CITIZENS UNITED FOR ALTERNATIVES
TO THE DEATH PENALTY (CUADP) is pleased to
forward the following press release....
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Murder Victim's Families for Reconciliation
21651 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02140
Phone 617 868-0007 fax 617 354-2832
www.MVFR.org
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACTS:
Renny Cushing 617.868.0007/ 617.930.5198
Kate Lowenstein, Esq. 202.270.0279
Monday May 12, 2003
MEDIA AVAILABILITY ANNOUNCEMENT
LOUISIANA PROSECUTORS SEEK TO BAR VICTIM'S
MOTHER FROM TESTIFYING
Mother of Six-Year-Old Victim May Be Stopped from Requesting
Mercy in Death Penalty Trial
LAKE CHARLES, LA---As the capital trial of Ricky Langley
continues, prosecutors are seeking to bar Lorelei Guillory, mother of
Langley's six-year-old victim, from giving a victim impact statement or
testifying for the defense because she has, in the past, expressed her
opposition to the death penalty. The U.S. Supreme Court has allowed states
to use victim impact evidence, and Louisiana law permits such testimony in
its trials. Typically, such evidence is used to bolster the state's request
for the death penalty against the defendant and is not challenged by
prosecutors. Judge Al Gray has ruled the prosecution cannot bar Guillory's
testimony, but prosecutors are now challenging that ruling in the state's
Supreme Court, which is expected to rule this week.
Among those supporting Guillory are members of Murder Victims' Families for
Reconciliation (MVFR) an organization comprised of murder victim's family
members who oppose capital punishment. MVFR has filed an amicus brief in
the case (attached document). Renny Cushing, Executive Director of MVFR,
notes that similar bias against victims who oppose a death sentence has
arisen in recent weeks in Arizona, Florida and other states.
"Over the past 20 years, all 50 states and the U.S. government have adopted
victims rights laws" said Cushing. "While this is not the first time that
victims have had to fight to get prosecutors to recognize their rights
under those recently enacted victims' law, this case marks the first time
that a prosecutor has gone to a state supreme court to get an order to
muzzle a victim's family member who opposed the death penalty."
WHAT: MVFR media availability-Organization files amicus brief as
Louisiana Supreme Court hears prosecutor's request to bar victim's testimony
WHO: Renny Cushing, MVFR Executive Director, 617-868-0007 or
617 930-5196
Kate Lowenstein, Esq. MVFR National
Organizer, 202-270-0279
WHEN: The Louisiana Supreme Court is expected to issue its
ruling this week
TEXT OF MVFR Brief to Louisiana Supreme Court
SUPREME COURT OF LOUISIANA
STATE OF LOUISIANA
NUMBER ___________
STATE OF LOUISIANA
VERSUS
RICKY LANGLEY
BRIEF OF AMICUS CURIAE
MURDER VICTIMS FAMILIES FOR RECONCILIATION
ON WRIT APPLICATION FROM THE DISTRICT COURT
PARISH OF CALCASIEU, No. 10258-02
HON. ALCIDE GRAY, PRESIDING
EXPEDITED RULING REQUESTED
DEATH PENALTY CASE
SIMULTANEOUS FILING IN THE
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF LOUISIANA
AND THE COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT
JAMES E. BOREN
Bar Roll No. 03252
830 Main Street
Baton Rouge, LA 70802
(225) 387-5786 (office)
(225) 336-4667 (fax)
Counsel for Murder Victims
Families for Reconciliation
COMES NOW AMICUS, MURDER VICTIMS' FAMILIES FOR RECONCILIATION (MVFR), by
counsel, and respectfully files the following opposition, pursuant to the
Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States
Constitution as well as the law of the State of Louisiana, to the State=s
petition for supervisory writs concerning the lower court=s order
respecting the rights of Lorilei Guillory, mother of the victim in this
case and a member of Murder Victims' Families for Reconciliation, to appear
and testify as any other witness requesting mercy at the penalty phase of
this case.
In support of this opposition, Amicus states as follows:
I.
THE RIGHT TO EQUAL PROTECTION UNDER THE LAWS GUARANTEED BY ARTICLE I,
SECTION 25 OF THE LOUISIANA STATE CONSTITUTION AND THE EQUAL PROTECTION
CLAUSE OF THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT TO THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION
REQUIRE THAT SURVIVING FAMILY MEMBERS OF HOMICIDE VICTIMS MUST BE
TREATED EQUALLY, WHETHER THOSE FAMILY MEMBERS SUPPORT OR OPPOSE CAPITAL
PUNISHMENT. THE STATE CANNOT DISCRIMINATE BETWEEN SPEAKERS BASED ON THE
CONTENT OF THEIR SPEECH.
Historically the rights of victims such as Ms. Guillory were ignored by the
Criminal Justice System before the advent of the Victims Rights Movement.
Murder Victims' Families for Reconciliation ("MVFR") is a national
organization of individuals who have lost a loved one to homicide and who
oppose the death penalty. MVFR work includes the following: educating the
public on the impact of violence and the needs of victims, providing
support and advocating on behalf of victims, promoting programs and
policies that reduce the rate of homicide, and promoting crime prevention
and alternatives to violence. While there are over 10,000 entities in this
country whose mission includes, in part, serving the interests of victims
of crime, MVFR is unique among such groups. It is the only organization
dedicated to serving and meeting the needs of the distinct group of the
victim population who are both the survivors of homicide victims and
abolitionists who are opposed to capital punishment. Since its founding in
1976, MVFR has worked with, and been a bridge between, the victims support
community and the death penalty abolition movement. MVFR belongs to the
National Center for Victims of Crime, The National Organization for Victims
Assistance, and the National Coalition to Abolish the Death
Penalty. MVFR's membership includes citizens of Louisiana, including Ms.
Guillory, as well as residents of other states who are the survivors of
individuals who were murdered in Louisiana. The outcome of the instant case
involving the treatment of the subgroup of the crime victim population who
oppose capital punishment will have an impact upon present and possible
future members of the organization, and other similarly situated victims,
whose rights, duties, privileges and interests, will be impacted by the
ruling of the Supreme Court.
By this brief, MVFR supports the efforts of Lorilei Guillory to have the
Supreme Court of Louisiana uphold Ms. Guillory's right to give a victim
impact statement and put an end to discrimination against surviving family
members of murder victims who oppose capital punishment. MVFR aspires for a
decision by the Louisiana Supreme Court that will clarify that all victims
of crime, including those who support mercy for the defendant, are entitled
to the full enjoyment of rights guaranteed by the Louisiana State Constitution.
MVFR members oppose the death penalty. As the courts have long held, the
death penalty as a sanction for crime is different than other punishments.
Louisiana, along with 37 other states and the federal government, still
provides the penalty. In so doing, it creates a separate class of victims:
those who, like members of MVFR, oppose for a wide variety of reasons, the
use of the death penalty by the state.
A brief review of the history of the victims movement will provide some
context to help understand the policies the Louisiana Victims Rights
Amendment seeks to embrace. Institutionalized consciousness about the role
of victims in our criminal justice system, and the system's impact on
victims, is formalized in the legal concept of "victims rights" that have
been incorporated into laws by all 50 states and the federal government.
In 1984, Congress passed the Victims of Crime Act (VOCA),
which provided incentives to states to enact support programs for victims
and created victim compensation funds. VOCA inspired the passage of victims
rights legislation in the states, as well.
Today, all 50 states and the federal government have statutes recognizing
and protecting victims of crime. Twenty eight states, including Louisiana,
have enshrined those rights into their state constitutions. See President's
Task Force on Victims of Crime: Final Report (Washington DC; Executive 1
New Directions from the Field: Victims Rights and Services for the 21st
Century. Office for Victims of Crime, Office of Justice Programs, United
States Department of Justice, Washington, D.C., 1997. 2 Serving Crime
Victims and Witnesses, 2nd Edition, by Julie Esselman Tomz and Daniel
McGillis, National Institute for Justice, US Department of Justice,
Washington, D.C., 1997, page 3. Office of the President, 1982).
The Louisiana "Victim Rights Amendment" and statutes recognize that the
suffering of the family members left after a homicide is tremendous. The
United States Supreme Court has also acknowledged that allowing surviving
victims to speak is of paramount importance. ".victim impact evidence.is
designed to show.each victim's 'uniqueness as an individual human being"
and is ".another form or method of informing the sentencing authority about
the specific harm caused by the crime in question, evidence of a general
type long considered by sentencing authorities." Payne v. Tennessee, 501
U.S. 808, 824-825 (1991). Payne outlined that the survivors of a homicide
victim are also "victims" and therefore have valuable information to
contribute to the determination of punishment.
MVFR wishes to emphasize the point that victims and survivors have the
right to be heard, even though they may surprise the state with their
desire for mercy. The widespread use of the death penalty in America is
predicated upon, and reinforces, the societal presumption that everyone who
has lost a loved one to murder wants and needs the death penalty for the
killer of their family member. Survivors of homicide victims who don't
embrace a ritual killing by the state as a necessity for their own healing
cannot be treated with bias and discrimination. The States effort to bar
Ms. Guillory from speaking is explicit discrimination as it is asking that
other family members of the child, those who support the death penalty, be
allowed to give victim impact statements.
The State's attorneys have clearly acted in a discriminatory fashion when
they chose to designate only the victim's pro-execution brother as the
person who would give a victim impact statement, despite the fact that Ms.
Guillory had informed them of her intent to assert her right to give such a
statement more than a year ago.
If the State intends to allow only a limited number of statements, they
cannot do so in a manner which excludes the victim's mother who is the
officially designated family member because of her position on the death
penalty. They must be required to establish standards which, for example,
would require accepting statements from all victim survivors who were
related to the deceased, or accepting statements from the victim designee
as outlined in the Louisiana statute. Notwithstanding her support of mercy
for the defendant Ms. Guillory is entitled to be respected as a victim and
her rights as such honored.
II.
THE EQUAL PROTECTION CLAUSES OF THE LOUISIANA STATE CONSTITUTION AND THE
UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION REQUIRE THAT SURVIVING FAMILY MEMBERS OF
HOMICIDE VICTIMS MUST BE TREATED EQUALLY, WHETHER THOSE FAMILY MEMBERS
SUPPORT OR OPPOSE CAPITAL PUNISHMENT.
The Fourteenth Amendment prohibits the government from "deny[ing] to any
person.the equal protection of the laws." U.S. Const. amend. XIV.
Differential treatment by the State motivated by a desire to select victims
with a pro-death penalty position should not be countenanced any more than
race- or sex-based discrimination is under the Equal Protection Clause. The
"Victim's Rights" Amendment to the Louisiana State Constitution requires
the State to recognize and hear the survivors of homicide:
".a status-based [governmental act] divorced from any factual context from
which [the Court can] discern a relationship to legitimate state
interests.is a classification of persons undertaken for its own sake,
something the Equal Protection Clause does not permit." Romer v. Evans, 517
U.S. 620, 635 (1996).
By excluding Ms. Guillory and others like her who oppose the execution of
murderers, the State is creating a class of victims who are deemed less
worthy of their constitutional right to be heard. This form of status-based
classification of persons is the precise evil the Fourteenth Amendment was
designed to prohibit.
CONCLUSION
In a society that prescribes the killing of murderers as a balm to the pain
experienced by survivors of homicide victims, it is always a struggle for
those who have made the journey from burying their loved one to becoming a
public opponent of the death penalty. If the Supreme Court of Louisiana
upholds the right of the District attorney to exclude the voice of victims
who don't want additional killings, such a decision will resonate beyond
the borders of this state. A ruling upholding the silencing of Ms. Guillory
will have a chilling effect upon all victim family members who wish to
participate in the public debate surrounding the death penalty in this
country. Victims such as Ms. Guillory have chosen to heal from the wounds
of murder without the assistance of state-sponsored execution. They have a
constitutional right, guaranteed by the Louisiana Constitution, to be
heard. The State's attorney's cannot be allowed to pick and choose which
victims express the "right" attitude.
Respectfully submitted,
Murder Victims Families for Reconciliation
Amicus Curiae
By:________________________________
James E. Boren, La. Bar No. 03252
830 Main Street
Baton Rouge, LA 70802
(225) 387-5786 (office)
(225) 336-4667 (fax)
Kate Lowenstein, Esq.
National Organizer
Murder Victims' Families for Reconciliation
2161 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02140
(617) 868-0007 (office)
(617) 354-4965
Member of the Maryland Bar
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that a copy of the foregoing pleading has
been served, by first class mail, postage prepaid, or by hand delivery upon
Cindy Killingsworth, Assistant District Attorney, Calcasieu Parish District
Attorney's Office, P.O. Box 3206, Lake Charles, LA 70602-3206; John
Olivier, Clerk, Supreme Court of Louisiana, 220 Supreme Court Building, 301
Loyola Avenue, New Orleans, LA 70112; Kenneth J. deBlanc, Clerk, Court of
Appeal, Third Circuit, P.O. Box 16577, Lake Charles, LA 70616; Hon. Alcide
J. Gray, Respondent Judge, P.O. Box 3210, Lake Charles, LA 70602-3210;
Clive A. Stafford Smith, representing the Defendant, 636 Baronne Street,
New Orleans, LA 70113; on the 9th day of May 2003.
________________________
JAMES E. BOREN
Robert Renny Cushing, Executive Director
Murder Victims' Families for Reconciliation
2161 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02140
617 868 0007 Ext 101
www.mvfr.org
cushing@mvfr.org
rrcushing@earthlink.net
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Forwarded by:
Abraham J. Bonowitz
Director, CUADP
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YES FRIENDS!
There is an Alternative to the Death Penalty
Citizens United for Alternatives to the Death Penalty
(CUADP) works to end the death penalty in the United
States through aggressive campaigns of public education
and the promotion of tactical grassroots activism.
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Visit www.cuadp.org or call 800-973-6548
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