totally fukcing insane.....

Dead Money

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Bush tries to halt execution of convicted killer in Texas


Suzanne Goldenberg in Washington
Monday October 8, 2007
The Guardian


President George Bush, who signed the death warrant for 152 prisoners as governor of Texas, this week faces a rare challenge from his home state against his efforts to block the execution of a convicted killer from Mexico.
The case of Jose Ernesto Medellin, to go before the supreme court on Wednesday, examines whether the president has the power to set aside a state law that conflicts with an international treaty.

It puts Mr Bush in the unusual position of arguing against the death penalty and against the very same Texans who helped put him in the White House. Even more unusually, it puts Mr Bush on the same side of the dispute as the International Court of Justice in The Hague.


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But the confrontation is more likely to turn on the dividing line between state and presidential powers than on the legitimacy of the death penalty. The supreme court is to deal more directly with the death penalty next January when it hears arguments against the use of lethal injection, the main method of execution in the US.
Wednesday's case began with a death row appeal from Medellin, a gang member from Houston who was just 18 when he raped and strangled to death two teenage girls in 1993. After a decade on death row, in 2004 the Mexican government obtained a ruling from the International Court of Justice on Mr Medellin's behalf that state police had violated his right to access to consular officials from Mexico. Mr Medellin, who was born in Mexico, has lived in the US since he was nine years old, although he was never a legal resident.

The judgment found that the Texas authorities failed to tell Mr Medellin and 50 other death row inmates from Mexico of their rights under the Vienna Convention to seek advice from the Mexican consulate, or to inform consular officials about their cases.

Mr Bush issued a memorandum two months later that the US courts would implement the ICJ ruling. The Bush administration is expected to argue that the president's executive power over treaty provisions outranks state laws.

Although the administration notes that it does not agree with the ICJ's interpretation of the Vienna Convention, it says it will abide by the court's decision for the sake of protecting US interests abroad.

However, Texas argues that Mr Bush's memo on the death penalty case would set a dangerous precedent for presidential power. The state argues that Mr Bush's action disregards earlier verdicts by an appeals court and the supreme court that Mr Medellin was not entitled to invoke his rights as a Mexican citizen because he had not raised the issue at his original trial.

In a speech to a conservative legal group in Washington, Ted Cruz, the state's solicitor general and a key adviser on Mr Bush's 2000 election campaign, accused the president of overstepping his authority. "This president's exercise of this power is egregiously beyond the bounds of presidential authority," he said.
 

smurphy

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What part of "raped and strangled to death" does Bush not understand?
 

Spytheweb

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Bush has built his carrer on killing Americans so this move shows you how fu#kedup his mind really is. Bush does not care about life, only his own, he would have you and your family in Iraq before he would ever show his face there. Well his killing days are almost over, 18 months to go. He's going to sink the republican party before he goes.
 

Chadman

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Two quick thoughts...

I never underestimate the Bush administration and their insatiable desire for ultimate authority.

I think I could buy the explanation that the administration might be abiding by this ruling to protect Americans in future issues abroad, which have nothing to do with the base issue of this individual. Maybe simplistic, but that could make some sense. I can't imagine Bush would have any strong support for this guy in particular, given his track record. Quite the contrary. Maybe the guy is somehow connected to his family, though. He might need him to be the new ambassador to illegal murdering aliens or some such thing...although he would be more qualified for this than most of the Bush appointees.

"You're doing a heckuva job, Jose!"
 

smurphy

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Bush cares more about his Arab and Mexican connections than he does about Americans. There is no way around that sad fact.
 

The Sponge

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Bush cares more about his Arab and Mexican connections than he does about Americans. There is no way around that sad fact.

those two border patrol guards who are spending their time in prison might agree with you. Anyone ever get them out?
 
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