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STARVIN' FOR JUSTICE 2001 PRESS & PICTURE GALLERY
Crime victim's daughter fights death penalty
Story from the Sun Sentinel
Photos by Sun Sentinel and Abe Bonowitz
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SueZann Bosler witnessed her father being stabbed to death, just before the
assailant plunged the blade into her skull. It happened in the parsonage of
her father's Carol City church in 1986.
Yet, she is an ardent opponent of the death penalty.
The Hallandale Beach resident is expected in Washington this weekend with
as many as 500 activists from across the country -- including a half-dozen
from South Florida -- who began a four-day fast and vigil in front of the
U.S. Supreme Court midnight Thursday that is expected to continue through
Sunday.
The eighth annual "Starvin' for Justice" commemorates two key anniversaries
in America's uncomfortable relationship with capital punishment.
June 29 marks the 1972 decision in which the high court found the death
penalty was applied in an arbitrary and capricious manner and forced all
states to rewrite their death penalty laws.
July 2, 1976, is the date when justices allowed executions to resume.
Coming four days and four years apart, these decisions, and the reality of
the high court's combustible effect on the issue, is what is placing these
activists as close to the marble front steps of justice as they can get.
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"The death penalty is one of the issues that shows us how fickle the court
is. The law is the same, but what's changed is the people who're
interpreting those laws," said Abe Bonowitz of Jupiter, a co-founder of the
Florida chapter of Citizens United for Alternatives to the Death Penalty.
"We want people to realize, to be educated on how, no matter what the
[state] laws are, the Supreme Court is the ultimate authority."
For the Florida activists, the event comes in the midst of a climate that
appears to be warming to their cause.
It was helped dramatically by the tale of Frank Lee Smith, a Death Row
inmate for 14 years, who died there of cancer in January 2000 -- 11 months
before DNA evidence exonerated him of the rape and murder of an 8-year-old
Broward County girl.
The case caused outrage, including a rally in March on the steps of the
state Capitol and a Florida Bar request that the state Supreme Court allow
DNA testing upon request.
The Legislature voted this session to give voters the chance to affirm the
death penalty in the state Constitution, while Gov. Jeb Bush signed a bill
preventing the execution of mentally retarded prisoners.
Abe Bonowitz (left) leads a noon day rally at the Fast 'n Vigil
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"What it really showed to most Americans," Bosler said of the Smith case,
"is there is something going on here."
Bosler's assailant never did get to Death Row, though in his first two
trials he was sentenced to death. Those rulings were reversed by the
Supreme Court and, on the third try, James Bernard Campbell was found
guilty again.
But Bosler -- a national figure by then -- was publicly crusading for a
life sentence, and that's what Campbell got.
Campell stabbed the Rev. Bill Bosler 23 times on Dec. 22, 1986, in a
robbery attempt at First Church of the Brethren.
At first, SueZann was angry, but over time the anger dissipated, she said,
as she became free to see Campbell as a human being created by God.
"I never had so much hate for anyone in my life. But I finally broke
through that and realize I can't change what he did, but I can change how I
feel about him. ... Killing him only diminishes me, you, all of us."
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SueZann (above right) and Marisa taking time out at the Fast 'n Vigil
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The Rev. Clay Grimsley (above) ministers to the condemned during the mock execution at the Fast 'n Vigil
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Besides fasting, activists in Washington will leaflet passers-by,
participate in street theater -- including a mock execution -- and rally
for abolition at a candlelight vigil.
The Rev. Clay Grimsley, of Anointed Fellowship in West Palm Beach, said
cases such as Smith's prove the United States needs to adopt alternatives
to capital punishment.
"[We're] asking everyone to give pause," he said. "Do we really want to
trust our government with the power to kill citizens?"
Besides Bonowitz, Grimsley and Bosler, activists will also attend from
Miami and Gainesville.
Copyright © 2001, South Florida Sun-Sentinel
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