4 OPINION Thursday, September 29, 1988 Page 4 The Michigan Daily 4 Eie m dtgan t t Mi Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Abolish capital punishment Vol. I C No. 16 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. Free Hartford By Kenneth Wittenberg The Presidential candidates have sharply clashed over the death penalty. It is an is- sue that should rcally be no issue at all. It is time to abolish the death penalty. I spent last summer representing death row inmates in South Carolina. I have seen the way our society chooses, prose- cutes and executes its citizens mirrors and mimics the killers it condemns to death. There is one simple reason why the death penalty should be abolished. It is ar- bitrarily and capriciously administered. And this is how it will always be for as long as we have humans judging whether other humans should live or die. Whether you are sentenced to death de- pends on where you commit the crime. In the city I worked, someone could commit a murder and get a 20 year sentence. If he had crossed over the river that runs FIFTEEN POLITICAL DISSIDENTS, seized in a raid by government agents, are charged with conspiracy related to a bank robbery. Two of them are incar- cerated for nearly three years without bail or trial. Illegally obtained docu- ments and wiretaps are submitted to a judge as evidence against them. When the first five defendants are finally brought to trial, their case receives al- most no coverage in the national press. Is this South Africa? The Soviet Union? Some Third World torture state? Wrong. This is Hartford, Con- necticut, and this is the trial of the Puerto Rico/Hartford 15 which is just now getting under way more than three years after the original arrests took place. Jury selection will probably be completed sometime this week, one of the defendants told the Daily. Close observers of the long-delayed trial and the various pretrial maneuver- ings say that the case is more about political persecution than criminal prosecution. The defendants - all members of an underground group that advocates Puerto Rican independence - claim they were targeted for prosecution by U.S. authorities because of their political activism. They are convinced that they will not receive. a fair trial. The evidence seems to support these contentions. In September 1983, a Wells Fargo guard escaped from a Hartford ware- house with $7.2 million in cash, representing the second largest bank robbery in U.S. history. Victor Gerena has never been captured. Two years later, 200 FBI agents wielding automatic weapons raided the homes of dozens of Puerto Rican inde- pendentistas. All are members of the Macheteros, the same underground or- ganization to which Gerena belongs. Their homes were ransacked and their printing press destroyed. last summer, I have heard many argu- ments. Many people have a gut-level re- action that they believe in the death penalty and cannot pinpoint why. When more logical arguments come to the sur- face, they can be boiled down to four propositions: The death penalty serves the goal of retributive justice. "If my family were killed by a vicious murderer, I would want that person to die." This is a central theme for supporters of the death penalty. This is also precisely why there should be no death penalty. Be- cause if your family were killed, you are not the one to be deciding the verdict and sentence the defendant should get. Emo- tion should not play a role in any trial, yet in a capital trial it always does. If a mem- ber of your family were slain, the law would not allow you to kill the murderer. In fact, you would be charged with murder. The fifteen finally arrested were charged with several counts of conspiracy related to the robbery. (The U.S. government has admitted that none of the defendants now going on trial actually participated in the rob- bery.) Massive civil rights violations con- tinued after the arrests. The fifteen were transported by U.S. military aircraft to the United States. Most were imprisoned without bail for 16 months. Detained for 32 months without bail, Filberto Rios became the longest held prisoner in U.S. history. So much for the presumption of innocence until proven guilty. So much for the right to a speedy trial. The case has set other scandalous precedents. The U.S. government has already spend a record $25 million to prosecute the Hartford 15, and the trial has not even yet begun. More than 400 witnesses have been summoned by the prosecution to testify in the govern- ment's behalf. These include many of the family members and friends of the defendants. Pretrial hearings have revealed nu- merous other civil rights violations by the FBI. Although wiretapping of any kind is strictly prohibited by the Puerto Rican constitution, the U.S. govern- ment's major evidence consists of illic- itly taped phone conversations. Fifty of the tapes submitted by the FBI as in- criminating evidence were tampered with and had to be thrown out by the judge last July. The FBI has also ad- mitted it recorded conversations which they had no authorization to intercept and later destroyed these tapes. Whatever the outcome of the trial, justice will not be done. The Hartford 15, incarcerated exiles in a country that has colonized their own, are in trial for crimes that will never be proven in a court of law. 'If a member of your family were slain, the law would not allow you to kill the murderer. In fact, you would be charged with murder. Yet when the state executes someone, it is doing exactly what it forbids you to do. The state, and that includes each of us, becomes the murderer.' committed on the spur of the moment: in fights between family members or friends, in panic during a botched robbery, in a drugged or drunken state. There is not much thinking going on in any of these situations. In talking to people on death row, this much is clear: they are generally, not people who think about tomorrow when they act today. Most death row inmates have come from backgrounds of routine and extreme violence. Some are mentally retarded. We had one client who has a mental age of ten. He has no idea why he is even on death row, but is trying to learn how to read so he can get a high school diploma, which he believes will get him off the Row. I believe that you and I would be deterred by the death penalty, but you and I would also be deterred by a night in prison. The death penalty saves taxpay- ers money. This is a common misconception. A recent New York study concluded that just the trial and the first appeal in a death penalty case cost more than twice as much as imprisoning someone for life. In addi- tion, capital cases are creating a tremen- dous logjam in the courts. Former Supreme Court Justice Lewis Powell re- cently called for the abolition of capital punishment because of the extreme strain on the courts. By killing murderers, we are as- suring they never murder again. While logically true, this argument misses the point. If it is longer sentences and tougher parole eligibility we need, then let's tackle that problem. Jurors, be- cause of the simple human inability to do so, are not likely to accurately choose who is in danger of killing again and who is not. So it becomes a kind of "Death Lot- tery" to determine who the "lucky win- ners" will be. And there is a chance one of the Lottery winners is innocent. Studies have shown that more than 100 innocent people have been executed in this century. We need stricter and swifter punishment, not more death. Last Sunday night, George Bush said, "I believe in the sanctity of human life." This eloquently sums up the moral mes- sage that our society ought to adhere to when we judge others. through the city into another county and committed the exact same murder, he would get death. There are people on death row whose accomplices in the murder got off with nothing. Race plays a huge role in who lives and who dies. It is the race of the defendant and the race of the victim that are crucial. An authoritative study has shown that Blacks who kill whites are far more likely to re- ceive a death sentence than whites who kill Blacks. Money is also a factor. There are no wealthy people on death row in America. Not only are jurors likely to place a higher value on an affluent mur- derer's life, but this type of defendant can afford to hire a lawyer who will put time and effort into his case; this is something poor defendants seldom receive. Thus, it is not who you are or what you did that de- termines whether you live or die, but how much you are worth and what color your skin happens to be. In talking to people about what I did Kenneth Wittenberg is a second-year law student at the University. Yet when the state executes someone, it is doing exactly what it forbids you to do. The state, and that includes each of us, becomes the murderer. Who are we to say who should live and who should die? This is not the way a civilized society ought to act. The U.S.S.R and South Africa are the only two other industrialized countries that still execute their citizens. The death penalty has been abolished in all of Western Europe and in Canada. Justice is never served by killing peo- ple. Nothing will bring back those who are dead. They do not miraculously reap- pear when the perpetrator is strapped in the- electric chair and jolted with 4000 watts of electricity. Nothing comes from it but more suffering. Justice demands punish- ment but state-sanctioned murder only de- humanizes all of us. The death penalty is a deterrent. Whether the death penalty deters crime is nearly impossible to empirically evalu- ate. But observation and intuition can give us a clue to the answer. Most murders are Walking alone Israel created refugee plight W OMEN IN U.S. culture are forced to accept the reality that it is potentially, dangerous for them to walk alone at night. This should not be used to re- strict the rights of women to choose nor should it be used to blame women for violence committed against them if they do choose to walk alone at night. There are several safe alternatives available to women that do not restrict their independence. Recently, the University has begun a number of programs to increase women's independence at night. The Night Owl bus service, Safewalk, and Night Ride-cab service provide safe transportation around campus. In attempts to address the issue the University has historically done little more than tell women to "Never Walk Alone." This has served to disempower women by restricting their freedom of choice. It has fostered a victim blam- ing atmosphere which makes women responsible for violence committed against them while walking alone at night. "Never Walk Alone" perpetuates myths and norms that are damaging to women. One prevailing myth is that a woman asks to be sexually assaulted if she walks alone. Telling women to never walk alone allows society to scapegoat women and to avoid the real issues behind society's rape culture. This phrase encourages people to blame women if they are sexually as..- saulted. Victim blaming begins with a seemingly innocent phrase "Never Walk Alone" and ends with a verdict of not guilty for a rapist. "Never Walk Alone" also ignores the issue of date and acquaintance rape and perpetuates the myth that most rapes are perpetrated by strangers and happen outdoors. An understanding of these issues is extremely important and rele- vant to the lives of women on college campuses. On college campuses, 90 percent of reported rapes are committed by dates or acquaintances and 80 percent happen inside. Never walking alone will de- crease the risk of a sexual assault, but not eliminate it. Insisting that never walking alone alleviates the problem of sexual assault diverts the attention from the more prevalent problem of date and acquaintance rape. Repeatedly telling women never to walk alone reinforces the "norm" of women's dependence on men. Never walking alone means always depending on someone to protect you when outside at night. It is possible for women to be safe outdoors at night while maintaining personal power and independence. It is understandable that women feel uncomfortable walking home alone at night and for that reason women have fought to have programs established to insure their safety and at the same time encourage their indepen- dence. Everyone has the right to walk alone if they choose. Women who don't feel comfortable walking alone should have services that'allow them the greatest amount of independence. But women who do feel comfortable walking alone should be able to do so without being blamed for violence against them. By Hana Odeh Its 10:30 a.m. and the Michigan Union mall is teaming with people; breakfast in hand I decide to find a table. Soon enough, I see one in the midst of the tap room, pieces of the morning Free Press , cover its top. As I begin to sit down, the bold caption of an editorial catches my attention it reads, "History shows Israel is not to blame" (Detroit Free Press, 4/4/88).; Louis H. Golden, a member of the Anti- Defamation of B'nai B'rith and a member J of the board of governors of Haifa Univer- sity in Israel is currently living in Warren, Michigan and the author of the editorial. Golden for the most part, contends that Israel is not to blame for the Arab refugee - problem and that the Arab countries are* the ones responsible for creating the prob- lem in the beginning. He specifically states, "...historically the Arab refugee problem cannot be blamed on Israel." He later says,"Why is it that the Arab coun- tries that created the refugee problem in the first place, ... refuse to take care of their brethren?' It is unbelievable that such a claim be , made. When contrary to Golden's belief, history only suggests that the Arab refugee problem is a direct result of the Israelis hostile takeover of hundreds of thousands of homes and villages since 1948. Men, women and children were forced to leave their homes which, in most , cases, were destroyed by shellfire to be only herded into settlement camps. In 1948, as a result of Israeli aggression and the establishment of the "State of Is- rael," 750, 000 Palestinian Arabs were uprooted from their homes and sought refuge in the pallid "refugee" camps in the Gaza Strip, Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon. These were the lucky ones; on April 8, ; 1948 the Irgan, terrorist Zionist group,a staged a vicious attack on the village camp of Dir-Yasseen, killing every man, woman, and child. The resulting panic Nnn n )ar. is n .:; .r C spread like wildfire and drove other Pales- tinian Arabs to seek refuge. History embedded in 1967 also substan- tiates the argument that it is Israel's ag- gressive actions and not the Arabs them- selves that are creating the refugee prob- lem. In 1967, the Jordan West Bank, the Gaza Strip, the Syrian Heights, and Sinai fell to Israeli strongholds. As a result, 410,000 new Palestinian Arabs were forced to leave their homes in the Jordan West Bank and Gaza to take refuge in the East Bank. Those living in the Syrian Heights and Sinai Peninisula also suffered the same disastrous plight. More recently, in the Israeli village of Beita, Palestinian Arabs were needlessly evicted from their homes when the death of a 15 year-old Jewish girl was blamed on a group of Palestinian Arabs. In reality, the girl was shot accidentally by an Israeli soldier. Immediately after the shooting, Israeli forces moved in and bombed 13 homes randomly so as to intimidate any opposing brute forces the Arabs might conjure. These homes supposedly have belonged to the girl's attackers but in- stead, families now see their homes as a pile of stones reduced to rubble. They have no place to go and will not leave; they are forced to "turn the other cheek" and call the ditch their home. Conditions in a refugee camp are de- plorable; fresh water and food staples are hard to come by and seldom fresh. Small children scantily clothed dot the landscape. Many are fatherless, the majority of their fathers imprisoned for trivialities ( i.e., being Palestinian), trial or no trial. As a method to curb demonstrations by Pales- tinian youths, Israeli soldiers (since 1977) have come to the refugee camps, threaten- ing 11 thru 16 year olds with live snakes, beatings till they bleed or break a bone, or arrested without charge in the middle of the night. The severity of the Arab refugee situa- tion has been nonetheless recognized. The Kuwati representative, Dr. Fayez Sayegh, at the 1976 United Nations General As- sembly has stated. "the dislodeement of the bulk of the indigenous Palestinian Arab population of the territory seized by the Israelis in 1948 was swift, the acquisition of their lands, homes, and other property was immediate, and their return to their ancestral homeland has been effectively prevented." The same logic that had decreed the Palestinian dislodgement also incited the corollary that ousted Palestinians must not be permitted to return to their homeland. The former general, Moshe Dayan ex- pressed this rationale by admitting in 1967, that "economically we can absorb the refugees" but nevertheless ruled out the return of the displaced Palestinians as be- ing "not in accord with our aims (to have a Jewish state)." Without the United States granting Israel billions of dollars in aid over the years I'm sure Israel would think twice before making such a state- ment. To further expedite the Arabs from their homes and thus creating more refugees, an extensive Jewish immigration drive was initiated in 1948 and thus between 1948 and 1968, 1,676,098 Jewish settlers mi- grated from countries everywhere to oc- cupy Palestine after 1948. Presently, some 67,000 new settlers have settled into a 100 new compounds in the West Bank over the past 20 years. The ever present influx of new Jewish settlers to the occu- pied lands perpetually displaces the Pales- tinian from their ancestral homes and robs them of mere existence, but then again this is exactly why the immigration drive. was begun. Obviously, the creation of Arab refugees serves a purpose, to in effect, free the land from the Arabs who have lived on it for centuries to thus create a "Jewish" land. Therefore, Golden's claim that the Arab countries are creating the Arab refugee problem is ludicrous, for what absurd rea- son would the Arabs want to deny their brethren a homeland and basic human rights? One should question the occupier !L5N~T It y~S - o~a~ 'NISIIE; ~ $EY A - . I- - - --t AWFU. ?COULD FIND A~ WAY TO BS LE.SS CONSPICUOU SLYHomp-ES I I