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------No mercy
BY MARC HERMAN California Gov. Pete Wilson is considering the clemency request of death row inmate Jaturun "Jay" Siripongs, scheduled to die by lethal injection Nov. 17. Wilson has rejected the five previous clemency requests he's faced in his eight years as governor. But Siripongs, a Thai national on California's death row for murdering two people since 1982, may test his resolve. Siripongs' case, with an unknown accomplice still at large, appears to be the most compelling appeal for clemency in Wilson's tenure. In the past several days, two of the jurors who convicted him have reversed themselves, saying they do not think he acted alone, and that an accomplice actually committed the murders. Additionally, the former warden of San Quentin prison, Daniel Vasquez, has asked Wilson to spare Siripongs after calling him a model prisoner. But Wilson is said to be thinking about a 2000 presidential bid, and a 6-0 record on executions may be important to him. A likely Republican front-runner for the nomination, Texas Gov. George Bush Jr., recently refused to grant clemency to Carla Faye Tucker in a case in which even many death penalty advocates suggested clemency. Wilson can't afford to look weak on capital punishment if he wants to take on Bush. "It's political. The Thai government has offered to take Jay, and Wilson won't let them do that," said Laura Magnani, a spokeswoman for the American Friends Service Committee, a Quaker organization that opposes capital punishment. "With people who've committed crimes here, he's asked for federal assistance to deport them. But when you get an actual case here he doesn't do that." Wilson spokesman Ron Lowe called the charge "sad" and said politics would have no bearing on the governor's decision. Living in the United States two years at the time, Siripongs took part in a robbery of the Panthai market in the Los Angeles suburb of Garden Grove on Dec. 15, 1981. During that robbery, Packovan "Pat" Wattaporn and Quach Nguyen, of Thai and Vietnamese background, respectively, were murdered, their bodies left where they fell and discovered several hours later. Caught trying to use Wattaporn's credit card the next day, Siripongs was the only person arrested in the crime. But the case against Siripongs has become complicated. The head of the Orange County public defender's office, Carl Holmes, said in a letter to the governor last week that he believes his office provided an inadequate defense. And two jurors have signed statements attesting to doubts about Siripongs' guilt and about the quality of defense he received. "All of the jurors thought Mr. Siripongs could not have acted alone," wrote juror Sylvia Twomey in a statement this week, adding she "had grave doubts that Mr. Siripongs was the killer." Twomey, who now lives in Oregon, wrote that she had expected his sentence to be reduced to life in prison, and learned of Siripongs' planned execution only when she was contacted by reporters. Twomey said she was convinced to vote for death in part because her boss at California Polytechnic College in Pomona, where she worked, was concerned about paying her during her absence for the long trial. She also claimed that anti-immigrant bias in the jury room clouded the case. "One male juror argued that we should not sentence Mr. Siripongs to prison because California's citizens would then be required to pay to house him," wrote Twomey. "The juror complained that Mr. Siripongs was an immigrant wrongfully taxing the American system. I told this juror that we could not sentence a man to die simply because he was an immigrant, but I do not think my words made an impact." N E X T+P A G E+| Deputy district attorney not convinced |
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