Cheshire murders renew death penalty fight
KEN DIXON, Connecticut Post
For a long time I believed in the death penalty. It made simple arithmetical
sense. Kill someone: be killed.
Then Michael Ross, Connecticut's serial rapist and murderer of at least
eight women dating back to 1981, came along.
He ultimately got what he said he wanted, which was to die, in May 2005, the
first Connecticut inmate executed in nearly 45 years. That was around the
time it dawned on me that as tempting as the state-sanctioned killing of a
murderer may be - laundering our rage through a faceless executioner -
taxpayers shouldn't be in the business of giving them what they want.
It's not as if a lethal injection could in anyway duplicate a murder
victim's terror.
Public discussion of the issue was revived last week when horrendous
violence ripped away the quiet facade of a suburban Cheshire home in
Connecticut's own version of "In Cold Blood," Truman Capote's landmark book
about a Midwestern family that was murdered by a duo of drifters.
I hope Steven Hayes, 44, of Winsted and Joshua Komisarjevsky, 26, of
Cheshire, don't become latter-day literary figures. I also hope that, if
found guilty, they spend long, anguished lives in tiny cages where they can
be forgotten until they expire 30, 40, 50 years down the line and taken out
of prison in coffins.
Life locked up in prison would mean that we won't have to reprise drawn-out
court proceedings every few years.
Maybe most important, Dr. William Petit Jr., the only survivor of the home
invasion, rapes and murders of his family, would be spared the many standard
appeals on capital cases that would keep the case in the news for the next
20 years.
It would protect Dr. Petit, 50, from decades of reiterated testimony on his
assault and the unspeakable sexual assaults to his wife, Jennifer
Hawke-Petit, 48, and 11-year-old Michaela Petit, who died of smoke
inhalation along with 17-year-old Hayley Petit when the assailants set the
home on fire.
After a point, capital-felony cases become get-out-of-prison day trips for
the murderers. They're also recurring public trials for the victims'
families, who have to relive the crime every time they walk into a
courtroom, every time a vacuous TV reporter asks them "What does it feel
like?"
Gov. M. Jodi Rell said Friday that she is a long-time supporter of the death
penalty for the most-violent crimes and supported the decision of Michael
Dearington, state's attorney for the Judicial District of New Haven, to seek
the death penalty. "This certainly falls into that category, in my mind" she
told reporters. "But at the same time I understand people are innocent until
proven guilty."
Another problem with Connecticut's death penalty has a name and a face. It's
James Tillman, the East Hartford man who spent 18 years in prison on a rape
charge. He was exonerated with DNA evidence and the General Assembly awarded
him $5 million this past session.
Imagine if the victim had died in the attack and Tillman was eventually
executed, an innocent man. That's the finality of the death penalty.
State Rep. T.R. Rowe, R-Trumbull is one of those lawmakers who feels
passionately about the death penalty.
"It just hits people close to home," Rowe said of last week's tragedy. "It's
Cheshire. It's a nice house. It's the soft underbelly of suburbia."
Rowe, who favors the death penalty and opposes abortion, agrees that capital
punishment is unworkable and should be either overhauled or eliminated.
One way to change it would be to allow a defendant's criminal past to be
used by juries as a so-called aggravating factor to mount a death sentence.
Both Hayes and Komisarjevsky, who were arrested leaving the scene by
Cheshire police, are ex-cons with strings of burglaries and both face six
capital-felony counts.
Rep. Mike Lawlor, D-East Haven, one of the Capitol's most-vehement opponents
to capital punishment, said Hayes and Komisarjevsky, if guilty, both deserve
a date with a lethal injection.
The problem is, capital cases can linger for decades. Indeed, if the
assailants don't want to die, it could take 40 years of appeals, paid for by
the taxpayers, to finally get them onto the gurneys at the Carl Robinson
Correctional Institution.
"It's just a horrible process that's about to begin," Lawlor said. "It's
better to lock them up forever, with no possibility for release. That's the
sentence that Michael Ross feared the most."
Why should Ross, or any capital felon, get the same treatment that a pet
owner would give a dear-old dog or beloved, elderly cat?
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Source : Connecticut Post
http://www.connpost.com/localnews/ci_6487430