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View Full Version : On 9/13 Rick Perry will execute another innocent man.




Razmear
09-09-2011, 01:47 PM
Info here:
http://saveaninnocentlife.net/Home.php
or:
http://deathpenaltynews.blogspot.com/2011/08/steven-woods-claiming-innocence.html
or google:
Steven Woods execution

The case details:



On September 13 2011, Steven Woods (31) is scheduled to be executed by lethal injection by the state of Texas after being wrongfully convicted and confined 24 hours a day for the past 9 years of his life. Woods maintained his innocence since he was arrested, and he swears that he will keep doing so until he dies. The evidence supporting Steven Woods' wrongful conviction is overwhelming; provided below is more information that I hope will help you better understand Woods' case:

- In 2002, Steven Woods was convicted for shooting and killing a young couple in Denton County, Texas.

- Woods was 21 at the time and had no prior arrests or warrants.

- 3 months after Steven was wrongfully convicted/sentenced to death, 24 year old Marcus Rhodes took responsibility for knowingly and intentionally shooting and killing both of the murder victims, in a Denton County court.

- Rhodes didn't insinuate that Steven in any way, participated/plotted/played any role in the murders.

- There is NO physical evidence or confession that ties Steven Woods to the murder scene. - No one has reported or testified to having eye-witnessed these murders.

- The murders were committed with Marcus Rhodes' own firearms. (Both registered under Rhodes' name)

- The firearms were found under Rhodes' bed when Police searched his parents' home.

- The weapons only had Rhodes' fingerprints on them.

- The victims' backpacks and their belongings were found in Rhodes' car a few days after the murders.

- The only "evidence" used against Woods were friends of Marcus Rhodes who took the stand, claiming that they heard Woods brag about the murder. This is called "hearsay" and is usually inadmissible in court.

- One "witness", a habitual heroin user and friend of Rhodes' was paid 1000 dollars for his testimony.

- Another "witness" signed a sworn affidavit stating that her testimony was coerced with threats.

-The state tried to use DNA found on a latex glove to convict Woods. The jury was told that the DNA on the glove was Woods', but later in the trial Steven demanded that the glove be tested. The DNA did NOT match Woods'. The glove was stricken from the protocol by Denton County Judge, Lee Gabriels - so that Woods could not use it to prove his innocence in his appeals process.

- The prosecution accused Woods of numerous erroneous claims to which they had no basis. Example: The prosecution lied to the jury claiming that Woods (who they did not know was of Armenian heritage), was a "white supremacist".

-The man who confessed to killing the couple, also confessed to carrying out an additional murder in CA that occurred 2 months prior to the Denton murders. Steven did not participate in that murder, nor did he witness it or get indicted in association with it.

- The actual murderer, Rhodes got a punishment of life in prison with parole.

-Steven Woods got sentenced to death and will be executed on Sept. 13 2011.

Razmear
09-09-2011, 05:27 PM
bumping from page 2

The Free Hornet
09-09-2011, 05:50 PM
Per the wiki, he was convicted with a controversial law (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_Michael_Woods,_Jr.):


Woods faces the death penalty after a jury convicted him under the Texas law of parties which allows for people who are present or assist in crimes to be tried the same as the main conspirator. Woods' placement on death row in Texas is unique because he is one of few people to face execution under the Texas law of parties.

Here are more sites:

http://www.savesteven.info/
http://www.texaskills.com/

I can't be speak to issue of guilt under the "law of parties" (his defense is the traditional "I didn't kill the guy" stuff), however,

I don't want to be a party to this conviction and implore the Perry people reading this to get your guy to stop this. America does not want an executioner.

Pericles
09-09-2011, 05:58 PM
Just a small point - TX does not have any form of firearm registration, so how can one claim the weapons used in the crime were "registered" to Rhodes? If Rhodes was the purchaser on the 4473, then say that.

When at least one claim made is clearly false, it calls the rest of the statement into question.

The Free Hornet
09-09-2011, 06:35 PM
Just a small point - TX does not have any form of firearm registration, so how can one claim the weapons used in the crime were "registered" to Rhodes? If Rhodes was the purchaser on the 4473, then say that.

When at least one claim made is clearly false, it calls the rest of the statement into question.

Is the "4473" BATF/federal paperwork? That is different from registration? Marcus bought/provided the weapons per this site:


The trial of the second perpetrator, Marcus Rhodes, was scheduled to begin 3 days ago on January 6, 2003, but there will be no trial now. Our family and the family of the other victim agreed to the plea bargain that our DA office offered to Rhodes. He pled guilty to Capital Murder in Texas, guilty to Accessory to Murder in California (California is a 25 year sentence which would have to be served consecutively, not concurrently, if he ever were to be paroled after his minimum of 40 years were served in Texas), and also no Appeals.

The families agreed to this for several reasons. I will not say that I am speaking for the whole family—some may have other reasons of their own, but I want to share my own personal reasons for agreeing to this plea bargain.

By ALL accounts, Rhodes did not inflict any of the mortal wounds upon any of the victims—a mitigating circumstance. He did provide the weapons, the gloves and the transportation, with full knowledge of what Steven Woods planned. Under the law of parties in the state of Texas, we know this makes him guilty of Capital Murder. But I had a very hard time believing that a Death Penalty would hold up under appeal, if we were even to obtain that DP in the trial, due to that mitigating circumstance. source (http://www.murdervictims.com/voices/Bethena_Brosz.htm)

This link (http://www.murdervictims.com/voices/Bethena_Brosz_news.htm) does not make me sympathetic to the guy. The way the case played out, it appears like the guy who "took the plea" got the (much) better deal. That is bad policy, IMO.

Rael
09-09-2011, 06:37 PM
Rick Perry cannot pardon anyone without a recommendation from the board of pardons. Has this happened yet?

CaptainAmerica
09-09-2011, 06:41 PM
http://msnbcmedia.msn.com/j/msnbc/components/photo/_new/110908-perry-paul-commercial-break-6a.grid-6x3.jpg
Obviously this man named Rick perry has no self control, but loves controlling everything and everyone else. VERY dangerous man.

Dianne
09-09-2011, 06:54 PM
Won't bother his ass... he'll be layed up with a prostitute somewhere (probably some FOX news whore)... nice candles... nice booze...

The Free Hornet
09-09-2011, 07:11 PM
Rick Perry cannot pardon anyone without a recommendation from the board of pardons. Has this happened yet?

I don't know. Here is what the wiki says (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_punishment_in_Texas), regarding the death penalty:


Perry supports the death penalty.[123] On June 2, 2009, Texas carried out the 200th execution since Perry assumed the office of governor.[124] As of August 10, 2011, Texas has carried out 234 executions since Rick Perry became governor.[125]

Under the Texas Constitution, the governor is not permitted to grant pardon, parole, or to commute a death penalty sentence to life imprisonment on his own initiative (the Constitution was changed in 1936 due to concerns that pardons were being sold for cash under the administrations of former Governor James E. Ferguson and later his wife and Texas' first female Governor Miriam A. Ferguson).[126] Instead, all requests for pardon, parole, and commutation are channelled through the Board of Pardons and Paroles who then reviews each application and makes a recommendation to the governor. Although the Governor can accept or reject a positive recommendation of commutation or pardon from the Board of Pardons and Paroles, he has no power to override a negative recommendation. The only unilateral action which the Governor can take is to grant a one-time, 30-day reprieve to the defendant.

Bush and Perry both managed to out-do their predecessors:
http://www.thedailybackground.com/2007/03/26/chart-executions-in-texas-by-governor-1976-2007/

Something is pushing this with no internal checks. Perry owned these executions at the Reagan forum and he gave no excuses:
http://kaystreet.wordpress.com/2011/09/08/reagan-library-crowd-goes-wild-for-perry%E2%80%99s-234-executions/

Please read the following:


Perry uses the State Board of Pardons and Paroles, whose members he appoints, to decide whether to commute death sentences or grant longer reprieves — though he can and has carried out an execution the board voted to halt.

On his own, the governor can issue last-minute reprieves of up to 30 days. Perry has done so only twice. source (http://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/article/Clemency-rare-on-Texas-death-row-1547457.php)

He is not exercising what power he has and ignored, in one case, the review board he appointed. He owns this shit!

QueenB4Liberty
09-09-2011, 08:50 PM
wow this is horrible.

Pericles
09-09-2011, 08:55 PM
Is the "4473" BATF/federal paperwork? That is different from registration? Marcus bought/provided the weapons per this site:


The 4473 is the form filled out by the buyer when purchasing a firearm (title 1) from a federally lisecnsed firearms dealer. Some states (not Texas) require firearms to be purchased only from licensed dealers. Per federal law (Tiahart amendment), once the purchase is made, the BATFE is prohibited from compiling a database of 4473 purchases, the form remaining with the dealer.

Some states (not Texas) have certain registration requirements in order to know who is the owner of a particular firearm.

Anyone who mentions firearms, registration, and Texas in the same sentence does not know WTF he is talking about.

For any firearm serial number run by a law enforcement agency in Texas, all you can find out is who made the purchase from a licensed dealer.

heavenlyboy34
09-09-2011, 09:23 PM
OMG, what a bastard Perry is! No wonder he wants to be prez...you get to kill foreigners with fancy war toys that way. :mad: Thanx for telling me about this, y'all. It's new info to me. :cool:

123tim
09-16-2011, 06:25 PM
I feel awful.

I completely forgot about this. I had intended to make a phone call, or sign the petition. I got sidetracked and completely forgot until tonight.

It's too late.


Steven Michael Woods Jr. was pronounced dead at 6:22 p.m., 10 minutes after the lethal injection dose began, said Michelle Lyons, a spokeswoman for the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. It was the 10th execution carried out in Texas this year

Jingles
09-16-2011, 06:41 PM
So Rick Perry just killed an innocent man... What a monster!