Sharon Keller - Michael Richard |
Judge Sharon Keller, presiding
judge of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, had appealed the "public
warning" the State Commission on Judicial Conduct gave her July 16. The
warning was one of the least severe sanctions that panel could have
imposed, but Keller's lawyer claimed the Texas Constitution didn't allow
such a warning.
The Supreme Court disagreed.
The brief order from the court
in Austin indicated only that Keller's petitions in the case were denied
and Justice Nathan Hecht did not participate in the ruling.
"Obviously, we're disappointed
they didn't accept the case for review," said Keller's attorney, Chip
Babcock.
The reprimand stemmed from the
2007 execution of twice-convicted killer Michael Wayne Richard. His
lethal injection came the same day the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to
consider a Kentucky case claiming the method of punishment was
unconstitutionally cruel.
Richard's lawyers, who were
scrambling to file a last minute appeal, told Keller they were having
computer problems that were preventing them from delivering their
appeal. She responded, "We close at 5," and closed the court.
Hours later, Richard was
executed for the 1986 rape and slaying of a Harris County nurse at her
home. He became the last condemned killer put to death anywhere in the
U.S. for months because the U.S. Supreme Court ruling effectively
stopped executions nationwide.
The 13-member judicial conduct
panel could have recommended the Texas Supreme Court remove Keller from
the bench but such action would have been historically extraordinary.
The commission did say her actions amounted to "willful or persistent
conduct that is clearly inconsistent with the proper performance of her
duties." It also decided she had cast "public discredit on the
judiciary."
Keller then appealed, asking for
the public warning to be removed from her record and allegations of
judicial misconduct to be dismissed.
The case is "by no means" over,
Babcock said Monday. He said he was writing a letter Monday asking
Supreme Court Chief Justice Wallace Jefferson to appoint a special court
of review or hold an entirely new trial similar to the one Keller had
before the Judicial Conduct Commission.
"Whatever the court thinks is
appropriate," he said. "We could have another trial in front of three
judges appointed by the court if the court decides it's permissible."
Babcock acknowledged such a
proceeding would be "unusual" and something that hadn't happened before.
Texas is the nation's most
active death penalty state. Keller, a Republican, was elected in 2006 to
the court that serves as the last resort for inmates facing execution
there.
Her lawyers claim the misconduct
case as an attempt by death penalty opponents to have her removed from
the bench. Her term expires in 2012, and it's unclear if she'll run for
re-election.
Source: AP, August 16, 2010
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