Gaile Owens (pic­tured) and Mary Winkler are two women who com­mit­ted sim­i­lar crimes under sim­i­lar cir­cum­stances in Tennessee. Both women suf­fered from abuse from the spous­es they killed, and both were exam­ined by the same psy­chol­o­gist, twen­ty years apart. The psy­chol­o­gist said both women suf­fered from bat­tered wom­an’s syn­drome. Mary Winkler con­front­ed her hus­band with a shot­gun and shot him in the back in 2006. Gaile Owens hired a stranger to kill her hus­band. Winkler was indict­ed for first-degree mur­der, con­vict­ed of vol­un­tary manslaugh­ter and served about two months in a men­tal health facil­i­ty. She is now free and has cus­tody of her chil­dren. Owens is on death row, await­ing exe­cu­tion by lethal injection.

According to an arti­cle by John Seigenthaler in the Tennessean, The dra­mat­ic dif­fer­ence in the sen­tences received by Winkler and Owens relates direct­ly to the man­ner in which the two cas­es were tried, how their sep­a­rate teams of lawyers han­dled their cas­es and how two dif­fer­ent judges dealt with their bat­tered woman’ defens­es.” Winkler tes­ti­fied on her own behalf regard­ing the abuse she suf­fered, while Owens did not take the stand in order to pro­tect her chil­dren from hear­ing the details of her abuse. Winkler was rep­re­sent­ed by expe­ri­enced crim­i­nal lawyers, whose expens­es were paid by her friends. Owens, on the oth­er hand, had trou­ble find­ing legal rep­re­sen­ta­tion. Her first lawyer with­drew from the case because she could not pay him. Perhaps the stark­est dif­fer­ence between the two cas­es were the wom­en’s pleas. Winkler pled not guilty on the basis that she was a bat­tered wife. Owens accept­ed the pros­e­cu­tor’s plea deal in return for a life sen­tence, but the pros­e­cu­tor sub­se­quent­ly refused to accept the agree­ment when Owens’s co-defen­dant would not accept the same plea. They were tried and sen­tenced to death together.

(J. Seigenthaler, The uneven hand of jus­tice in TN mur­ders,” The Tennessean, December 20, 2009). Read about Women and the Death Penalty. See also Arbitrariness.

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