DNA evidence clears black man of crime, Missouri still going ahead with execution

DC_Dude

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Just FACTs



The Supreme Court allows execution of #MarcellusWilliams in #Missouri, denying bid for delay but allow me to put this more in context, #liberal #SupremeCourt justices that were appointed by #Obama and #Biden Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and #KetanjiBrownJackson said they wanted to grant the request to halt the execution to allow more evidence. But the conservatives Supreme Court justices appointed by #Bush and #Trump wanted the execution with no delay. But somehow some black folks say #voting doesn’t matter. This matter is all about who we put in office.

Faced with the #DNA evidence and other new information in Williams' case, #StLouis County Prosecuting #Attorney #WesleyBell sought to toss out the conviction on numerous grounds, including the results of the DNA testing and constitutional violations during the jury selection process.

By the way Trump executed 13 black men during the last six months of his #presidency. The 13th #federal #execution concluded just five days before the inauguration of #President-elect #JoeBiden — an opponent of the federal #deathpenalty.
 

DC_Dude

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Was there any outrage when Trump allowed these black men to die?

Two Black men have been executed within two days. Two more are set to die before Biden's inauguration​

Brandon Bernard left, and Alfred Bourgeois were the ninth and 10th people executed since the Justice Department resumed federal executions in May 2019.

(CNN)normal Anger over federal executions continued to grow Friday after two Black men died by lethal injection within nearly 24 hours.

Alfred Bourgeois was executed the day after Brandon Bernard. Bernard's death sentence was criticized by celebrities and politicians who fought until the end to halt the execution.

Bernard's case became a high-profile clemency campaign that advocates say highlights major issues within the justice system. The cases were among the last that were quickly scheduled by the Trump administration. Bernard and Bourgeois were two of four Black men scheduled to die by lethal injection during the Trump administration's final days in the office.

Feds execute 10th death row inmate of 2020
Feds execute 10th death row inmate of 2020

Bourgeois was the 10th person to be executed since Attorney General William Barr announced in July 2019 the revival of capital punishment for federal death row inmates -- a decision that has been fraught with controversy.

The Department of Justice has defended its decision.

"The Department intended to resume executions in December 2019, however due to litigation, the process was suspended," a department spokeswoman told CNN Friday night. "Once the Supreme Court ruled in favor of resuming executions, the Department has proceeded each month -- with the exception of October -- since July 2020."

Although six White men were executed over the summer, critics say that death sentences have disproportionally affected people of color for decades. Five Black men, including Bourgeois and Bernard, have been scheduled to die since Election Day. Bernard's co-defendant Christopher Vailva, who was Black, was executed in September.

On Friday morning, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders tweeted, "Brandon Bernard should be alive today. We must end all federal executions and abolish the death penalty. In a world of incredible violence, the state should not be involved in premeditated murder."

DOJ set to execute 5 federal prisoners before Inauguration Day
DOJ set to execute 5 federal prisoners before Inauguration Day
Bernard was one of five gang members convicted in Texas of killing Stacie and Todd Bagley -- who were youth ministers -- in 1999.

Although Bernard apologized for his role in the crime before he died on Thursday night, it wasn't until 2018, when his legal team learned that the trial prosecutor withheld information from the defense. The alleged violation was the basis of Bernard's appeals and changed the minds of five out of the nine living jurors who sentenced him to death, according to court documents.

"A case like Brandon Bernard's shows that our criminal legal system often prioritizes finality over fairness, even when there are deeply troubling legal issues that have never been addressed by the courts and in spite of widespread calls for clemency," Kristin Houle Cuellar, executive director of Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty, told CNN on Friday.

Texas has consistently lead the country with the most executions and has conducted 570 since 1976.

Since 2015, more than 70% of death sentences in Texas have been imposed on people of color in Texas, according to the nonprofit organization, Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty. Of the 210 Texas death row inmates in Texas: 93 are Black, 57 are White, 54 are Hispanic and six identify as other, according to the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.

Case attracted national attention​

Bernard, 40, was the youngest person in the United States in nearly 70 years to be executed by the federal government for a crime committed when he was a teenager. He was also the ninth of 13 federal death row inmates Barr requested the Bureau of Prisons to schedule to die before Inauguration Day -- January 20.

https://www.cnn.com/2020/12/10/politics/brandon-bernard-executed/index.html
Brandon Bernard executed after Supreme Court denies request for a delay

"Brandon's execution is a stain on America's criminal justice system. But I pray that even in his death, Brandon will advance his commitment to helping others by moving us closer to a time when this country does not pointlessly and maliciously kill young Black men who pose no threat to anyone," his attorney, Robert C. Owen, said.

Kim Kardashian West and the Rev. Jesse Jackson were among the high-profile figures who made last-minute requests to President Trump to commute Bernard's sentence to life in prison.

An 11th-hour attempt by Alan Dershowitz and Ken Starr -- high-powered defense attorneys who also represented Trump -- to join Bernard's legal defense, delayed the proceedings for three hours, but did not sway the Supreme Court to grant a request to delay the execution for two weeks.

Since executions were reintroduced in the United States in 1977, nearly 300 Black defendants have been executed for the murder of a White victim, while only 21 White defendants have been executed for the murder of a Black victim, according to a Death Penalty Information Center report released in September. The report examined the historical context of how capital punishment has been a tool for authority over Black people.

There are currently 53 people on federal death row: 23 Black men, 21 White men, seven Latino men, one Asian man and one White woman, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

Since 1973, there have been 172 men and women who were sentenced to death and later found to be wrongfully convicted, according to the Death Penalty Information Center. Of those exonerees are 89 Black men, 63 White men, 15 Latino men, one Native American man, two other men of another race as well as one Black woman and one White woman.

President-elect Joe Biden has pledged to abolish the federal death penalty and will give incentives to states to steer them away from seeking death sentences. While no federal death row inmate has been wrongfully convicted, Biden's initiative against the death penalty is due in part to the amount of wrongfully convicted people who have been given the sentence, said Robert Dunham, executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center.

https://www.cnn.com/2020/07/14/politics/daniel-lewis-lee-supreme-court-rule-execution/index.html
Daniel Lewis Lee executed after Supreme Court clears the way for first federal execution in 17 years
Until Biden's swearing in, there are three more federal death row inmates pending execution. They are two Black men, Corey Johnson and Dustin Higgs, and Lisa Montgomery, who is the only woman scheduled to be executed by the US government in nearly 70 years.

With Bourgeois' execution, Trump is now tied with President Ulysses S. Grant (1873-1876) for the fourth most federal executions in a single year, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.

Bourgeois, 56, was sentenced to death in 2004 for torturing and killing his 2-year-old daughter in Texas.

After Bourgeois' execution Friday, anti-death penalty activist Sister Helen Prejean tweeted, "The SCOTUS voted to allow the federal government to execute Alfred Bourgeois despite the fact that he is intellectually disabled with an IQ measured between 70-75."

"State sanctioned murder is not justice," Rep. Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts said Thursday during a virtual discussion hosted by The Appeal calling for support for Bernard. "For Donald Trump ... the willful criminality to allow a pandemic to rage out of control that has disproportionately impacted the most marginalized and now the cruelty that we first came to know of him in calling for lynching of ... young Black men. Death and cruelty will be his legacy."
 

COINTELPRO

Transnational Member
Registered
65bf9b8fdd992.image.jpg


What is up with you thirsty fools thinking you could kill and rape white women. Instead of an angry white mob, they have moved their executions to the state.

Look at the way you guys are fawning over Caitlin Clark while practically ignoring Angel Reese.

After what I have seen, I don't trust the state to met out justice to anybody. They can't even handle a car accident let alone a death penalty case.

All the governors are white, your appeal with a court system stacked against you built up after successive elections of white governors has no chance. Quit rape staring at white women, leave them alone.

maxresdefault.jpg


While fools on here will be crying over KH, they positioned themselves strategically into these positions.
 

God-Of-War-420

Mr. Pool
Kamala don't care, they could have stopped it?
No, they couldn't have done anything, It was up to the courts, the lazy Democrat/left leaning voters could have stopped this if people where informed and voted, if people didn't allow that idiot trump to get in office and appoint 3 right wing nut jobs to the supreme Court that will be deciding major life altering issues for decades, and shaping the law of the land. But hey, her emails.
 

Soul On Ice

Democrat 1st!
Certified Pussy Poster
I was today's years old when I discovered that Black people are responsible for killing this brother and not the white supremacist system.
 

^SpiderMan^

Mackin Arachnid
BGOL Investor
A Black man was wrongly executed today. Respect and the motivation for Black support is so low that our President and the Presidential candidate that NEEDS our support was silent as it happened. Aren’t y’all tired of this? Both of them have aggressively assured Israel/Jews of their support since the Gaza conflict began. How hard would it have been for Biden or Kamala to speak on how tragic this is and say that they believe the Supreme Court should give it more time.

Yes Trump ain’t shit and very likely racist. I’m definitely not going to vote for him. That said, aren’t you tired of voting for candidates that you know don’t give a shit about us? Biden went on Charlemagne’s show and communicated himself as the “Black” candidate. Kamala is wearing chucks, claiming AKA, and changing her speech patterns. But when it comes to such a public, racist, emotional wrongdoing like this, these mfers didn’t even speak on it. And Black men are on this thread using the death to gather more support for them. Think about how fucked up this is. We can’t keep doing this.
 
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Chiyo

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
If any of you believe Marcellus was innocent despite the fact his foot prints were at the scene, other witnesses said he did it, his girlfriend said he confessed it to her, he had the deceased items which he tried to sell, he confessed to a cellmate, and even his lawyers didnt try to claim innocence even with his last hail mary then I have a bridge to sell you in London.

You can have beef with death penalty and the system, but dont let the media lie to you. The idea that this man was put on death row for 20 years with no evidence, and then put to death when EVERYBODY thought he was innocent is simply not true.
 

Politic Negro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
A Black man was wrongly executed today. Respect and the motivation for Black support is so low that our President and the Presidential candidate that NEEDS our support was silent as it happened. Aren’t y’all tired of this? Both of them have aggressively assured Israel/Jews of their support since the Gaza conflict began. How hard would it have been for Biden or Kamala to speak on how tragic this is and say that they believe the Supreme Court should give it more time.

Yes Trump ain’t shit and very likely racist. I’m definitely not going to vote for him. That said, aren’t you tired of voting for candidates that you know don’t give a shit about us? Biden went on Charlemagne’s show and communicated himself as the “Black” candidate. Kamala is wearing chucks, claiming AKA, and changing her speech patterns. But when it comes to such a public, racist, emotional wrongdoing like this, these mfers didn’t even speak on it. And Black men are on this thread using the death to gather more support for them. Think about how fucked up this is. We can’t keep doing this.
I'll agree on the first part because it has reached National attention.

We'll see how people are moved to vote in the state of Missouri to vote the next Gov., Lt Gov, and AG. This Gov & AG won by by less than 70% turnout.

In regards to their historical positions on the death penalty as a whole, here's a short article explaining it. Interpret it as you will.



For two decades, Vice President Harris has opposed the death penalty. Now her campaign is declining to say whether she'd fight to end it as president.
Why it matters: Harris and her team have dodged questions about what she believes on several policy fronts as she's changed some of the liberal positions she's held.

Driving the news: In a shift, the Democratic Party changed its official platform this summer to remove opposition to the death penalty, which a small majority of Americans support.

  • The party's platforms in 2016 and 2020 had called for ending capital punishment.
  • "We will abolish the death penalty, which has proven to be a cruel and unusual form of punishment," the 2016 platform said.
But that language didn't appear in Democrats' 2024 party platform, which was drafted and voted on in mid-July, before President Biden dropped out of the race.

  • Asked whether Harris supports legislation or would sign an executive order to end the death penalty, her campaign did not respond.
Zoom in: Harris has a long record of opposing the death penalty.

  • As a presidential candidate in September 2019, she rolled out a criminal justice reform plan that included ending it.
  • "Kamala believes the death penalty is immoral, discriminatory, ineffective and a gross misuse of taxpayer dollars," her campaign website read.
In March 2019, she praised California Gov. Gavin Newsom for halting the death penalty in California, calling it an "important day for justice."

  • She added: "the application of the death penalty — a final and irreversible punishment — has been proven to be unequally applied."
Fifteen years earlier, in her inaugural address as San Francisco's district attorney, Harris vowed to "never charge the death penalty" — a promise she kept in her seven years in the office.

  • Harris added some flexibility to her stance in a close 2010 campaign to be California's attorney general.
  • She didn't reverse her opposition to the death penalty, but promised to "enforce the death penalty as the law dictates."
  • During the 2020 Democratic primary for president, Harris' website noted that as district attorney she had "declined to seek the death penalty in the prosecution of an individual accused of killing a police officer, despite facing relentless political pressure to do so."
Zoom out: Trump is pledging to dramatically expand executions if he's elected.

Biden was the first president to openly oppose the death penalty despite his past support for it.

  • Biden's administration considered issuing an executive order or pushing legislation to fulfill his pledge to abolish the death penalty but ultimately did not.
  • Attorney General Merrick Garland paused executions in the summer of 2021 and reversed most — but not all — of the Trump Justice Department's decisions to seek the death penalty.
Between the lines: The politics of criminal justice reform have shifted since the summer of 2020, when many Democrats pushed to cut police departments' funding after a Minneapolis police officer killed George Floyd.

  • Few Democratic lawmakers are calling for that now.
  • At the time, Harris was open to the idea of redirecting police funding or significantly changing policing.
  • "This whole movement is about rightly saying, we need to take a look at these budgets and figure out whether it reflects the right priorities," she told a radio host in 2020, CNN reported.
 

Pworld297

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
I woulld never step foot in Missouri.. They couldn't pay me to go there.
Back in the early 2000's I got pulled over driving through Missouri for speeding, that cop put me in his car and the preceeded to ask me a 1000 question even after he ran my plates and me showing him my drivers licenses. My shit was legit but he was doing his best to find anything on me. My homegirl was with me so maybe that's why he let me go.. Smh!
 

CORNBREAD

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Back in the early 2000's I got pulled over driving through Missouri for speeding, that cop put me in his car and the preceeded to ask me a 1000 question even after he ran my plates and me showing him my drivers licenses. My shit was legit but he was doing his best to find anything on me. My homegirl was with me so maybe that's why he let me go.. Smh!
That was good.. It could have got ugly.. Thats why its always safety in numbers
 

praetor

Rising Star
OG Investor
A Black man was wrongly executed today.

And Black men are on this thread using the death to gather more support for them. Think about how fucked up this is. We can’t keep doing this.

He was executed because the conservatives on the Supreme Court have a 6-3 majority and the three liberals appointed by democrats couldn't stop it.

If the don't vote/both sides are the same negros had voted for Hillary in 2016, the liberals would have a 5-4 majority today and he'd be alive right now.

Clarence Thomas is 76 and will be 80 by the end of the next president's term.

Samuel Alito is 74 and will be 78 by the end of the next president's term.

If they die/retire, either a REPUBLICAN president will replace them or a DEMOCRAT president will replace them. There is no third option.

If Trump wins, he will replace them with young justices that would also allow for an execution like this.

If Harris wins, she will replace them with young justices that would STOP the execution.

The only way to stop this from happening again is for people to VOTE DEMOCRAT.
 

COINTELPRO

Transnational Member
Registered


Blazer One I repeat, extraction necessary, say again Blazer One, say again...

Request for extraction denied, area is still compromised proceed to Sector 3000 for prisoner extraction, priority out. Next contact 0930.

Roger Blazer One, 1030 hours



I got to get away from this retarded nonsense, get away from me. Wow look at your display of lethality, almost like an animal.

Let me come into your country or I will eat your pets, BBQ.
 

DC_Dude

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
TRUMP EXECUTED BLACK MEN....FOH with that BS not knowing how laws work...All in Federal Prisons where he could have easily given them Pardons



The Trump Administration’s Unprecedented Spree of Executions Is Scheduled to Continue Today​

7 minute read
College students and community members wearing face masks
Demonstrators hold placards while gathering in Peoples Park to protest against the death penalty, and a wave of executions at the Federal Correctional Complex at Terre Haute during the last months of Donald Trump's presidency.Jeremy Hogan—LightRocket/Getty Images
By Madeleine Carlisle
Updated: December 11, 2020 11:25 AM EST | Originally published: December 8, 2020 4:42 PM EST
The U.S. Department of Justice executed 40-year-old Brandon Bernard Thursday evening, despite vocal pushback from numerous advocates and high-profile figures. Fifty-six-year-old Alfred Bourgeois is scheduled to be executed Friday, bringing the total number of people executed by the federal government since July up to 10—the highest in a single year since 1896.
A third defendant, Lisa Montgomery, had been scheduled to be executed on Dec. 8, but a judge stayed her execution until Dec. 31 after both her attorneys contracted COVID-19.

After a 17-year hiatus, the Trump Administration resumed federal executions in July, and has since executed nine individuals, including Bernard on Dec. 10 and Orlando Cordia Hall on Nov. 19—the first people executed under a lame duck president in over 100 years. In an unprecedented move, the Administration is now speeding up its pace of executions further still, scheduling five more (including Bernard and Bourgeois) in December and January before President-Elect Joe Biden—who has pledged to end the use of federal death penalty—takes office.
In all of the 2000s, the federal government executed three people, for comparison.
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“This string of executions is absolutely exceptional,” says Ngozi Ndulue, senior director of Research and Special Projects at the Death Penalty Information Center. “Exceptional in the number, exceptional in the break from precedent, exceptional in conducting them in the middle of a pandemic.”
Here’s what to know about the federal executions this week.

Alfred Bourgeois is scheduled to die Dec. 11​

Alfred Bourgeois; Brandon Bernard is scheduled to be executed on Dec. 10, despite vocal pushback from advocates and ongoing legal challenges.
Alfred BourgeoisFederal Bureau of Prisons
Alfred Bourgeois, 56, was sentenced to death in 2004 in Texas after he was found guilty of murdering his two-and-a-half-year-old daughter, who the Department of Justice says he also abused and tortured.
Bourgeois was originally scheduled to be executed on Jan. 13, 2020, but the execution was first stayed in November 2019 and then stayed again by a federal judge in March, who argued that his legal team presented compelling evidence that Bourgeois has an intellectual disability under current legal standards. (The Supreme Court ruled in 2002 in Atkins v. Virginia that executing someone with intellectual disabilities violates their constitutional protection against cruel and unusual punishment.)

However, that ruling was overturned by the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals on Oct. 6, and Bourgeois’s new execution date was set on Nov. 20. His legal team has filed a petition before the U.S. Supreme Court asking that his execution be stayed so a lower court can hold a new hearing on the evidence of his disability.
Bourgeois’s legal team has also filed for a petition clemency from President Trump this week.
The swiftness of the scheduling of these executions was the basis of a lawsuit filed jointly by both Bernard and Bourgeois’s legal team, who pointed to the provision of the U.S. Federal Death Penalty Act that says the federal government must adhere to the law of the state where the sentence was imposed: Texas in both cases. Texas law requires defendants receive 90 days notice of their execution, yet Bernard was only given 55 days, and Bourgeois was given 21 days, his team says. A judge denied the request on Dec. 6 on procedural grounds; the defense appealed the motion to a higher court, which rejected the motion on Thursday five to four.

Brandon Bernard was executed on Dec. 10​

Brandon Bernard Alfred Bourgeois
Brandon Bernard.Courtesy of Attorneys for Brandon Bernard
Brandon Bernard was executed Dec. 10 at the Federal Correctional Complex in Terre Haute, Ind., despite vocal pushback from several high profile figures and advocates. The U.S. Supreme Court denied a petition for a stay Thursday evening, clearing the path for Bernard’s execution to move forward, a decision Justice Breyer and Justice Kagan disagreed with and Justice Sotomayor dissented.

“Tonight, those of us who love Brandon Bernard—and we are many—are full of righteous anger and deep sadness,” Bernard’s attorney Robert Own said in a statement Thursday night. “Brandon’s execution is a stain on America’s criminal justice system. But I pray that even in his death, Brandon will advance his commitment to helping others by moving us closer to a time when this country does not pointlessly and maliciously kill young Black men who pose no threat to anyone, when we hold prosecutors to the highest standards of integrity in every case, and when our leaders exercise their moral authority where it is needed.”
Bernard was sentenced to death in 2000 in Waco, Texas, at just 18 years old, making him one one of the youngest people ever to receive a federal death sentence.
In 1999, three teenagers kidnapped Todd and Stacie Bagley at gunpoint, forced them in the trunk of their own car and drove around for several hours while trying to pawn Stacie Bagley’s ring. Bernard and another teenager joined the trio later in a separate car. Eventually one of the teenagers who had abducted the Bagleys, Christopher Vialva, shot the couple in the head while they were still in the trunk, killing Todd and knocking Stacie unconscious. Vialva then directed Bernard to light the car on fire, which he did.

The government tried Bernard and Vialva together as adults (the other three defendants were under 18 and were not charged with capital offenses.) Vialva was given the death sentence on three capital counts; Bernard was given life without parole on two counts and the death sentence on one. Vialva, who was 19 at the time of the crime, was executed on Sept. 22, 2020.
Bernard’s legal team had filed a petition asking President Trump for clemency—the process by which a governor, president or administrative board uses their executive power to reduce a sentence—arguing that Brandon was denied adequate legal counsel during his trial, has consistently expressed remorse for the crimes, has had zero disciplinary write-ups during his 20 years on death row and has dedicated his time to mentoring at risk youth.
Since Bernard’s execution was scheduled on Oct. 16, a growing number of advocates, including Kim Kardashian West, had publicly expressed support for the stay, arguing that the death penalty, which is usually understood to be reserved for the “worst of the worst,” should not be imposed on an accomplice who didn’t fire the gun.
“As he was in the chair his attorney called me and they just had their last call and said this…Brandon said he loves you and wants to say thank you again,” West tweeted Thursday night. “The most important thing to him that he said was a gift to his mom, sister, daughters and family was the validation the public support gave to his family.”


Five of the nine surviving jurors who sentenced Bernard to die had also since said they no longer believe Bernard should be executed. Eleven members of that jury were white; all five of the defendants charged were Black. Research has found that race and implicit bias can play a major role in how individuals are perceived, including a recent study that found that Black boys are often perceived as older and less innocent than their White peers.
“I felt that Brandon was a kid who got caught up with the wrong crowd, and I think that Brandon was prejudiced by being on trial with Christopher ViaIva. It made it hard for me to disassociate Mr. ViaIva’s role in the crimes from Mr. Bernard’s role,” one juror said in a statement provided to TIME by Bernard’s defense team prior to his execution. “His young age at the time does weigh on me. I do not believe that Brandon should be executed for bad choices he made when he was 18.”

Angela Moore, a federal prosecutor who defended Bernard’s death sentence on appeal, had also since reversed her position, urging in a Nov. 18 op-ed that Bernard’s life should be spared and that “executing Brandon would be a terrible stain on the nation’s honor.”
And on Dec. 8, The New Yorker reported that the Department of Justice’s pardon office had “strongly” recommended Bernard’s sentence be commuted to life, and repeated the recommendation in a report to the White House.
Following Bourgeois, Lisa Montgomery is scheduled to be executed on Jan. 12, Corey Johnson is scheduled to be executed J
corey-johnson-headshot.jpg
an. 14 and Dustin Higgs is scheduled to be executed Jan. 15, only five days before Biden takes office.

MT-HIGGS-OFF-PLAT.jpg
 
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YoungSinister

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
I was today's years old when I discovered that Black people are responsible for killing this brother and not the white supremacist system.
Not surprised
The system is filled with coons

TRUMP EXECUTED BLACK MEN....FOH with that BS not knowing how laws work...All in Federal Prisons where he could have easily given them Pardons



The Trump Administration’s Unprecedented Spree of Executions Is Scheduled to Continue Today​

7 minute read
College students and community members wearing face masks
Demonstrators hold placards while gathering in Peoples Park to protest against the death penalty, and a wave of executions at the Federal Correctional Complex at Terre Haute during the last months of Donald Trump's presidency.Jeremy Hogan—LightRocket/Getty Images
By Madeleine Carlisle
Updated: December 11, 2020 11:25 AM EST | Originally published: December 8, 2020 4:42 PM EST
The U.S. Department of Justice executed 40-year-old Brandon Bernard Thursday evening, despite vocal pushback from numerous advocates and high-profile figures. Fifty-six-year-old Alfred Bourgeois is scheduled to be executed Friday, bringing the total number of people executed by the federal government since July up to 10—the highest in a single year since 1896.
A third defendant, Lisa Montgomery, had been scheduled to be executed on Dec. 8, but a judge stayed her execution until Dec. 31 after both her attorneys contracted COVID-19.

After a 17-year hiatus, the Trump Administration resumed federal executions in July, and has since executed nine individuals, including Bernard on Dec. 10 and Orlando Cordia Hall on Nov. 19—the first people executed under a lame duck president in over 100 years. In an unprecedented move, the Administration is now speeding up its pace of executions further still, scheduling five more (including Bernard and Bourgeois) in December and January before President-Elect Joe Biden—who has pledged to end the use of federal death penalty—takes office.
In all of the 2000s, the federal government executed three people, for comparison.
Ad Choices

Branded ContentA Taste Of Home: Bringing Mexico To Brooklyn At Border TownBy Nissan USA
“This string of executions is absolutely exceptional,” says Ngozi Ndulue, senior director of Research and Special Projects at the Death Penalty Information Center. “Exceptional in the number, exceptional in the break from precedent, exceptional in conducting them in the middle of a pandemic.”
Here’s what to know about the federal executions this week.

Alfred Bourgeois is scheduled to die Dec. 11​

Alfred Bourgeois; Brandon Bernard is scheduled to be executed on Dec. 10, despite vocal pushback from advocates and ongoing legal challenges.
Alfred BourgeoisFederal Bureau of Prisons
Alfred Bourgeois, 56, was sentenced to death in 2004 in Texas after he was found guilty of murdering his two-and-a-half-year-old daughter, who the Department of Justice says he also abused and tortured.
Bourgeois was originally scheduled to be executed on Jan. 13, 2020, but the execution was first stayed in November 2019 and then stayed again by a federal judge in March, who argued that his legal team presented compelling evidence that Bourgeois has an intellectual disability under current legal standards. (The Supreme Court ruled in 2002 in Atkins v. Virginia that executing someone with intellectual disabilities violates their constitutional protection against cruel and unusual punishment.)

However, that ruling was overturned by the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals on Oct. 6, and Bourgeois’s new execution date was set on Nov. 20. His legal team has filed a petition before the U.S. Supreme Court asking that his execution be stayed so a lower court can hold a new hearing on the evidence of his disability.
Bourgeois’s legal team has also filed for a petition clemency from President Trump this week.
The swiftness of the scheduling of these executions was the basis of a lawsuit filed jointly by both Bernard and Bourgeois’s legal team, who pointed to the provision of the U.S. Federal Death Penalty Act that says the federal government must adhere to the law of the state where the sentence was imposed: Texas in both cases. Texas law requires defendants receive 90 days notice of their execution, yet Bernard was only given 55 days, and Bourgeois was given 21 days, his team says. A judge denied the request on Dec. 6 on procedural grounds; the defense appealed the motion to a higher court, which rejected the motion on Thursday five to four.

Brandon Bernard was executed on Dec. 10​

Brandon Bernard Alfred Bourgeois
Brandon Bernard.Courtesy of Attorneys for Brandon Bernard
Brandon Bernard was executed Dec. 10 at the Federal Correctional Complex in Terre Haute, Ind., despite vocal pushback from several high profile figures and advocates. The U.S. Supreme Court denied a petition for a stay Thursday evening, clearing the path for Bernard’s execution to move forward, a decision Justice Breyer and Justice Kagan disagreed with and Justice Sotomayor dissented.

“Tonight, those of us who love Brandon Bernard—and we are many—are full of righteous anger and deep sadness,” Bernard’s attorney Robert Own said in a statement Thursday night. “Brandon’s execution is a stain on America’s criminal justice system. But I pray that even in his death, Brandon will advance his commitment to helping others by moving us closer to a time when this country does not pointlessly and maliciously kill young Black men who pose no threat to anyone, when we hold prosecutors to the highest standards of integrity in every case, and when our leaders exercise their moral authority where it is needed.”
Bernard was sentenced to death in 2000 in Waco, Texas, at just 18 years old, making him one one of the youngest people ever to receive a federal death sentence.
In 1999, three teenagers kidnapped Todd and Stacie Bagley at gunpoint, forced them in the trunk of their own car and drove around for several hours while trying to pawn Stacie Bagley’s ring. Bernard and another teenager joined the trio later in a separate car. Eventually one of the teenagers who had abducted the Bagleys, Christopher Vialva, shot the couple in the head while they were still in the trunk, killing Todd and knocking Stacie unconscious. Vialva then directed Bernard to light the car on fire, which he did.

The government tried Bernard and Vialva together as adults (the other three defendants were under 18 and were not charged with capital offenses.) Vialva was given the death sentence on three capital counts; Bernard was given life without parole on two counts and the death sentence on one. Vialva, who was 19 at the time of the crime, was executed on Sept. 22, 2020.
Bernard’s legal team had filed a petition asking President Trump for clemency—the process by which a governor, president or administrative board uses their executive power to reduce a sentence—arguing that Brandon was denied adequate legal counsel during his trial, has consistently expressed remorse for the crimes, has had zero disciplinary write-ups during his 20 years on death row and has dedicated his time to mentoring at risk youth.
Since Bernard’s execution was scheduled on Oct. 16, a growing number of advocates, including Kim Kardashian West, had publicly expressed support for the stay, arguing that the death penalty, which is usually understood to be reserved for the “worst of the worst,” should not be imposed on an accomplice who didn’t fire the gun.
“As he was in the chair his attorney called me and they just had their last call and said this…Brandon said he loves you and wants to say thank you again,” West tweeted Thursday night. “The most important thing to him that he said was a gift to his mom, sister, daughters and family was the validation the public support gave to his family.”


Five of the nine surviving jurors who sentenced Bernard to die had also since said they no longer believe Bernard should be executed. Eleven members of that jury were white; all five of the defendants charged were Black. Research has found that race and implicit bias can play a major role in how individuals are perceived, including a recent study that found that Black boys are often perceived as older and less innocent than their White peers.
“I felt that Brandon was a kid who got caught up with the wrong crowd, and I think that Brandon was prejudiced by being on trial with Christopher ViaIva. It made it hard for me to disassociate Mr. ViaIva’s role in the crimes from Mr. Bernard’s role,” one juror said in a statement provided to TIME by Bernard’s defense team prior to his execution. “His young age at the time does weigh on me. I do not believe that Brandon should be executed for bad choices he made when he was 18.”

Angela Moore, a federal prosecutor who defended Bernard’s death sentence on appeal, had also since reversed her position, urging in a Nov. 18 op-ed that Bernard’s life should be spared and that “executing Brandon would be a terrible stain on the nation’s honor.”
And on Dec. 8, The New Yorker reported that the Department of Justice’s pardon office had “strongly” recommended Bernard’s sentence be commuted to life, and repeated the recommendation in a report to the White House.
Following Bourgeois, Lisa Montgomery is scheduled to be executed on Jan. 12, Corey Johnson is scheduled to be executed J
corey-johnson-headshot.jpg
an. 14 and Dustin Higgs is scheduled to be executed Jan. 15, only five days before Biden takes office.

MT-HIGGS-OFF-PLAT.jpg
Some of those niggas need to go
The fuck :smh:
Nigga killed a toddler on purpose
Why would I care if he dies?
 
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D24OHA

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
If any of you believe Marcellus was innocent despite the fact his foot prints were at the scene, other witnesses said he did it, his girlfriend said he confessed it to her, he had the deceased items which he tried to sell, he confessed to a cellmate, and even his lawyers didnt try to claim innocence even with his last hail mary then I have a bridge to sell you in London.

You can have beef with death penalty and the system, but dont let the media lie to you. The idea that this man was put on death row for 20 years with no evidence, and then put to death when EVERYBODY thought he was innocent is simply not true.

Then why did the County Prosecutor argue that the conviction needed to be overturned and at the very least he deserved a stay of execution until more details/ evidence is reviewed?

The prosecutors office at the time did some dirt and suppressed evidence that may have freed Williams, the DNA evidence was compromised BY THE PROSECUTORS OFFICE and last but not least..... the victim's family didn't want him KILLED!

I'm not saying he was "innocent." But he didnt deserve to DIE. there was significant reasonable doubt
 
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crossovernegro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
he was convicted in state court. POTUS has zero power over his prison term or execution. Only people on the federal level who had any power to stop it were the supremes and all three of trumps appointed judges plus the bush's appointed justices said "gotta go".

.


So sad why didn’t your democratic savior Biden or Kamala issue an executive order to pardon this guy
 

conspiracy_brotha

Woke as fuck
BGOL Investor
he was convicted in state court. POTUS has zero power over his prison term or execution. Only people on the federal level who had any power to stop it were the supremes and all three of trumps appointed judges plus the bush's appointed justices said "gotta go".

.
They could have spoken up about it at least. Maybe pull federal funding from the state stop making excuses for the democrips
 

D24OHA

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
They could have spoken up about it at least. Maybe pull federal funding from the state stop making excuses for the democrips

They didn't, so now what?

Republicans want to give police complete qualified immunity.

What's the bigger grievance;
a sitting president/ democratic presidential candidate not speaking up on an issue they had no power over,
or

a republican presidential candidate that promises if he gets elected that when police kill black people they'll face no consequences, we're making it harder for you black mfkrs to vote and I'm trying to be a dictator ?
 
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