Ronald George (pic­tured), Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court, recent­ly called the state’s death penal­ty dys­func­tion­al” and crit­i­cized state law­mak­ers for their unwill­ing­ness to ade­quate­ly fund the state’s cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment sys­tem. The Justice not­ed that this refusal has been a dis­ser­vice to the admin­is­tra­tion of jus­tice.” George added, I think that there are many, many things in the eyes of leg­is­la­tors that have greater pri­or­i­ty. That’s the prob­lem. People want to have the death penal­ty, but they don’t want to pay every­thing it costs to have it imple­ment­ed in a judi­cious man­ner.… The sys­tem is very dys­func­tion­al.”

George, a Republican who was appoint­ed to the court by Governor Pete Wilson, said that the California Supreme Court needs sev­er­al new staff attor­neys to process cap­i­tal cas­es, and he also stat­ed that law­mak­ers need to increase hourly pay­ments to lawyers han­dling death penal­ty appeals in order to keep inmates from wait­ing years before coun­sel is appoint­ed. Approximately 25% of those on California’s death row do not have a pub­licly appoint­ed lawyer to chal­lenge their con­vic­tion and sen­tence. Since California rein­stat­ed the death penal­ty in 1978, 13 peo­ple have been put to death. Four times as many peo­ple on death row have died of nat­ur­al caus­es, sui­cide, or murder.

(Associated Press, April 30, 2006). See New Voices and Costs.

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