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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe only Native American on federal death row faces execution Wednesday
https://www.cnn.com/2020/08/26/politics/lezmond-mitchell-native-american-execution-supreme-court/index.html (CNN)As the clock ticks toward the scheduled Wednesday night execution of the only Native American on federal death row, attorneys for 38-year-old Lezmond Mitchell are fighting on multiple fronts and pleading directly to President Donald Trump to commute Mitchell's death sentence.
Late Tuesday night, the Supreme Court denied Mitchell's motions to stop his execution. The federal district court in Washington, DC, also denied a request to halt Mitchell's execution until after his petition to the President for clemency has had more time to be considered.
Mitchell filed his clemency petition at the end of July asking the President to demonstrate respect for tribal sovereignty by commuting his death sentence to life in prison without the possibility of release. Mitchell argues that since the Department of Justice set his execution date on July 29, his petition for clemency has not been given adequate time for consideration. But with Mitchell's execution scheduled for 6 p.m. ET Wednesday, it is unlikely his clemency request will be granted at this late stage.
Mitchell was convicted in connection with the 2001 murders of a 63-year-old Navajo woman, Alyce Slim, and her 9-year-old granddaughter, Tiffany Lee, on the Navajo reservation in the northeast corner of Arizona.
(snip)
Mitchell's attorneys say he would be the first Native American in modern history to be executed by the US government for a crime committed against another Native American on tribal land. That's because under the Major Crimes Act, Congress allowed a "tribal option" where tribal leaders can decide whether to opt in to the federal death penalty. The Navajo Nation, along with many other Native American tribes, has not opted in. But since the Major Crimes Act applies only to serious crimes including murder and manslaughter, federal prosecutors in Mitchell's case found a legal loophole: They could pursue the death penalty in the carjacking resulting in death charge, which is not considered a serious crime and does not fall under the act.
Late Tuesday night, the Supreme Court denied Mitchell's motions to stop his execution. The federal district court in Washington, DC, also denied a request to halt Mitchell's execution until after his petition to the President for clemency has had more time to be considered.
Mitchell filed his clemency petition at the end of July asking the President to demonstrate respect for tribal sovereignty by commuting his death sentence to life in prison without the possibility of release. Mitchell argues that since the Department of Justice set his execution date on July 29, his petition for clemency has not been given adequate time for consideration. But with Mitchell's execution scheduled for 6 p.m. ET Wednesday, it is unlikely his clemency request will be granted at this late stage.
Mitchell was convicted in connection with the 2001 murders of a 63-year-old Navajo woman, Alyce Slim, and her 9-year-old granddaughter, Tiffany Lee, on the Navajo reservation in the northeast corner of Arizona.
(snip)
Mitchell's attorneys say he would be the first Native American in modern history to be executed by the US government for a crime committed against another Native American on tribal land. That's because under the Major Crimes Act, Congress allowed a "tribal option" where tribal leaders can decide whether to opt in to the federal death penalty. The Navajo Nation, along with many other Native American tribes, has not opted in. But since the Major Crimes Act applies only to serious crimes including murder and manslaughter, federal prosecutors in Mitchell's case found a legal loophole: They could pursue the death penalty in the carjacking resulting in death charge, which is not considered a serious crime and does not fall under the act.
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The only Native American on federal death row faces execution Wednesday (Original Post)
WhiskeyGrinder
Aug 2020
OP
ret5hd
(20,511 posts)1. Hmmm...what an oxymoron:
A death penalty crime that is "not considered a serious crime".
The Magistrate
(95,251 posts)2. Always Worth Knowing What The Conviction Is For, Ma'am
Mitchell was convicted in connection with the 2001 murders of a 63-year-old Navajo woman, Alyce Slim, and her 9-year-old granddaughter, Tiffany Lee, on the Navajo reservation in the northeast corner of Arizona.
Prosecutors said Mitchell and his co-defendant murdered Slim and Lee, dismembering both of their bodies and burying them, so they could steal Slim's pickup truck and use it in an armed robbery. Mitchell, who was 20 at the time of the crimes, was found guilty on multiple charges including first-degree murder, felony murder and carjacking resulting in death.
It does not seem any claim of innocence is being made. The legal question of tribal sovereignty is important, and seems valid. But no injustice will be done to this man if the sentence is carried through.
WhiskeyGrinder
(22,393 posts)3. As someone who does not see state killing as justice, I disagree.
Also, while I know it's your thing, please stop gendering me when you respond to me.