Part I THE NATIONA

by BRUCE SHAPIRO

Dinan, Brittany

This walled medieval city in France’s ancient Breton heart­land is the last place any­one would look for evi­dence of a com­ing trans­for­ma­tion in US law. German and British tourists crowd the old stone streets and file through the twelfth-cen­tu­ry Church of St. Saveur to gaze up at a stained-glass por­tray­al of St. Rocco dying in prison. The small Commissaire du Police on the town square near­by is bare­ly notice­able. But a few months ago, gen­darmes from this police sta­tion and pros­e­cu­tors from the nine­teenth-cen­tu­ry Palais du Justice down the block made inter­na­tion­al head­lines with the arrest of fugi­tive James Charles Kopp, accused of mur­der­ing Buffalo obste­tri­cian Bernard Slepian and wound­ing three Canadian physicians.

As note­wor­thy to many Americans as the fugi­tive’s arrest was what Dinan offi­cials did next: They refused to extra­dite Kopp to the United States, because he might face the death penal­ty. No one in France had any sym­pa­thy for Kopp, nor did they doubt the dan­ger he rep­re­sents. But France is a sig­na­to­ry to European con­ven­tions pro­hibit­ing extra­di­tion where cap­i­tal charges are a pos­si­bil­i­ty; in a late June court hear­ing in Rennes, a few miles from Dinan, three judges made it clear that when it comes to this stan­dard, France means busi­ness: Kopp would only be turned over to US pros­e­cu­tors, they reit­er­at­ed, if the death penal­ty is not request­ed, pro­nounced or applied.” Kopp’s French lawyer, Hervé Rouzaud-Leboeuf, added this fil­lip: Given what we know of the opin­ions of the cur­rent American President, we must stay extra vig­i­lant.” It took three months of painstak­ing nego­ti­a­tions, end­ing with writ­ten assur­ances from George W. Bush’s nor­mal­ly death-penal­ty-enam­ored Justice Department, before the French in ear­ly July shipped Kopp back to New York for trial.

France’s refusal to extra­dite even so intense­ly hunt­ed a fugi­tive is at once ordi­nary and emblem­at­ic. Ordinary: The shel­ter­ing of a US defen­dant from the US death penal­ty is rou­tine in a grow­ing num­ber of coun­tries, and is unusu­al only in that it sur­faced in the media. Emblematic: In recent months, long-sim­mer­ing over­seas oppo­si­tion to the US death penal­ty seems to have reached the boiling point.

The date­lines alone sug­gest that some­thing is hap­pen­ing on a wide­spread scale. Toronto and Johannesburg: The high courts of Canada and South Africa both ruled unan­i­mous­ly this spring that their nations may not extra­dite even the most want­ed crim­i­nals to the United States or oth­er nations if they could face cap­i­tal charges – effec­tive­ly block­ing exe­cu­tion, one case at a time, in an inter­na­tion­al ges­ture of judi­cial non­co­op­er­a­tion. Mexico City: President Vicente Fox per­son­al­ly per­suad­ed Oklahoma Governor Frank Keating to stay the sched­uled June exe­cu­tion of Mexican nation­al Gerardo Valdez Mota after the State Department acknowl­edged that Valdez’s rights under the Vienna Convention had been vio­lat­ed; through­out his tri­al and appeals Valdez was nev­er informed that he could call the Mexican con­sulate for legal help. (On July 20, how­ev­er, Keating refused clemen­cy – turn­ing aside not only Fox but the rec­om­men­da­tion of Oklahoma’s own parole board.) The Hague: On June 27 the World Court ruled that the United States had vio­lat­ed its Vienna Convention oblig­a­tions by exe­cut­ing two German nation­als with­out per­mit­ting them a lawyer hired by their con­sulate – and assert­ed the Court’s own author­i­ty over cap­i­tal cas­es involv­ing for­eign nation­als. Madrid: When President Bush land­ed in Spain, he faced scores of anti-death-penal­ty pro­test­ers and hard ques­tions from the local press about a Spanish nation­al on Florida’s death row who had been exon­er­at­ed and freed just days before. All this in just a few weeks’ time. As much as 2000 was marked by Illinois Governor George Ryan’s death-penal­ty mora­to­ri­um, this year rep­re­sents a moment of trans­for­ma­tion,” in the words of Harold Koh, for­mer Assistant Secretary of State for Human Rights – one in which the American death-penal­ty debate is going definitively global.

The New Abolitionism

While Kopp’s lawyer, the French courts and the Justice Department were con­clud­ing their nego­ti­a­tions for his extra­di­tion from Brittany, the speed and inten­si­ty with which the American death penal­ty debate has moved to a world stage were cast in bold relief across France in Strasbourg. If Dinan is defined by its ancient walls, Strasbourg, a few miles from the German bor­der, is defined by the mas­sive Modernist palaces of the European Union: the Council of Europe, the European Parliament and the European Court of Human Rights, adjoin­ing one anoth­er in an expan­sive park near the city cen­ter. There in late June, two days after the United States exe­cut­ed Juan Raul Garza in Terre Haute, Indiana, the Council of Europe and the French cap­i­tal-pun­ish­ment abo­li­tion group Ensemble Contre la Peine de la Mort con­vened a World Congress on the Death Penalty, pack­ing the par­lia­men­tary cham­bers and the streets of Strasbourg for three days with lawyers, politi­cians and activists from several continents.

On the one hand, it was the kind of politi­co-cul­tur­al hap­pen­ing that seems quin­tes­sen­tial­ly European: In front of the ele­gant­ly styl­ized tree trunk from which springs the dais of the Council of Europe, vet­er­an human rights lawyers and youth­ful Mumia Abu-Jamal advo­cates rubbed shoul­ders with Jacques Derrida, Angela Davis and Bianca Jagger.

Yet at the same time, it was clear that in Europe, at least, cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment is a hot top­ic in the high­est coun­cils of pow­er. Austrian par­lia­men­tar­i­an Walter Schwimmer, the avun­cu­lar Secretary General of the Council of Europe, declared the American death penal­ty our great­est con­cern,” call­ing a lengthy press con­fer­ence with Jagger and exon­er­at­ed American death-row inmate Kerry Cook to under­score the point. Chris Patten, the last British gov­er­nor of Hong Kong and chair­man of Northern Ireland’s police-reform com­mis­sion, called on the United States to observe the strict lim­its set in inter­na­tion­al agree­ments” on the exe­cu­tion of retard­ed and juve­nile offend­ers. French elder states­man and legal schol­ar Robert Badinter, who as François Mitterrand’s Justice Minister abol­ished the guil­lo­tine twen­ty years ago and who rushed from the Congress to nego­ti­ate the truce in Macedonia, point­ed out that just four coun­tries – China, Saudi Arabia, Iran and the United States – are respon­si­ble for 90 per­cent of world exe­cu­tions. How can you explain these strange bed­fel­lows?” he demanded.

Europeans oppose the death penal­ty in gen­er­al, and in America in par­tic­u­lar, for a vari­ety of rea­sons. In Italy – home to some of the Continent’s most ded­i­cat­ed anti-cap­i­tal-pun­ish­ment cam­paigns, such as the transna­tion­al group Hands Off Cain – the Vatican has played a cen­tral role, fol­low­ing Pope John Paul II’s 1995 encycli­cal Evangelium Vitae. In France, groups like the League of Human Rights, found­ed in 1898 to defend Alfred Dreyfus, have giv­en cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment abroad greater promi­nence, as the worst European colo­nial and author­i­tar­i­an abus­es of past gen­er­a­tions have grown more remote. Reflexive anti-Americanism may play a part too. But increas­ing­ly – evi­dent in any casu­al con­ver­sa­tion about Timothy McVeigh – it is sim­ple horrified bafflement.

This is not just a mat­ter of cul­tur­al oppo­si­tion. As that string of recent court cas­es sug­gests, anti-death-penal­ty coun­tries – and not only in Europe – are seek­ing ways to inter­vene active­ly in American law and pol­i­tics in a sys­tem­at­ic and can­ny fash­ion. Three years ago the European Union declared cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment world­wide its top human rights pri­or­i­ty and began chan­nel­ing mon­ey into con­fer­ences, reports and lob­by­ing. Some of the mon­ey is going toward legal reform in China, which has far and away the largest num­ber of exe­cu­tions, an esti­mat­ed 1,000 per year. But the great­est polit­i­cal effort is going toward the United States, because it is here, EU min­is­ters feel, that they can have the greatest influence.

One cru­cial cen­ter of activ­i­ty is the Council of Europe, com­pris­ing par­lia­men­tar­i­ans from mem­ber nations. In ear­ly June the coun­cil’s Human Rights Committee threat­ened to revoke US observ­er sta­tus – along with that of Japan, the only oth­er observ­er state to retain cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment – unless a nation­al death penal­ty mora­to­ri­um is imposed with­in two years. A Council of Europe observ­er state has to accept the prin­ci­ples of human rights and democ­ra­cy to which all mem­bers com­mit them­selves,” says Renate Wohlwend, a par­lia­men­tar­i­an from Liechtenstein and the coun­cil’s rap­por­teur on the death penal­ty. The United States is no excep­tion.” Not long ago it might have been laugh­able to think of Liechtenstein attempt­ing to influ­ence the United States in any way; but the Council of Europe and the EU have effec­tive­ly ampli­fied and giv­en insti­tu­tion­al clout to voic­es like Wohlwend’s.

Activists are look­ing for cre­ative ways to inten­si­fy European pres­sure. At the World Death Penalty Congress in Strasbourg, Steven Hawkins, exec­u­tive direc­tor of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty in Washington, found a recep­tive audi­ence when he pro­posed that European nations tar­get invest­ment in the United States to non-death-penal­ty states – shift­ing hun­dreds of mil­lions of dol­lars from Texas, California and Pennsylvania to Massachusetts, Michigan and mora­to­ri­um-bound Illinois. Publicly, few offi­cials are will­ing to go that far yet: I view myself as a friend of America,” said Secretary General Schwimmer. I do not know that we will see eco­nom­ic boy­cotts. But at the same time, we will find ways to show the seri­ous­ness of our con­cern.” Privately, European par­lia­men­tar­i­ans say Bush’s per­sis­tent rebuffs of Europe over mis­sile test­ing and the Kyoto treaty make the idea of even­tu­al eco­nom­ic action far more palatable.

The inten­si­ty of European engage­ment echoes sen­ti­ments heard increas­ing­ly in the Americas. Canada removed the last ves­tiges of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment from its laws in 1998, while Mexico – which in the­o­ry keeps a death penal­ty for trea­son and a hand­ful of oth­er extra­or­di­nary offens­es – has not exe­cut­ed any­one in more than six­ty years. Mexican Foreign Minister Jorge Castañeda calls the forty-five Mexican nation­als cur­rent­ly on US death rows an impor­tant strain on bilat­er­al rela­tions” – so impor­tant a strain that Mexico has put a US defense attor­ney on full-time retain­er for cap­i­tal cas­es. Elsewhere in Latin America, only Guatemala and Guyana still have cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment on the books. In coun­tries whose clos­ets are still crammed with the skele­tons of dic­ta­tor­ship and civ­il war, the death penal­ty has spe­cial mean­ing. Chile, for instance, for­mal­ly abol­ished it in June (an event greet­ed in Rome with a cel­e­bra­to­ry light­ing of the Colosseum). Our coun­tries have lived the death cul­ture, so we know how impor­tant this is,” said Andrés Zaldívar Larraín, pres­i­dent of Chile’s Congress, in Strasbourg. In an exquis­ite irony, Fidel Castro – along with a few tiny Caribbean com­mon­wealth states – joins the United States in keep­ing cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment alive in the Western Hemisphere.

Collision Course

In part, world­wide anti-death-penal­ty sen­ti­ment has ratch­eted upward over the last year for pre­cise­ly the same rea­sons that US sup­port for cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment has soft­ened: near­ly 100 high-pro­file exon­er­a­tions, the exam­ple of Illinois’s mora­to­ri­um [see Shapiro, A Talk With Governor George Ryan,” January 8/​15] and George W. Bush’s track record as what France’s Badinter calls the world champion executioner.”

But on anoth­er lev­el the United States long ago set itself on a col­li­sion course with its clos­est demo­c­ra­t­ic allies. The his­tor­i­cal arc leads back to a sin­gle month a quar­ter-cen­tu­ry ago. In June 1977, a full year after the Supreme Court rein­stat­ed cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, Utah stood Gary Gilmore in front of a fir­ing squad. In that same month, Patrick Henry, accused of kid­nap­ping and gar­rot­ing a small child in France, faced the death penal­ty in a media-sat­u­rat­ed tri­al. Badinter, then a ris­ing legal star, per­suad­ed the jury to spare Henry’s head by putting the death penal­ty itself on tri­al as an atavis­tic rel­ic. Badinter’s argu­ment effec­tive­ly shut down the guil­lo­tine, and in 1981 he spear­head­ed its formal abolition.

Just thir­ty-one nations had ban­ished cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment at that time, and it was still on the books not only in France but also in Belgium and Britain. The United States car­ried out a sin­gle exe­cu­tion in that year. But sub­se­quent­ly, abo­li­tion world­wide has gained momen­tum in inverse pro­por­tion to the pro­lif­er­a­tion of American exe­cu­tions. Since the US death penal­ty was rein­sti­tut­ed, 725 peo­ple have been put to death. Meanwhile, more than sev­en­ty nations have abol­ished cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment – twen­ty-four in the past four years alone, rang­ing from South Africa to Azerbaijan.

The shift away from cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment was par­tic­u­lar­ly notable in Europe. In 1985 the Council of Europe adopt­ed an amend­ment to the European Convention on Human Rights, known in inter­na­tion­al law cir­cles as Protocol 6, abol­ish­ing the death penal­ty in peace­time. It was what Hans Krüger, the coun­cil’s deputy sec­re­tary gen­er­al, calls the first bind­ing legal instru­ment” to out­law exe­cu­tions under rou­tine con­di­tions. In 1994 the coun­cil made rat­i­fi­ca­tion of Protocol 6 a con­di­tion for mem­ber­ship. Any nation wish­ing to sit in the coun­cil or join the EU was required to either abol­ish the death penal­ty or impose a mora­to­ri­um and a sched­ule for abolition.

Coming amid the post-cold war recon­fig­u­ra­tion of Europe, the impact of Protocol 6 was seis­mic, says Harold Koh. Every coun­try that wants to join the EU has had to do the kind of cost-ben­e­fit analy­sis over cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment that we in the United States have always avoid­ed,” Koh says. It has real­ly raised the bar.” Even the Russian Federation, long one of the United States’ chief com­peti­tors in the exe­cu­tion game, has signed Protocol 6, though the Duma has yet to rat­i­fy it. Between 1995 and 1998, Ukraine exe­cut­ed more than 200 peo­ple. But last year – with Ukraine’s mem­ber­ship in the EU more valu­able than its his­toric embrace of the death penal­ty – the coun­try rat­i­fied Protocol 6. In all of Europe, only Turkey keeps cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment on the books, and that is being chal­lenged now, with the cap­i­tal con­vic­tion of Kurdish resis­tance leader Abdullah Ocalan in 1999.

A New Standard

One of the best van­tage points from which to view this rev­o­lu­tion in inter­na­tion­al crime-and-pun­ish­ment cul­ture is the Irish Center for Human Rights, in Galway. The cen­ter’s direc­tor, William Schabas, is a Toronto-born human rights lawyer and expert on inter­na­tion­al law who before mov­ing to Europe spent time work­ing in Washington. Schabas draft­ed Amnesty International’s brief in the Canadian extra­di­tion case and in any giv­en week is like­ly to fly between, say, a death penal­ty con­fer­ence in Taiwan and a con­sul­ta­tion with Mexico’s US attor­ney. Schabas sees a wel­ter of devel­op­ments – inter­na­tion­al law like the Vienna Convention and Protocol 6, nation­al prece­dents like the South African and Canadian Supreme Court deci­sions, the pros­e­cu­tion of war crim­i­nals like Slobodan Milosevic – all cre­at­ing a cul­ture that will make it much more dif­fi­cult for the United States to sus­tain its uni­lat­er­al com­mit­ment to the death penal­ty. You can see the fis­sures in for­mer­ly impen­e­tra­ble legal sys­tems,” he says. It is like the abo­li­tion of slav­ery 150 years ago: on the one hand, slow progress, yet absolute­ly inevitable con­flicts that will have to be addressed soon­er or later.”

One of the rea­sons he is con­vinced the pace of change is accel­er­at­ing: For the first time, the death penal­ty debate is mov­ing bot­tom-up as well as top-down.” Part of the evi­dence lies out­side Schabas’s office win­dow in Galway. For years, death-penal­ty sup­port­ers have claimed that Europe’s abo­li­tion­ist laws were elit­ist reforms that did not reflect pop­u­lar sen­ti­ment. And in fact, cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment was nev­er put to a pop­u­lar vote in any European coun­try. Not, that is, until this June, when a hand­ful of human rights lawyers suc­ceed­ed in plac­ing a ref­er­en­dum on the Irish bal­lot per­ma­nent­ly excis­ing cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment – even in times of war or civ­il unrest – from the Republic’s constitution.

It was, in some ways, a risky strat­e­gy. Says Schabas, There have been pub­lic opin­ion polls in some oth­er European coun­tries sug­gest­ing you might win an anti-death-penal­ty ref­er­en­dum. But until Ireland, no one dared to do it.” Ireland’s last exe­cu­tion was in 1954, but crime rates and pub­lic fear have been ris­ing. Turnout was high, thanks to heat­ed pub­lic debate over anoth­er ref­er­en­dum, on a pro­posed treaty gov­ern­ing the fed­er­a­tion’s expan­sion. The results were stag­ger­ing: Death-penal­ty abo­li­tion was approved by more than 60 per­cent of voters.

The idea of bot­tom-up oppo­si­tion to cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment – a new strat­e­gy for abo­li­tion­ists who cut their teeth fight­ing in the courts – is tak­ing hold on both sides of the Atlantic. In the United States, Bobby Muller of the Vietnam Veterans of America Foundation, who helped ini­ti­ate the suc­cess­ful world­wide cam­paign for a land­mine treaty, is work­ing with anti-death-penal­ty vic­tims of vio­lence as well as European groups to estab­lish a new transna­tion­al lob­by. In Europe, reli­gious and civic groups like Italy’s Community of San Egidio, a Catholic social-jus­tice net­work, have begun adopt­ing US death-row pris­on­ers, mak­ing links through sis­ter cities in the United States and tak­ing oth­er steps more sophis­ti­cat­ed than sim­ply fil­ing futile last-minute diplo­mat­ic protests, as was often the strat­e­gy in the past. Indeed, Emma Bonino, pres­i­dent of the abo­li­tion­ist net­work Hands Off Cain, sees a new, more demo­c­ra­t­ic approach evolv­ing. You can­not impose a new human right by decree – a mis­take some­times made in the past,” she says. That’s why it is impor­tant to push for a mora­to­ri­um. A mora­to­ri­um is the com­mon ground between abo­li­tion­ists and reten­tion­ists, which can allow the debate to take place.”

Once Again, the Swing Vote

The pic­ture that emerges is of the United States alone in the demo­c­ra­t­ic world, encir­cled by gov­ern­ments and NGOs seek­ing every pos­si­ble way of encum­ber­ing the American death penal­ty. I must say, this is a glob­al­iza­tion I like,” says the Council of Europe’s Schwimmer.

The ques­tion remains, though: What impact does all this effort have in the United States? Can the Supreme Court, for instance, be per­suad­ed that the over­whelm­ing con­sen­sus of the world’s democ­ra­cies has rel­e­vance for the American death penal­ty? It’s an intrigu­ing ques­tion. The Declaration of Independence places America on a glob­al stage when it makes ref­er­ences to a decent respect to the opin­ions of mankind.” And until the mid-1980s, Supreme Court deci­sions about the death penal­ty – like Gregg v. Georgia, which rein­stat­ed cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in 1976 – fre­quent­ly made ref­er­ence to inter­na­tion­al stan­dards, to the num­ber of coun­tries accept­ing or reject­ing cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, for instance, as a way of gaug­ing soci­ety’s con­sen­sus on the issue.

All that changed in 1989, when Justice Antonin Scalia wrote a 5‑to‑4 major­i­ty opin­ion in Stanford v. Kentucky. The Court declared that only domes­tic evolv­ing stan­dards of decen­cy” mat­ter in cap­i­tal cas­es. Moral sen­si­bil­i­ty, the Court ruled, stops at the water’s edge. But it is not a closed ques­tion. Justice Sandra Day O’Connor con­curred sep­a­rate­ly in Scalia’s rul­ing – hint­ing that she might still be open to a world-stan­dard argu­ment. Indeed, O’Connor seems to be rethink­ing, or at least restrate­giz­ing, her over­all posi­tion on the death penal­ty, com­ment­ing recent­ly at a Minnesota con­fer­ence that inequities in tri­al rep­re­sen­ta­tion may have led to the exe­cu­tion of innocent people.

The glob­al debate mat­ters in anoth­er and far more imme­di­ate way, too: It is per­suad­ing a grow­ing num­ber of US diplo­mats that cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment may be more trou­ble than it’s worth. Recently Koh, the for­mer US offi­cial, wrote a Supreme Court brief on behalf of a dozen retired American diplo­mats in the case of a men­tal­ly retard­ed North Carolina inmate, due for a hear­ing in October. The diplo­mats – includ­ing Thomas Pickering, the Reagan and first Bush admin­is­tra­tions’ ambas­sador to El Salvador – argue that the United States is so alone in exe­cu­tion of the retard­ed (a prac­tice banned even in China) that it is inter­fer­ing with US diplo­ma­cy. I can’t tell you the num­ber of times we had meet­ings with anoth­er gov­ern­ment over seri­ous human rights issues – and all we heard about was the death penal­ty,” Koh says. The extra­di­tion issue is one con­crete exam­ple: a painstak­ing­ly con­struct­ed sys­tem of inter­na­tion­al law enforce­ment is being dis­rupt­ed” by allies’ revul­sion at the death penal­ty, he says. As for major human rights abusers like China, he adds, We’re just hand­ing these thugs ammunition.”

That is not to say that all this transna­tion­al effort is for the ben­e­fit of Justice O’Connor. In Galway, William Schabas sees the impact spread­ing to judges well beyond the Supreme Court. US judges are spend­ing more and more time at inter­na­tion­al con­fer­ences,” Schabas says. The notion of evolv­ing stan­dards of decen­cy’ has spe­cif­ic rel­e­vance in devel­op­ing a dif­fer­ent court­room cul­ture around cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment.” In the long run the real ques­tion is not about court­rooms. Europe and Latin America will not resolve the US death-penal­ty prob­lem. But the new transna­tion­al abo­li­tion­ists may at least accel­er­ate aware­ness that the United States has a death-penal­ty prob­lem – a prob­lem with legal, moral and, yes, per­haps even finan­cial con­se­quences. The ques­tion is whether the increas­ing­ly impas­sioned cam­paign­ers now ham­mer­ing on the nation’s doors from Mexico and Europe can reach over the heads of judges and politi­cians, for the first time plac­ing American cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in a glob­al con­text and mak­ing clear our iso­la­tion in the democratic world.