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 Condemned inmate Gary Graham Associated Press/Pat Sullivan
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HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP) — There's no question Gary Graham was a street
punk responsible for a crime spree 19 years ago. But he insists his
weeklong rampage of robbery, rape and theft did not include the fatal
shooting of an Arizona man outside a Houston supermarket.
His execution, scheduled for Thursday evening, had drawn exceptional
scrutiny, largely because of Republican Gov. George W. Bush's presidential
bid and a national re-examination of capital punishment.
The fate of Graham, his court appeals exhausted, rested early Thursday
with the 18-member Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles, which could
recommend that Bush issue a 120-day reprieve, a commutation or a pardon.
``I'll treat this case no differently than any other case that has come
across my desk,'' Bush told the National Association of Hispanic
Journalists in Houston late Wednesday. ``I'll ask two questions: Innocence
or guilt, and whether this person has had full access to the courts of
law.''
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 Mary Robinson during a demonstration AP/Harry Cabluck
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The governor appoints the parole board, but is barred by law from
halting the execution without a majority nod from the panel. The governor
does have the power to grant a one-time 30-day reprieve in death penalty
cases, but Graham received one in 1993 from Bush's predecessor, Democrat
Ann Richards.
Texas has executed 22 inmates this year and 134 during Bush's 5 1/2
years in office.
Two years ago, Bush told the parole board to review the case of serial
killer Henry Lee Lucas because of questions about the slaying for which
Lucas was about to die. Lucas' death sentence eventually was commuted to
life. And earlier this month, he authorized a reprieve for inmate Ricky
McGinn pending DNA tests.
He has sent no similar messages about Graham's case.
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 The Rev. Jesse Jackson AP/Pat Sullivan [17K]
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The debate over Graham's case comes amid growing questions around the
country about the death penalty. Illinois Gov. George Ryan has placed a
moratorium on state executions and Bush and Vice President Al Gore have
been forced to deal with the issue as they campaign for president.
The case has prompted the loudest protests since convicted pickax
killer Karla Faye Tucker was executed in 1998, the first woman put to
death in Texas since the Civil War era. Death penalty opponents have
adopted Graham's claims of innocence and his contention that he unfairly
was convicted, primarily because of testimony from a single eyewitness.
``The Gary Graham case is significant because if he is executed ... he
will be the case that will be the most frail, the weakest evidence to
justify any execution in the past 27 years,'' said Lawrence Marshall,
legal director of the Center on Wrongful Convictions at Northwestern
University School of Law.
Opponents also used the Graham execution to focus on capital punishment
in Texas, which by far outpaces other states in executions, and their
opposition to Bush, the presumptive GOP presidential nominee.
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 Anti-death penalty protester Motapa Live Associated
Press/EDWARD A. ORNELAS [30K]
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``I'm going to uphold the laws of the land,'' Bush said. ``If it costs
me politically, it costs me politically.''
Graham, 36, promised to ``fight like hell'' on the trip to the death
chamber and urged 10,000 supporters to converge on Huntsville, about 80
miles north of Houston, to protest what he called his legal lynching and
assassination.
Attorney General John Cornyn noted that both state and federal courts
have reviewed Graham's case.
``Gary Graham has had at least 20 appeals and his claims have been
heard and rejected by at least 33 different judges,'' Cornyn said.
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 AAshanti Chimurenga chants in protest AP/Harry Cabluck
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Graham was 17 when Bobby Lambert, 53, was slain on May 13, 1981.
Graham pleaded guilty to 10 aggravated robberies during the crime
spree, but argued that the eyewitness at his trial was mistaken when she
identified him as the gunman who struggled with Lambert before shooting
him.
The witness, Bernadine Skillern, has been pressured over the years by
Graham backers but has never wavered. Last week she insisted it was Graham
she saw that night.
Courts also have rejected Graham's claims that his lawyer at his trial
was ineffective. As for witnesses he wants heard, they initially told
police they couldn't identify the killer, and prosecutors said they were
not actual eyewitnesses.
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On the Net:
Death Penalty Information Center: http://www.essential.org/dpic
Death penalty links:
http://www.clarkprosecutor.org/html/links/dplinks.htm