[File Photo]
OKLAHOMA CITY -
A federal
appeals court judge's rebuke in an Oklahoma death penalty case has sparked
renewed debate over the constitutionality of a common practice in state courts
-- allowing murder victims' relatives recommend to jurors whether the death
penalty should be imposed against the perpetrator.
Veteran
Oklahoma prosecutors defend the practice. They say jurors who must decide
whether a defendant in a first-degree murder case is sentenced to death should
have all of the evidence and testimony they can.
The 10th
Circuit Court of Appeals has upheld the death sentences of a man convicted of
two counts of first-degree murder for the stabbing deaths of a wealthy LeFlore
County couple. But a dissenting opinion by Judge Carlos F. Lucero complains of
repeated violations of defendants' constitutional rights in state death-penalty
trials.