Cupertino Courier

District attorney wants South Bay convicts taken off state's death row

Jeff Rosen would like 14 San Quentin prisoners to serve life terms without possibilit­y of parole

- By Robert Salonga rsalonga@bayareanew­sgroup.com

SAN JOSE >> Building on a 2020 pledge to stop pursuing the death penalty, Santa Clara County District Attorney Jeff Rosen is now seeking to remove all condemned South Bay prisoners from California's death row.

Rosen's office is petitionin­g the county Superior Court to resentence 14 men — all being held in San Quentin State Prison — to terms of life in prison without the possibilit­y of parole.

In court filings, Rosen cited the irreversib­le nature of the death penalty, and thus the inability to guarantee due process, as grounds for the petition. There is also, he added, a “diminishin­g likelihood” of executions resuming in part because of a moratorium by Gov. Gavin Newsom, who also has initiated the shutdown of death row.

“The state is dismantlin­g death row, and it is time we recognize this reality and dismantle these sentences as well,” Rosen states in one of the resentenci­ng motions.

Also in the motions — one filed for every condemned man convicted in Santa Clara County who agrees to be taken off death row — Rosen acknowledg­es “the enduring and indescriba­ble pain” suffered by crime victims' families and friends that “cannot be discounted or ignored.”

In an interview, Rosen said since his office ceased pursuing the death penalty four years ago, they cannot rationally continue to litigate and defend death sentences levied prior to that point.

“It flows logically, because if you're saying that for the same crime committed today you would not seek the death penalty, but someone else has been sitting on death row for 20 years, that's not fair,” he said. “We want to try to treat people who have committed similar crimes similarly.”

Rosen added that his personal views have changed.

“I used to think that in a perfect world, in a perfectly fair society, there could be some crimes so horrible and awful that the appropriat­e response would be death,” he said. “But I've come to know what we all know — we don't live in a perfect world where everything is fair. I just began to feel like we don't have the moral authority as a society to execute someone.”

He added that converting the death sentences will inevitably free up his office's resources to focus on local crimes and offer closure to victims' families instead of the decades-long limbo they currently experience awaiting some finality in their loved ones' cases.

County Public Defender Molly O'neal lauded the resentenci­ng motions, calling them another step toward California dispensing with capital punishment altogether.

“We have executed people who weren't actually the killer. It's such an extreme ultimate consequenc­e, and we almost never get it right,” O'neal said. “I truly believe we will get to a place where we will not use the death penalty. It takes out a revenge system that was never implemente­d fairly and was always a bad system.”

Bishop Oscar Cantú of the Diocese of San Jose said he is “very pleased” with the district attorney's actions.

“How we treat the worst of us says something about us as well,” Cantú said in an interview. “Those on death row are poor, almost all of them. Most of them are people of color. How the justice is administer­ed is dubious and troubling. We don't need capital punishment. We're better off without it as a society.”

Both in the court filings and in the interview, Rosen noted what he considered fundamenta­l inequities in death penalty sentences, which are determined by separate juries, all of whom must declare under oath their support for capital punishment. That has resulted, the filing argues, in sentencing juries that are predominan­tly white and lack diversity both culturally and in life experience­s.

A recent court case involving a Santa Clara County death row inmate helps illustrate that point. Willie Branner, 74, was convicted of murder in 1981 after a fatal shooting during a robbery; after more than 30 years of legal appeals, he got his sentence vacated and was granted the right to a retrial by a federal court this past December. The crux of his appellate argument was that the prosecutor who secured his conviction unconstitu­tionally rejected Black, Asian American and Jewish people from his trial jury.

Rosen's administra­tion has secured capital punishment once during his 13 years as district attorney, in the case of Melvin Forte, who was sentenced to death in 2011 by a county judge.

The judge based the decision on a jury recommenda­tion reached the previous December, after Rosen was elected to his first term but before he was sworn into office. That 2010 jury finding occurred a few days after Rodrigo Paniagua Jr. was sentenced to death by a county judge for murdering his pregnant girlfriend and their two daughters.

Those two cases mark the most recent death sentences issued in Santa Clara County; the oldest is for 74-year-old David Ghent, who was sentenced in 1979 and has since secured his own retrial. Rosen's office has sought the death penalty four times since then, eventually withdrawin­g the pursuit in two of the cases.

Rosen said he does not expect across-the-board agreement with his resentenci­ng motions. Already, one of the condemned men offered the legal relief, Christophe­r Spencer, has opted to continue litigating his case as a capital defendant. The district attorney's office is sending out letters to members of the victims' families in all of the death penalty cases they are looking to resentence, and Rosen said he welcomes the chance to meet with him.

At least half of the prisoners who would be affected by the proposed resentenci­ng have signaled an intent to agree, according to the office.

Rosen expressed confidence that his motions will hold up in court, citing state law that empowers district attorneys to recommend resentenci­ng and rules requiring that such motions “may only be overcome if a court finds the defendant currently poses an unreasonab­le risk of danger to public safety.” His office argues that provision doesn't apply because none of the resentenci­ngs would entail any prison release.

“We took the first step four years ago,” Rosen said. “This is the second and final step.”

 ?? KARL MONDON - STAFF ARCHIVES ?? Santa Clara County District Attorney Jeff Rosen wants to see the death penalty abolished in California.
KARL MONDON - STAFF ARCHIVES Santa Clara County District Attorney Jeff Rosen wants to see the death penalty abolished in California.

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