because a prison sentence can be ended if new evidence or a successful appeal shows that they were wrongfully convicted. A death sentence cannot be reversed once it is applied.
As to the appeal process: does everybody on death row have the same access to the same quality of lawyer? is the appeal process also dependant upon people to carry it out and make the decision? I know of several cases in the UK where initial appeals have upheld the conviction and later appeals (brought when new evidence has been brought forward, or when a lack of probity in the police case has been uncovered) have resulted in their being freed.
The Birmingham Six are a classic case. They were convicted because they were in the wrong place, at the wrong time and happened to be Irish:
Quote:
In March 1976 their first appeal was dismissed by Lord Chief Justice Widgery[12].
Journalist (later Government minister) Chris Mullin investigated the case for Granada TV's World in Action series. In 1985, the first of several World in Action programmes casting serious doubt on the men's convictions was broadcast. In 1986, Mullin's book, Error of Judgment - The Truth About the Birmingham Pub Bombings, set out a detailed case supporting the men's innocence including his claim to have met with some of those actually responsible for the bombings. Home Secretary Douglas Hurd MP referred the case back to the Court of Appeal.
In January 1988, after a six week hearing (at that time the longest criminal appeal hearing ever held), the men's convictions were upheld. The appeal judges, under the Lord Chief Justice Lord Lane, in their summing up strongly supported the original conviction. Over the next three years newspaper articles, television documentaries and books brought forward new evidence to question the conviction while campaign groups calling for the men's release sprang up across Britain, Ireland, Europe and the USA.
Their third appeal, in 1991, was successful. Hunter was represented by Lord Gifford QC, others by noted human rights solicitor, Gareth Peirce. New evidence of police fabrication and suppression of evidence, the discrediting of both the confessions and the 1975 forensic evidence led to the Crown withdrawing most of its case against the men.
The Court of Appeal stated about the forensic evidence that: Dr. Skuse's conclusion was wrong, and demonstrably wrong, judged even by the state of forensic science in 1974
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This is disturbing on a number of levels. Firstly, had the death penalty been an option at the time of their conviction these men would almost certainly have been executed. The impetus to keep pushing for appeals would therefore have been greatly lessened (although a recent pardon of a man wrongly hanged in the 60s would suggest it may have been possible) and the best outcome would be a posthumous pardon. The political nature of their conviction may have led to continued investigation into the safety of their conviction. That impetus would be a rarity, however. The man hanged in the 60s was a cause celeb because of his severe learning disabilities. An average bloke wrongfully convicted of rape or murder and hanged for it, wuold simply be dead and there wuold be no lengthy process of uncovering an uncomfortable truth: we would never know he'd died an innocent.
Secondly, because there was no death penalty involved, these men were eventually freed. Having lost half theirlives to a prison sentence for a crime of which they were entirely innocent, they at the least have had the opportunity to experience freedom again. It's a small comfort, but it's better than nothing.
Thirdly, the political element of this conviction and the unwillingness of the system to overturn it worries me. Class, race and politics. This is in our system where the judges are not elected. Add the potential for a Judge losing his job if he acts in a way that upsets his electorate (opens him to charges of being soft on crime for example) and the risks are, in my opinion, all the greater. How are you that there is never a racial/class/political element in either your original trials or subsequent appeals process?
As a final question, to repeat myself somewhat: is everyone able to access the same quality of legal representation? Is it free at the point of need? Are the lawyers representing the poor, the same as those representing the wealthy?