Etusivu SMS-vetoomukset Tennesseeläinen mies välittömässä teloituksen vaarassa

Tennesseeläinen mies välittömässä teloituksen vaarassa

Usalainen Edmund Zagorski ollut teloitusjonossa 30 v. Kuolemantuomio on määrä toteuttaa 1.11. Pysäytetään se!. Vastaa VETOAN USA NIMESI (90snt).

Update: The Tennessee Supreme Court has issued an execution date of 1 November 2018, for Edmund Zagorski, for death by electrocution.

Edmund Zagorski was scheduled to be executed on 11 October, using the State of Tennessee’s three-drug lethal injection protocol, but the state Governor granted a temporary stay of execution until 21 October. After this date, Edmund Zagorski will be at imminent risk of execution.

Edmund Zagorski was convicted in 1984 of the first-degree murders of two men. The State of Tennessee presented evidence that Edmund Zagorski promised to sell them marijuana, then shot and killed both men. In the penalty phase of his original trial, Edmund Zagorski expressed a desire to receive the death penalty, rather than spend his life in prison. Edmund Zagorski claimed the statements he made to police were coerced; that police kept him in isolation, deprived him of sunlight, and exposed him to extreme temperatures while he was detained. He appealed his original conviction, stating that police coerced him to implicate himself in the murders, improperly withheld evidence, and that he did not receive effective counsel.

His attorneys have also argued that Edmund Zagorski was denied a constitutional proportionality review, a process in Tennessee capital punishment cases to determine whether the sentence is proportionate to those issued in cases with similar facts.

The Tennessee Supreme Court found his death sentence proportionate, but in each of the three cases cited by the Court in that review, the death sentences were overturned, and life sentences were imposed. The defendants in each of those three cases were also later released on parole.

Please write immediately in English or your own language to the USA authorities urging them to:

  • Halt Edmund Zagorski’s execution and commute his death sentence.

Taustatietoa

Edmund Zagorski was convicted in 1984 of the first-degree murders of John Dale Dotson and Jimmy Porter. The State of Tennessee presented evidence that Edmund Zagorski promised to sell them marijuana, then shot and killed both men. In 1998, Edmund Zagorski appealed his conviction to the Tennessee Supreme Court, claiming that his counsel had been ineffective because his attorneys did not investigate or present mitigating evidence of Edmund Zagorski’s childhood trauma and brain damage at the sentencing phase of his original trial. In 2009, Edmund Zagorski appealed on claims that the prosecution in his original trial improperly withheld evidence that someone else murdered John Dale Dotson and Jimmy Porter and that the prosecution in his original trial had improperly admitted statements that Edmund Zagorski made to police. In each of these appeals, the appellate court affirmed Edmund Zagorski’s conviction and sentence.

Holding prisoners in prolonged solitary confinement is a violation of the absolute prohibition against torture and other cruel, inhumane or degrading treatment or punishment. In June 1983, Edmund Zagorski was placed in solitary confinement for seven weeks at Robertson Country Jail, in a metal cell with no air conditioning, no air circulation and meager ventilation, allowing temperatures to reach 100 degrees Fahrenheit (38 degrees Celsius) in July. These conditions are believed to have contributed to compromised mental and physical health including significant weight loss and multiple suicide attempts.

There have been 18 executions in the USA in 2018, bringing to 1,483 the number of executions since 1976. Amnesty International opposes the death penalty unconditionally. Today 142 countries are abolitionist in law or practice.

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