Death case under scrutiny
Planned execution of Mexican could inflame tensions
Texas next month is poised to execute a Mexican national accused of rape and murder in a case that could further inflame border tensions over apparent violations of the Vienna Convention and international law.
The Mexican government is now funding legal efforts by Ruben Cardenas Ramirez to halt his execution after authorities neglected to notify Mexico about the arrest and failed to hold a review required by the United Nations international court in The Hague.
“It is as if the United States were thumbing its nose at the government of Mexico and the United Nations,” said Sandra Babcock, a Cornell Law School professor specializing in international issues surrounding capital punishment. “And when I say the U.S., I should be clear that we’re talking about Texas.”
To make matters worse, the condemned man’s lawyer is alleging that he didn’t actually commit the crime that earned him a death sentence in the first place.
But according to Hidalgo County prosecutor Ted Hake, the UN ruling is “not enforceable” and there’s no mechanism to hold the required review under Texas law.
“There’s no point,” he said. “This guy is guilty as sin.”
The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights has weighed in with a resolution recommending that the U.S. vacate the death sentence, and the Mexican government has pleaded for an opportunity to be heard,
according to court filings by defense counsel Maurie Levin.
Mexican government officials did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The former security guard was arrested in the 1997 slaying of his 15-yearold cousin, Mayra Laguna, whose body was found in a canal after she was abducted by a man who slipped in through a bedroom window.
The case has been plagued by claims of unreliable forensic evidence, conflicting statements and witnesses, concerns about ineffective lawyers, and allegations of a coerced confession.
Yet it was the concerns about treaty violations and international repercussions that pushed the U.S. State Department to meet in February with Hidalgo County prosecutors. For now, the Nov. 8 execution date stands.
“It makes us a clear human rights abuser,” said Robert Dunham of the nonprofit Death Penalty Information Center.
Human rights concerns
Authorities in Hidalgo County first collared Cardenas hours after the abduction but did not immediately notify him of his right to talk to his country’s consulate, according to court documents — an apparent oversight that violates Article 36 of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations.
A 2004 U.N. World Court ruling known as the Avena case mandates that foreign nationals who weren’t told of their consular rights are allowed a review to examine whether that oversight influenced the outcome of the criminal case.
And for Cardenas, there’s some chance that it could have. Hidalgo County never told Mexico about the arrest, Levin said. Instead, Mexico found out on its own after five months, long after Cardenas had given multiple, conflicting confessions that Levin argues were coerced.
Repeatedly, Cardenas asked for a lawyer, but authorities ignored his pleas until 11 days after his arrest, instead pushing on in their interrogations without telling him about his consular notification rights, Levin wrote in court filings.
Although the treaty violation could have international repercussions, the 2008 Supreme Court decision in Medellin v. Texas deemed it unenforceable, unless Congress takes legislative action — and it hasn’t.
In the meantime, some states have complied, but others have not.
“There are Mexican nationals whose rights under the Vienna convention have been violated and they have been executed,” Levin said.
Famously, the state put to death Jose Medellin — the man behind the Supreme Court case — in 2008, over protestations from Mexico.
Even before the international legal saga, the case had already gained notoriety for its sheer brutality. In 1993, Medellin and five other men raped and slaughtered two teens in a Houston park during a bloody gang initiation.
The case netted five death sentences, though two were later commuted to life because of the defendants’ ages at the time of the slayings.
Then three years ago, another Houston case drew sharp condemnation south of the border when the state executed cop-killer Edgar Tamayo, another Mexican national not informed of his consulary rights. ‘Miscarriage of justice’ Yet the Cardenas case stands out. “This is the first case where there has been a really substantial miscarriage of justice in that Cardenas really could be innocent,” Babcock said. “Although there is a confession, that confession is inconsistent with the physical evidence, the statements are inconsistent with each other, and he himself is of low intelligence. And then on top of that you have a lack of physical evidence.”
Now, Cardenas has few remaining shots at avoiding the death chamber.
Last month, Levin filed a motion for DNA testing of scrapings taken from beneath Mayra’s fingernails.
“To permit Mr. Cardenas’s execution to proceed without permitting this testing would fly in the face of the most fundamental concept of justice,” she wrote in a scathing Hidalgo County court filing. A judge slapped down the motion Wednesday, but Levin said she plans to appeal.
At the same time, there’s a long-shot plea for a reprieve and sentence commutation in front of the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles, and a request for a 30-day reprieve pending before Gov. Greg Abbott.
If the sentence goes forward, some worry it could have ramifications.
“When we allow executions to occur in situations like this,” Dunham said, “we place Americans in danger abroad because we risk that other countries will mistreat our nationals the same way our courts are mistreating theirs.”