On July 10, Carlton Akee Turner is sched­uled to be put to death in Texas for the mur­der of his adop­tive par­ents when he was 19 years old. But a major­i­ty of the vic­tims’ rel­a­tives are speak­ing out against the exe­cu­tion. Victim Tonya Carlton’s broth­er, Kelly Johnson, wrote in a peti­tion to the Board of Pardons and Paroles, I do not wish to see my sister’s only child exe­cut­ed. I believe in my heart that my sis­ter would only have want­ed Akee to receive the help that he need­ed to restore his mind to a sound state.” Tonya’s first cousin and close friend Krishell Colemen said, I don’t think Carlton [the defen­dant] should be exe­cut­ed. I don’t want him to be exe­cut­ed. Now that I know more of the details that led to the mur­ders, I real­ize that he needs help. Killing him is just anoth­er mur­der. Nothing is going to bring my cousin back. Killing him will just hurt our fam­i­ly again, the way Tonya and Carlton’s mur­ders did.”

The clemen­cy also cit­ed Governor Rick Perry’s state­ment that Texas can nev­er for­get the impact felt by crime vic­tims” while remind­ing the Board that the vast major­i­ty” of the vic­tims’ fam­i­ly mem­bers don’t want to see the couple’s son exe­cut­ed. Executions are held out as a tal­is­man that will pro­vide the vic­tim with clo­sure,” said the peti­tion. This belief serves in part as a ratio­nale for exe­cu­tions. But, in Mr. Turner’s case, an eye for an eye’ tru­ly does leave a fam­i­ly blind, twice robbed of their own.”

The peti­tion also point­ed out that Turner was con­vict­ed by an all-white jury, with no black cit­i­zens even mak­ing it to the voir dire phase of selec­tion. The peti­tion argued, The cap­i­tal pros­e­cu­tion of an African American man by an all white jury from a juris­dic­tion [Dallas County] with such an exten­sive record of dis­crim­i­na­tion in exact­ly that are­na should cause doubts in the first instance.”
(B. Sanders, Sanders: Another Troubling Dallas Case,” Star Telegram, July 6, 2008). See Victims and Race.


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