California executes oldest inmate (AP) Updated: 2006-01-17 19:20
California executed its oldest death row inmate early Tuesday despite
arguments from prisoner advocates that condemning a blind and wheelchair-bound
inmate in his 70s violated the U.S. Constitution's ban on cruel and unusual
punishment.
In this photo released of Benjamin Vaughn,
lower right, with his great uncle Clarence Ray Allen, lower left, and
Allen's son Roger Allen, upper left, and his wife, Dell Ray Allen, upper
right, inside San Quentin Prison in San Quentin, Calif., Monday, Jan. 16,
2006, before the execution of Allen. Allen, 76, was sentenced to death for
ordering the slaying of three people at a Fresno, Calif., market while he
was behind bars in 1980 for another murder.
[AP] | Clarence Ray Allen, whose 76th birthday was Monday, was pronounced dead at 12:38 a.m. at
San Quentin State Prison. He became the second-oldest inmate put
to death nationally since the Supreme Court allowed capital punishment to resume in
1976.
Allen, who was blind and mostly deaf, suffered from diabetes and had a nearly
fatal heart attack in September only to be revived and returned to death row,
was assisted into the death chamber by four large correctional officers and
lifted out of his wheelchair.
His lawyers had raised two claims never before endorsed by the high court:
that executing a frail old man would violate the Constitution's ban on cruel and
unusual punishment, and that the 23 years he spent on death row were
unconstitutionally cruel as well.
The high court rejected his requests for a stay of execution about 10 hours
before he was to be put to death. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger denied Allen
clemency Friday.
Allen went to prison for having his teenage son's 17-year-old girlfriend
murdered for fear she would tell police about a grocery-store burglary. While
behind bars, he tried to have witnesses in the case wiped out, prosecutors said.
He was sentenced to death in 1982 for hiring a hit man who killed a witness and
two bystanders.
"Allen deserves capital punishment because he was already serving a life
sentence for murder when he masterminded the murders of three innocent young
people and conspired to attack the heart of our criminal justice system," state
prosecutor Ward Campbell said.
Allen expressed his love for family, friends and the other death-row inmates
in a final statement read by Warden Steve Ornoski. Allen ended his statement by
saying, "It's a good day to die. Thank you very much. I love you all. Goodbye."
The family of one of Allen's victims, Josephine Rocha, issued a statement
saying that "justice has prevailed today."
"Mr. Allen abused the justice system with endless appeals until he lived
longer in prison than the short 17 years of Josephine's life," the statement
said.
Last month in Mississippi, John B. Nixon, 77, became the oldest person
executed in the United States since capital punishment resumed. He did not
pursue an appeal based on his age.
Allen's case generated less attention than last month's execution of Crips
gang co-founder Stanley Tookie Williams, whose case set off a nationwide debate
over the possibility of redemption on death row, with Hollywood stars and
capital punishment foes arguing that Williams had made amends by writing
children's books about the dangers of gangs.
There were only about 200 people gathered outside the prison gates before
Allen's execution, about one-tenth of the crowd that came out last
month.
|