3A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2016 Marquis, Portland defense attorney debate death penalty Forum looked at ultimate punishment By PETER WONG Portland Tribune Most Oregon lawyers never deal with cases involv- ing the death penalty. But as part of their require- ment by the Oregon State Bar for continuing legal education, a group of them heard from two lawyers experienced in it during a session last Thursday at bar offices in Tigard. Josh Marquis has been a county prosecutor for four decades, the past 23 years as the elected district attorney of Clatsop County. Jeff Ellis is a Portland law- yer who specializes in crimi- nal defense, and as director of the Oregon Capital Resource Center, has been involved in cases in Oregon and other states. Oregon is among the 31 states, plus the federal gov- ernment, with the death pen- alty. Oregon is also one of four states where the governor has called a temporary halt to executions. Thirty-three men and one woman await execution in the Oregon State Penitentiary. Two men were executed by lethal injection most recently 20 years ago; both waived fur- ther appeals. Oregon voters have gone back and forth on the death penalty since the state took over responsibility for execu- tions in 1903. A repeal mea- sure may appear again on a statewide ballot, although death penalty opponents have not advanced it. ‘Rare sentence’ When Oregon voters rein- stated the death penalty in 1984, it applies to aggravated murder — circumstances are specified by law — and it is exempt from the state con- stitutional ban on vindictive justice. “It is a rare sentence, and very few murderers deserve it,” Marquis said. “But there are some people who I believe are beyond redemption.” He described them as “people who have such deep sociopathic, antisocial per- sonalities that either they do not care about anybody — or worse, they actually like to inflict pain, particularly on vulnerable people.” Despite his outspoken sup- port for the death penalty, Marquis said he has sought it for only two offenders during 40 years as a prosecutor. He sought it three times for Randy Lee Guzek, who was convicted of a double murder in Terrebonne in 1987, when Marquis was chief deputy district attorney in Deschutes County. The Oregon Supreme Court upheld Guzek’s death sentence in 2015; Guzek’s appeal is pending in federal courts. “I suspect that Mr. Guzek will probably outlive me on death row,” said Marquis, who is 17 years older. “I will probably die of natural causes before he dies of natural causes.” He also sought it for Anthony Scott Garner, con- victed in 2001 of the 1997 murder of an informant in Warrenton. But the jury sen- tenced Garner to life impris- onment without parole. “That is really what the death penalty process attempts to do,” Marquis said. “It allows 12 jurors to decide whether a person has any possibility of either being redeemed or redeeming himself.” Under current procedure, jurors must first decide an offender’s guilt, then in a sep- arate penalty phase, answer “yes” to four questions before imposing the death penalty. ‘Morally wrong’ Ellis, who has taken part in Guzek’s case, also has a strong belief on the death penalty. “I think it is morally wrong. I think the state should not be in the business of kill- ing individuals in our name,” he said. “But that does not get us very far, because reasonable people can disagree about that position.” He took issue with Mar- quis’ argument that Oregon’s death penalty should apply only to criminal offenders beyond redemption. “I guess he has a vision of an Oregon death penalty system that is not the system that has been operating since the mid-1980s in Oregon. Instead we have a system that is chock-full of problems,” Ellis said. Of the offenders sentenced to death, Ellis said, the only two actually executed waived appeals — and no other case (until Guzek) has moved on to federal appellate review. “Eventually we will have a small and random group of individuals who were sen- tenced to death, who lost on appeal and in post-conviction, and lost in (federal) habeas corpus,” he said. “Are these people the worst of the worst? Absolutely not.” Penalty is final According to the Death Penalty Information Center, 1,442 executions have taken place since the U.S. Supreme Court allowed the death pen- alty to resume in 1976. Mar- quis said that number is a fraction of about 600,000 murders during that period. Texas leads with 538 exe- cutions, and according to the center’s definition of the region, the South accounts for a total of 1,175. (Ten of the 11 states in the former Confeder- acy are in the top 14 states for executions; the exception is Tennessee.) onment, he added, “If she stands for office in two years, I suspect she would not get re-elected.” A ballot question? The Daily Astorian/File Photo District Attorney Josh Marquis is an advocate of the death penalty for criminals who are “beyond redemption.” He has been a county prosecutor for 40 years. “Unlike any other pun- ishment, the death penalty is irreversible when inflicted,” Ellis said. He mentioned the case of Cameron Todd Willingham, who was executed in Texas in 2004 for the 1991 arson mur- der of three children. A subsequent report dis- puted whether the fire was arson, although the fire agency says the report over- looked some points. “The criminal justice sys- tem does not do a good job with claims of innocence,” Ellis said. Marquis said it is the “worst nightmare” of prose- cutors to convict an innocent person. “Innocent people have been on death row,” Marquis said. “Anyone who denies that is not being honest.” But Marquis said even the most ardent opponents of Oregon’s death penalty have yet to make a case for absolv- ing any of the 34 on Oregon’s death row. Marquis cited the case of Roger Coleman, who was executed in Virginia in 1992 for the rape and murder of his sister-in-law, despite death-penalty foes rais- ing doubts. A DNA test per- formed in 2006 confirmed Coleman’s guilt. “The story sank faster than dropping a 10-pound weight into the deepest part of the Columbia River channel,” he said. Which way? According to a report by the Death Penalty Informa- tion Center, the past year resulted in the fewest death sentences imposed in the United States in the past 40 years, and the fewest execu- tions since 1991. Seven states in the past decade have abolished the death penalty. But Marquis said all of them occurred because of legislative or court actions — and when the ques- tion was put in November in California, Nebraska and Oklahoma, voters upheld the death penalty. (In Nebraska, voters over- turned a 2015 legislative repeal. In Oklahoma, second only to Texas in executions since 1976, voters approved a measure allowing any form of execution not specifically barred by the U.S. Supreme Court.) When then-Gov. John Kitzhaber issued a tempo- rary reprieve to Gary Haugen, who was within two weeks of execution in 2011, Kitzhaber also imposed a moratorium on executions. Haugen won a challenge to his unsought reprieve in T HE D AILY A STORIAN ’ S C UTEST B ABY C ONTEST If your baby was born January 1st & December 31st , 2016 , between Alder and Maple Saw Logs & Standing Timber N orth w es t H a rdw oods • Lon gview , W A Contact: John Anderson • 360-269-2500 H APPY N EW Y EAR The Daily Astorian will be CLOSED Monay, January 2, 2017 you can submit your newborn’s picture either via email at: CLASSIFIEDS @ DAILYASTORIAN . COM or drop by one of our offi ces in Astoria or Seaside and we can scan in the photo for you. Deadline to enter is W A NTED Circuit Court, but the Ore- gon Supreme Court in 2013 upheld the governor’s broad constitutional authority to grant clemency — including the reprieve. “I think the declaration of a reprieve and a morato- rium was undertaken by Gov. Kitzhaber for very serious and real reasons,” said Ellis, one of four signers of a let- ter that Kitzhaber considered before announcing a morato- rium in 2011. The 2013 Legislature gave only a single hearing to Kitzhaber’s proposed consti- tutional amendment to substi- tute life imprisonment for the death penalty. Gov. Kate Brown con- tinued the moratorium upon succeeding Kitzhaber in Feb- ruary 2015, and it will last as long as she holds office. She was elected in November to the two years remaining in Kitzhaber’s term. “If she thinks it is so wrong, that it is so egregious and she believes there are innocent people on death row, she has the power of commu- tation. Good luck,” said Mar- quis, who has been an outspo- ken critic of the moratorium. Were she to commute death sentences to life impris- Oregonians for Alterna- tives to the Death Penalty is conducting a campaign to raise awareness, but so far, the group has not petitioned for any ballot initiative to abolish it. They say they are determining lawmakers’ atti- tudes in the 2017 session. “I can assure you that the Oregon Legislature does not have the guts to change the Constitution — they will refer it to the voters,” Mar- quis said, although the Legis- lature is required to refer any constitutional amendment to a statewide vote. “I’ve been part of this con- versation for the past 17 years in this state. We have talked this to death. If the voters choose to abolish the death penalty, so be it.” Voters shifted 14 years later, but Oregon in 1964 was the most recent state to repeal the death penalty by popular vote. Marquis said he remem- bers that at 12 years old, he put a pro-repeal sticker on the rear bumper of his father’s Ford Falcon. Although no one has been released so far under a life-imprisonment law for aggravated murder took effect in 1991, Marquis said he believes opponents would challenge it based on the fed- eral constitutional guaran- tee against cruel and unusual punishment. But Ellis said life impris- onment without parole is a good alternative to the death penalty — and he would not challenge it for adults. “If a person is innocent and we have sentenced him to life, we cannot give back the years he lost, but we can release him and give him some compensation,” Ellis said. “We can keep our com- munities safe with life with- out parole — and I think we can keep prisons safe even with individuals who have committed murder.” Wednesday, January 25 th at 5 pm Entries will be printed in The Daily Astorian on January 31st. *Human babies only please!* CLASSIFIED DEADLINES ARE 11am on Friday, Dec. 30 fo r Monday, Jan. 2 editio n 1 p m on Friday , Dec. 30 for Tuesday, January 3 edition Usual delivery of the Newspaper T HE D AILY A STORIAN Come Join Us for Our N e w Full color, scenic montage postcards of Astoria now available at the Daily Astorian office! 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