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| Supreme Court Refuses Death Row Legal Aid Case |
| By Associated Press |
| Published: 12/20/2002 |
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The U.S. Supreme Court refused to consider giving poor death row inmates more free legal help. The court had been asked to force the government to pick up the tab for inmates' legal bills during clemency proceedings and some last-minute appeals. Defense attorneys argued that a 1998 federal law requires death row inmates' lawyers to continue representing them through 'every' stage of appeals. 'Congress made clear that people sentenced to death should not be abandoned by their lawyer as an execution date nears,' University of California, Berkeley, law professor Charles Weisselberg told the court, on behalf of lawyers in a fees dispute. 'Clemency is a critical part of our criminal justice system, and is particularly vital when the state seeks to take a human life.' The Bush administration argued that it made no sense for the federal government to pay to assist inmates in state clemency hearings. The government does pay for some federal death row appeals. The government's chief attorney, Solicitor General Theodore Olson, argued that states may not want federal courts getting into their business by appointing and paying for lawyers. The cases the Supreme Court refused to hear involve lawyers who represented three Texas inmates who already have been put to death. Juan Soria, who was convicted of kidnapping and stabbing to death a 17-year-old standout swimmer, was executed in 2000. Jack Wade Clark was put to death in 2001 for the abduction, rape and fatal stabbing of a 23-year-old woman. Odell Barnes was executed in 2000 for the rape, beating, stabbing and shooting of a woman at her home. Mental health groups had urged the court to take up the issue. |

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