
In theory, the death penalty for capital crimes should work.
An accused killer takes the life of an innocent and is put to death to protect the rest of society.
The only problem is that theory has little to do with real life.
Prejudicial prosecution; coerced confessions; corrupted informants; botched lawyering; and, yes, even racism, have turned the death penalty, as it is now applied in the United States, into a very dirty, inaccurate business.
Let's cross our fingers and pray that with a little luck, a death knell for the death penalty will soon be sounded, especially in light of the sad case of Romell Broom, who would have been executed in Ohio's death chamber on Sept. 15 but for his weak veins.
You read that right.
An execution team of 12 at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility spent several hours trying unsuccessfully to find a viable vein in Broom for a lethal injection. Gov. Ted Strickland was forced to issue a seven-day reprieve of the execution.
A second execution attempt was scheduled for Sept. 22, but a U.S. District Judge issued a temporary restraining order delaying it until a new motion is filed with the Ohio Supreme Court.
Broom's defense attorney is arguing another execution attempt would violate state law, because Broom was forced to suffer a slow and painful execution attempt. Ohio is the only state that has a statute that requires a quick and painless execution.
I'll let others debate that point, because I'm not going to shed any tears for Broom, who was convicted of raping and murdering 14-year-old Tryna Middleton on Sept. 21, 1984. Let him rot in prison, pick up trash, clean out sewers or do anything else that can benefit the public good in even a small measure.
Exonerated by DNA
Byron Halsey
Halsey spent more than two decades in state prison before being exonerated by DNA testing for the brutal rape and murder of two New Jersey children. Now he's filing a federal civil rights suit.
AP / The Star-Ledger
Alton Logan
Logan spent 26 years in prison for fatally shooting a security guard in 1983. In 2007, an attorney for another man who admitted that he had committed the crime came forward with the truth. He was officially declared innocent in April 2009.
AP
Antonio Beaver
He served more than a decade in prison because blood found on an attack victim was not presented in his trial. Once testing proved him not guilty, all charges were dropped in 2007. Unfortunately, he landed back in jailafter crashing his car while drunk.
Innocence Project
Calvin Johnson
DNA from a rape kit did not match Johnson's. He was set free in 1999 after nearly 16 years in prison. He later wrote a book about his ordeal.
John Bazemore / AP
Darryl Hunt
Darryl Hunt was convicted twice of a 1984 North Carolina murder. After DNA results proved his innocence in 1994, it still took 10 years of legal appeals to exonerate him.
Innocence Project
Donte Booker
After serving 15 years on a rape conviction, Booker was exonerated on Feb. 9, 2005, after DNA evidence on the victim's clothing pointed to someone else. In 2007 he was accused of a second rape, of which he was found not guilty by a jury in 2008.
Innocence Project
Floyd Brown
Brown was freed in 2007 after 14 years behind bars. Authorities locked up the mentally disabled man without a trial in 1993 and lost or destroyed key criminal evidence that could have freed him years ago.
Innocence Project
Herman Atkins
Atkins was convicted in 1988 of robbery, rape, forcible oral copulation and for using a handgun. After test results were returned, Atkins was released from prison in February 2000, after spending 12 years in prison. He has since gone to college, married, and dedicated his life to helping those who have been wrongly convicted.
Innocence Project
James Lee Woodard
Woodard spent more time in prison than any other wrongfully convicted inmate in U.S. history -- 27 years. DNA testing in the murder and rape of his girlfriend ultimately overturned his conviction in 2008.
AP
James Waller
In 2006, 23 years after his conviction of rape, DNA from a rape kit that had never been presented was found not to belong to Waller. He was pardoned by Texas governor Rick Perry in 2007.
Innocence Project / AP
The Broom case should be used as a lever to overturn the death penalty nationwide.
I hope some smart anti-death penalty lawyers use the case to show how absurd, unfair and unconstitutional the death penalty is.
Just a visit to the respected Innocence Project website, with its stories of death row inmates being freed by DNA evidence, should chill the spine of any thinking person. (And be sure to read the case of Cameron Todd Willingham, a white Texas man who was put to death even though all of the evidence says he was innocent.)
Besides being applied to innocent people, another fatal flaw of the death penalty is that it is applied so unequally. Often times, the important question of whether someone gets the death penalty is determined by something as simple as where the crime was committed.
Get convicted of murder in New Mexico, and you are likely facing a long prison stretch. Do that same crime in neighboring Texas, and you may have to kiss your behind goodbye.
So let us hope that the miserable life and crime of Mr. Bloom brings at least one positive to the country: the end of the unfair death penalty.


Comments: (41)
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By: Tired of Poor ME attitude on 9/25/2009 9:12PM
Just use a firing squad, what is the big deal? It has worked for years, always will. Death row, use DNA evidence, if it doesn't pan out, SHOOT THE LOW LIFE. Maybe use them for Military Ballistic tests.
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By: ezzie on 9/28/2009 4:31PM
why do people always want want to kill people thats the first thing come out of of their mouth, isn`t there some other way to do things besides killing people, thats the problem with world today all people talk about is death and killing each other
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By: James on 10/05/2009 4:17AM
A killer should die a painful death.
Instead of a nice quite sleep away, he should have had to "Ride the Lighting." and FRY for His Misdeeds.
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By: Jake on 9/25/2009 7:21PM
For killing and raping a 14 year old girl, execute the bastard by any means necessary. Don't allow that beast to draw another breath for too long.
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By: Bwpapoose43b on 9/25/2009 7:29PM
For killing and raping a 14 year girl, execute the bastard by any means necessary. Do not allow the beast to draw another breath too long.
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By: Sharon on 9/25/2009 10:36PM
I agree they need to pull out the electric chair, that was disgusting and sick raping and killing He should receive exactly what he put that poor child through
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By: William on 9/26/2009 5:28AM
Put the savage in Old Sparky soaking wet and throw the switch immediately.
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By: nyc5055 on 9/26/2009 11:51AM
I think DNA investigation should apply even if the defendant does'nt have the money or a good paid lawyer.It is absurd to allow a death penalty to proceed if DNA can prove innocence,and even more so if the testing was'nt done because of not having money or quality lawyer.Now this guy Broom is the lowest piece of grime there is. A child rapist. You tried to take his life more than once and failed.Give him a life at hard labor in a cell.This IMO is worse then death as long as hard labor is hard labor.
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By: Andrew Thompson on 9/28/2009 7:51AM
How quickly some of you non-thinking people are do you think the family of the young girl who was murdered by scumbags like Broom will feel sorry for him and would you if this had happened to one of your loved ones?
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By: johnsons on 9/28/2009 9:24AM
Just because he was found guilty, do not means that he is guilty. Our courts are so corrupt that one can't take all courts decisions as the right one. The death penalty is wrong, and should be removed from our country.
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