugan was already serving time in prison for that crime when he was
sentenced to death for the 1983 DuPage County murder of 10-year-old Jeanine
Nicarico.
"He took their lives from them, and he still lives," Schnorr said at a Springfield news conference. "Death is the right sentence for this killer."
Governor Pat Quinn
signed the bill which abolished the death penalty in Illinois on Wednesday 9
March 2011: For many,
Quinn’s signing means those who suffered the most heinous of acts would never
see adequate retribution.
“What right does he have to live when
he’s taken the lives of three young girls?” said Roger Schnorr, whose 27-year-old sister,
Donna, died at Dugan’s hands in 1984. “Why does he get
to enjoy even the simple pleasures in life, like eating a meal? It’s not fair.”
Cindy McNamara whose
daughter, Shannon was murdered by Anthony Mertz in 2001. In 2001, Mertz
broke into Shannon's apartment during her senior year at Eastern Illinois
University in Charleston, strangling and mutilating the Rolling Meadows High
School graduate and aspiring teacher.
“Having the death penalty is not about revenge for me, because I
know I'll see Shannon one day and I know God is watching over her and that
she's happy,” McNamara said. “We need this on the books because Mertz is evil through and
through, and having one less evil person on this earth is what's best for
society.”
Cindy
McNamara, who's disappointed she never got notice that a vote on the death
penalty may come up in the House, last week wrote an impassioned plea to Gov.
Quinn appealing to him not as the governor, but as a parent.
She
urged Quinn to read the victim impact statement she made during Mertz's
sentencing hearing in order to get a brief glimpse into Shannon's all-too-brief
21 years. In it, she described her daughter coming home from college, not
bothering to drop her laundry load and book bag before they embraced.
“At times the thought of life without her is more than I feel I can
bear,” McNamara said in court. “At times it even hurts to breathe.”
Despite
the death penalty's controversial history, McNamara strongly believes each case
should be considered individually.
Even
though Mertz has never confessed to killing Shannon, there was overwhelming
evidence in the case: his DNA was found under her fingertips, his credit card
was left at the crime scene and cellmates testified Mertz spoke openly about
killing Shannon. Investigators have tried to link him to the 1999 murder of
Charleston's Amy Warner.
“I agree that there's nothing worse than being in prison when you're
innocent, but he's (Mertz) the poster boy for the death penalty,” McNamara said. “He has no soul, and
there's never been any doubt about his guilt.”
Family members of murder victims also made
emotional pleas. Among them was Cindy McNamara, whose daughter, Shannon, was
murdered in 2001 while attending Eastern Illinois University.
Shannon McNamara was asleep in her locked
off-campus apartment when she was raped, strangled, beaten and stabbed. Her
body was left in the living room. A washcloth was stuffed in her mouth.
Former EIU student Anthony Mertz was
convicted, becoming the first person sent to death row after Ryan emptied it.
"We have the death penalty for a
reason," Cindy
McNamara wrote in a letter to Quinn. "This is the
reason!"
Pat and Tom
Nicarico whose 10-year-old daughter, Jeanine Nicarico was murdered
by Brian Dugan. Dugan abducted, raped and fatally bludgeoned the bubbly
fifth-grader from Naperville in 1983, then went on to commit two more sex
slayings as well as several other attacks.
The
parents and sisters of murdered 10-year-old Jeanine Nicarico applauded a jury's
decision sentencing convicted killer Brian Dugan to death in late 2009. Dugan
abducted, raped and fatally bludgeoned the bubbly fifth-grader from Naperville
in 1983, then went on to commit two more sex slayings as well as several other
attacks.
“The news of the vote is more than disappointing,” parents Pat and Tom Nicarico wrote in a statement from
their South Carolina home. “(It) feels like our almost
twenty-eight year odyssey seeking justice for Jeanine's murder has been
overturned.”
The
Nicaricos are joining the McNamaras in calling on the Senate and Gov. Quinn not
to follow the House's vote, saying it's not an act of prudence and caring, but
rather cowardice, laziness and a disregard for justice.
“It is lazy because it eliminates the necessity to further evaluate
the latest legal reforms and makes moot the need for further research into the
matter; it's the easy way out of a burdensome predicament,” the Nicaricos wrote. “If the system
is broken, fix it — don't destroy it.”
“It (capital punishment) serves a
purpose. It should be on the books.”
Governor Pat Quinn
signed the bill which abolished the death penalty in Illinois on Wednesday 9
March 2011: While
some celebrated Quinn’s decision to abolish a punishment that for years exposed
a system fraught with errors, it rattled others to the core.
Jeanine’s
father, Thomas Nicarico, said he’s struggled with his personal tragedy for 28
years. Now, he envisions a party on death row.
“They’re
celebrating because even though they took lives, the governor gave them their
lives back,” said
Nicarico. “He (Dugan) has killed three girls. He has
admitted it. DNA has proven it. How much more certain do you have to be?”
Governor Pat Quinn signed the bill
which abolished the death penalty in Illinois on Wednesday 9 March 2011: Tom Nicarico thought his family's
long, emotional wait for justice had finally ended in November 2009 when jurors
condemned Brian Dugan to death for the rape and murder of his young daughter.
But
Gov. Pat Quinn's decision Wednesday to ban the death penalty in Illinois and commute
the sentences of Dugan and 14 other death row inmates to life without parole
left Nicarico outraged.
"It's not just the murder of my daughter," he said by telephone from his home in
South Carolina. "He murdered two other people's
daughters and attacked others. This man earned it, and he's not the only one on
death row who earned it."
Diane Martin, whose sister, Ruth Gee, was
murdered in 2009 along with her husband and three of their children in
downstate Beason.
"Please consider the family of the
victims, those left behind to remember," wrote Diane Martin, whose sister, Ruth Gee, was
murdered in 2009 along with her husband and three of their children in
downstate Beason.
"It is plain that the persons
responsible for committing the crime care nothing for life," Martin told Quinn. "Why should the state protect them from the same fate
they have dealt?"
Pam Bosley is a Chicago woman whose son was gunned down
outside a church in 2006 says she's disappointed that Gov. Pat Quinn has
decided to abolish the death penalty in Illinois.
Pam Bosley says she and other loved ones of victims of gun violence met Quinn a few weeks ago and tried to talk him out of signing the bill.
Bosley's 18-year-old son, Terrell, was killed in 2006. Police are still searching for his killer and she says she wants whoever is responsible to be executed.
Bosley says that people who haven't lost a loved one to gun violence don't know the pain she's endured. She says the thought of allowing the person who killed her son to "breathe the air that I breathe" is almost too much to bear.
“I can’t see my son at all no more. I can’t see him grow old” she said “They
took all that from me, so I feel that their life needs to be ended”.
Mario
DeCicco is the brother of Sheri Coleman. She
and her two sons were murdered by Christopher Coleman in 2009.
Christopher
Coleman, the Columbia, Ill., man accused of strangling his wife and two sons in
2009.
But
surviving relatives like Mario DeCicco, the brother of murder victim Sheri
Coleman, are still hoping some combination of events in the courtroom and the
Legislature will make it happen.
"Any person convicted for killing a child should be put to
death," DeCicco
said.
It's
a common sentiment in Monroe County, where residents shouted
"Murderer!" and "Baby killer!" when Coleman arrived at the
courthouse in Waterloo for his arraignment in 2009. Coleman's preliminary
hearing was packed with spectators, among them a woman in a black T-shirt
depicting an electric chair and the message, "I
saved you a seat."
Governor Pat Quinn signed the bill
which abolished the death penalty in Illinois on Wednesday 9 March 2011: Nicarico's anger was echoed by many
victims' families after they learned of a governor's decision to clear
Illinois' death row for the second time in less than a decade.
Karen
Bond, 63, whose son, Jerry Weber, was killed by Edward Tenney in 1992, also was
upset.
"I was really looking forward to sitting in the front row while
they executed this guy,"
Bond said. "Now the taxpayers of Illinois have to
pay his room and board."
Governor Pat Quinn signed the bill
which abolished the death penalty in Illinois on Wednesday 9 March 2011: Far fewer inmates were affected by
Quinn's decision. And not all relatives of their victims were upset. At least
one family was divided.
As
a 9-year-old five years ago, Quincy Newburn had urged a jury to give the death
sentence to Dion Banks, who was convicted of killing his mother in 2001 during
a carjacking while Quincy and his brother, who were 4 and 5 at the time,
watched from the back seat.
"I've already forgiven him for what he did, but I want to see
justice in action,"
said Quincy, who is now 14.
Quincy's
father, Tyrone Newburn Sr., 53, once felt the same way but has since changed
his mind — though not because he has forgiven Banks.
"Just
putting them to death would be too easy for the offender, so I figure it would
be more of a punishment to let them rot in jail for the rest of their
lives," said the elder Newburn, a maintenance worker for Chicago Public
Schools.
The next time when
Illinois wants to reinstate the death penalty, do not use lethal injection but
use the electric chair, the gallows or hire a Saudi Arabian executioner.
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