Monday, October 02, 2006

Hockey and Death

To provide a bit of context, this is a nifty little discussion to have after a U.S. Court sentenced Alfonso Rodriguez Jr. to death for murdering Dru Sjodin. Note how California ACLU Lawyer Aundré Herron is extolled to the rafters while Warden Tim Schuetzle is given a small fart applause. Dakota Liberals love California, but they are afraid to move there -- maybe too much Arnold?

At least one Dakota Liberal understands why Dakota sent him to D.C.
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PRESS RELEASE
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Panel at UND Law School to Discuss Problems of Proof and Inequality with the Death Penalty

GRAND FORKS, ND (September 30, 2006) A panel discussion on problems with the death penalty will be held on Monday, October 9, 2006 at 4:30 p.m. in the Baker Court Room in the UND School of Law. The event, titled “The Ultimate Mistake: Problems of Proof and Inequality with the Death Penalty,” will feature, Aundré Herron, a nationally recognized death penalty expert and attorney, and Tim Schuetzle, Warden of the North Dakota State Penitentiary. The program, hosted by the UND Public Interest Law Student Association (PILSA), is free and open to the public.

Aundré Herron is a staff attorney with the California Appellate Project in San Francisco . She has worked for the last 15 years on behalf of death row clients in California who are appealing their sentence. Herron will discuss the work of her agency, the legal and political issues involved in capital cases, and day-to-day capital appellate practice. She has broad perspective on capital punishment, having begun her legal career as a state prosecutor, and is a surviving family member of a murder victim. Herron has won a national award for her commitment and work surrounding the death penalty.

Tim Schuetzle is the Director of the North Dakota Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation Prison Division and is the Warden of the North Dakota State Penitentiary in Bismarck. He will be discussing the history and current status of the death penalty in North Dakota. Schuetzle has worked in the prison system for 30 years and has received national recognition as warden of the year.

The event is PILSA's annual First Monday event, which it hosts near the first Monday of October each year in recognition of the U.S. Supreme Court's new term. PILSA chose the death penalty as this year's topic because of its importance and timeliness in light of the Alfonso Rodriguez, Jr. trial and current discussion of death penalty cases throughout the state. PILSA is a student-run organization aimed at informing law students and the community on important legal issues and encouraging the legal representation of underserved communities.

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Clint Bueling
Coordinator of Student Organizations
Memorial Union Room 113
University of North Dakota
2901 University Avenue Stop 8385
Grand Forks, ND 58202
(701) 777-3620
clintbueling@mail.und.edu

5 comments:

My Frontier Thesis said...

Note: North Dakota does not have the death penalty.

Mr roT said...

The press release sounds pretty straight to me.

My Frontier Thesis said...

We'll have to see which direction it goes. Pretty charged social environment here in the Red River Valley after the Alfonso Rodriguez, Jr. trial.

My Frontier Thesis said...

Also: I don't endorse the Death Penalty because it provides "closure." I do so because I want to see that motherfucker pay with his life for taking the life of someone else. This is more of a pagan response than a Christian one. As an Infidel and Heathen, I'm fine with that.

Mr roT said...

I am coompletely in agreement. Punishment is punishment and deterrence, not retraining.