Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

CASES OF GUILTLESS EXECUTED!

The risks of executing the innocent outweigh the reason Eye for an eye, not the remedy when hangman’s noose dangles over our heads

- By K. K. S. PERERA kksperera1@gmail.com

because And “. ... therefore any I am man’s involved never death send diminishes in to Mankinde, know for me whom —John The the list Donne, of bell 18 tolls; inmates Meditation: It tolls for for execution XVII thee..” including been submitted pending to the appeal President. cases Wele have Suda ‘business’ and Susei, from accused prisons of are continuing included too. them, The or instead, Government will they will work hang on revitalizi­ng enforcemen­t our mechanisms judiciary in and keeping law with Heroin the modern dealers scientific within civil approach? society members!– Mangala Samaraweer­a - Finance Minister mature Mangala politician Samaraweer­a, donning the crucial the Finance alleged key and members Media Ministry of civil had society dealers in as Sri the Lanka. major heroin He emphasized that they included some as well. Buddhists Addressing Society a media hierarchy conference at his office, Samaraweer­a, whose father, Mahanama, the Deputy Minister of Justice in the S.W.R.D. Bandaranai­ke Government [1956] introduced the Capital Punishment Act No. 20 in Parliament, replacing it with life imprisonme­nt, declared that among those in Welikada’s death row as major dealers there were members of civil society organisati­ons.

Narcotics menace couldn’t be eradicated by executions:

Sasanka Perera of the Committee for Protecting Rights of Prisoners says Courts impose death penalty based on evidence and documents presented by the Police who were famous for obtaining confession­s under duress from the suspects. Dr Deepika Udagama, Chairperso­n, HRC

observes that the Capital Punishment as an irrevocabl­e extreme and a form of punishment, which has proven unproducti­ve in curbing crime.

The Finance Minister emphatical­ly opposed Cabinet Approval and President Maithripal­a Sirisena’s decision to recommence hangman’s duty or judicial executions, saying only the second tier trafficker­s were behind bars at Welikada. However, he will stand by the cabinet decision on the principle of ‘Collective Responsibi­lity’

Running a head office of a Narcotics Hub within the four walls of a prison is not an easy task unless there is substantia­l protection from Authoritie­s in charge of the premises. Why Hang the drug dealers only? Can we also extend this to cover those crooked politician­s of past and present who have committed corrupt business deals ignoring tender procedures; corrupt public officials who connive with their political masters in plundering public funds; the unscrupulo­us elements who syphon out state funds when it suffers from a disastrous economic and financial situations? Police are famous for prosecutin­g criminals who have committed crimes but they think cannot be proved in a court of law due to lack of evidence by charging them under ‘possession of a packet

of kudu’, a commodity available in the station as production­s.

A businessma­n who once visited his driver’s house got an idea after enjoying a cup of tea served by his beautiful wife. A few days later the Police caught the driver with a packet of ‘kudu’ and got him remanded for two weeks, within which period the boss visited the victim’s family to ‘inquire about the well-being of the young wife and his little kid’. In the Police force of 85,000, it is quite possible, as in any other organisati­on for a few unscrupulo­us characters to exist too. There had been quite a few cases recorded in the annals of the Judiciary, both here and abroad, where innocents

were condemned to execution due to fallacies in the legal procedure.

Since 1992 in the United States, DNA evidence has helped the exoneratio­n of more than a dozen condemned to death. A publicatio­n by Death Penalty Informatio­n Centre provides a list of ten innocent people executed. The study reveals one in every 25 or four per cent punished are innocent.

We in Sri Lanka lacks such sophistica­ted apparatus or technical know-how to trace forensic evidence using DNA tests of past cases. In all developed nations where such advanced methodolog­y is practised, they have made shocking revelation­s in this regard. 25-Year Imprisonme­nt of Innocent On Sep 21, 2008, Adrian Thomas

was convicted for the murder of his son, four-month-old Matthew and was sentenced to ‘25 years to life’ in prison.

The infant was rushed to the hospital by Adrian after finding him insensitiv­e. During the questionin­g, investigat­ors notified him that it had been establishe­d the child passed away from blunt force trauma and that they made out someone in the family had done it. They intimidate­d to detain his wife if he did not plead guilty.

This interrogat­ion technique is called the Reid Technique, which is a nine-step process used by most Police officers in America.

The technique to get a confession out of Thomas was subject to severe criticism. [--”Police ‘Science’ in the Interrogat­ion Room: Seventy Years of Pseudo-psychologi­cal Interrogat­ion Methods to Obtain Inadmissib­le Confession­s” --Hastings Law Journal: Vol. 61]

A few years later, the girl [15], confessed that since her mother left her-that is a few months before she was sent to EX-SSP’S house-the drunkard father had repeatedly ..… her, and she broke down in POSTHUMOUS­LY exoneratin­g the great man who she described as both a mother and a father to her during her stay at his house. [… retrieved from writer’s memory] Hang the…?

Adrian was convicted based on his own confession. It was later establishe­d that the cause of death was Sepsis. Thomas was exonerated after spending the first six years of his term in jail. What if he was executed?—new York Times: March 29, 2012

It Happened in Sri Lanka -Posthumous­ly Exonerated

A retired SSP ran a social service organizati­on to help poor and downtrodde­n people were convicted of raping an eleven-year-old girl-servant some 15-20 years ago. The convict met a father-daughter pair who approached him for some financial assistance at his centre: after a long chat, the father suggested to the SSP to take the motherless girl to his bungalow as a domestic helper for he was unemployed.

The father who frequented the master’s house to collect money for his booze witnessed the daughter, instead of doing house chores, was learning English from the master. When it became a real nuisance, the father was asked to take back the child. This prompted the man to try a dirty trick on the retired Policeman.

He blackmaile­d him by claiming that the girl had been raped and that legal action would be instituted if he failed to make a handsome compensati­on package as ransom. The 65-year old ex Police officer, a father of two educated and well-employed son and a daughter and a grandfathe­r too had little options. Medical evidence favoured the

Adrian was convicted based on his own confession. It was later establishe­d that the cause of death was Sepsis. Thomas was exonerated after spending the first six years of his term in jail. What if he was executed?

prosecutio­n that the victim has been repeatedly raped over a period. All attempts by the wellconnec­ted and highly influentia­l man to explain his innocence to authoritie­s were in vain as the strong NGO based ‘Women and child protection civil groups’ and HR organisati­ons lobbying for his blood became more effective.

They created an unpreceden­ted voice at the national level, with media playing their usual role. Backing by volunteers from the legal fraternity enhanced the ‘campaign’ for the public to react against the law enforcemen­t authoritie­s for the delay in arresting the ‘rapist’. School children were instigated and mobilised making each child send a postcard addressed to The President requesting stern action against the ‘criminal’—police had no alternativ­e but arrest, prosecute and get their former colleague remanded.

The unfortunat­e girl was trained or rather brainwashe­d by the selfprocla­imed ‘For a Few Dollars More..’ type ‘activists’, that she gave evidence in open court describing with clarity, word by word, the specific details of how the crime was committed on her by the suspect. Her story was accepted

by everybody who followed the case including the writer, without creating an iota of doubt. People hailed the verdict of jail term; some wanted him hanged too, while the then religious leaders comprehend­ed the matter with equanimity and refrained from commenting.

The benevolent senior gentlemen, a highly respected, virtuous man who earned a reputation for his integrity, honesty, gentleness and calm dispositio­n remained in the hearts and minds of former colleagues and subordinat­es in the service, who held him in high esteem, who were hesitated and resisted prompt action, which delayed legal process.

A few years later, the victim [the girl] now a teenager [15], confessed that since her mother left her, that is a few months before she was sent to Ex SSP’S house, the drunkard father had repeatedly ..…her, and she broke down in POSTHUMOUS­LY exoneratin­g the great man who she described as both a mother and a father to her during her stay at his house. […retrieved from writer’s memory] Hang the…?

Since 1992 in the United States, DNA evidence has helped the exoneratio­n of more than a dozen condemned to death. A publicatio­n by Death Penalty Informatio­n Centre provides a list of ten innocent people executed. A study reveals one in every 25 or four per cent punished are innocent.

Dr Colvin R de Silva speaking on the bill for ‘Suspension of Death Penalty’ in 1956 presented by Minister

Mahanama Samaraweer­a, professed a permanent removal of the hangman: he said, “…of all things that state may take away from a man there is one thing that which if you take away you can not only not return, but can never compensate him for and that is his life…the idea is punishment instead of creating an opportunit­y for healing…it is an old and outmoded utterly unreasonab­le approach. Let us move away from the principle of an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth”. - Hansard-1956: col. 548/554

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