![]() Editorial
A few weeks ago, for example, Canadian citizen Stanley Faulder
was executed, despite protests from the Canadian government and
even Secretary of State Madeleine Albright that Faulder had never
been accorded the consular rights due him him under international
law. The members of the Board of Pardons and Paroles and the Governor
who appoints them were unmoved. When asked about the case, George
W. Bush responded solemnly, If you come to Texas, dont kill
anybody, later voluntarily repeating that lesson after reading
aloud to a group of schoolchildren. Neither the children nor the
reporters in attendance asked the Governor if he therefore believed
the state of Texas is exempt from the rule of law it imposes on
its citizens or whether foreign governments should henceforth
feel free to ignore laws which would otherwise protect the rights
of American citizens abroad. The international issue was only one of several troubling in the
Faulder case, including purchased testimony and evidence that
Faulder perhaps suffered from mental illness or organic brain
damage. And as recently reported in the political newsletter Counterpunch,
during a youthful stint in a Canadian prison, Faulder, having
asked for psychiatric help, was instead subjected to experimental
drug treatment with doses of LSD, under research funded by the
Canadian Defense Department and the U.S. Central Intelligence
Agency. It is worth noting, of course, that even had Faulders
attorneys been able to prove mental illness, it might not have
saved his life. Despite popular legend to the contrary, the number
of capital defendants who make successful claims of insanity is
virtually nil. And this year the Texas Legislature rejected an
attempt to ban the execution of the mentally retarded, at least
partly because of the resistance of the Governor. Which brings us to the case of Larry Robison, scheduled to be
executed August 17 for the brutal 1982 murder of Bruce Gardner,
near Fort Worth. The evidence is abundant that Robison was completely
insane at the time of Gardners murder. He killed four more people
the same night, beheading and mutilating his roommate in a manner
he believed was being dictated by the voices in his head, the
clocks in his room, the apocalyptic stories of the Old Testament.
He readily confessed to the killings, and the four prosecutors
developing the case were willing to accept a plea of insanity
and permanent confinement to a mental institution. They were overruled
by the Tarrant County prosecutor, and in court, the evidence of
Robisons madness was ruled, for the most part, inadmissible
the jury in both his first and second trials heard almost none
of it. As Robisons family can easily document, the deafness of the state
of Texas to Larry Robisons paranoid schizophrenia was nothing
new. The Robisons spent the years preceding 1982 fighting for
Larrys sanity, and have spent the years since fighting for his
life. As a teenager he began acting strangely, hearing voices,
believing he had secret paranormal mental powers. He joined the
Army but was discharged after only a year only much later was
the family told that he was convinced he could control people
and objects with his mind. It was easier for the Army to get rid
of him than help him. Larrys condition continued to deteriorate,
and for four years his parents attempted to get him medical treatment,
to get him committed for mental care. At one point, Larry spent
six months in jail because his parents could not find a hospital
to admit him. Larry himself, in his more desperately lucid moments,
begged them to help him. Again and again the Robisons were told,
Hes not on your insurance
he doesnt have his own
we cant
commit him for more than thirty days
hes not your problem
and hes never been violent. Unless he does something violent,
theres nothing we can do. On the bloody night of August 10,
1982, Larry Robison finally gave the state of Texas something
to do. While in police custody, he tried to help the state along
two serious and almost successful attempts at suicide but
was revived from a coma to begin the death watch that will likely
conclude this month. Even after Larrys conviction, evidence of his insanity continued
to accumulate. It was discovered that several of his relatives
suffered from similar illnesses confirming the diagnosis of
schizophrenia, a congenital disease although out of shame, family
members had hidden the knowledge. His natural father had died
of a brain tumor when Larry was two; a few years after his conviction,
Larrys younger sister also became ill, and was diagnosed with
schizophrenia. Her prospects are better, says her mother. It took
seven years of fighting for treatment, but when mental health
administrators tried to turn her away, Lois Robison, would deliver
a three-minute version of her sons story, and they eventually
found a way to place her daughter in a residential program where
she receives excellent care. Larry Robisons case is certainly horrible, but is it exceptional?
Only in degree. Based on her work with inmates families, Lois
Robison says, Were not the only ones this has happened to. Its
happened to I dont know how many people before. At this writing,
in addition to Larry Robison, there are five Texas death row inmates
scheduled to die in August (some may be postponed). Of those five
cases, three inmates exhibit evidence of severe mental illness
and/or retardation. Recently Lois Robison told a brief version of her sons story
to a meeting of the Board of Pardons and Paroles. Some members
seemed interested, she said, and two even thanked her for her
testimony. It should never have come to this, said Lois. If
we had been able to get him the treatment that we begged for,
and he begged for, then these people wouldnt have died. Its
basically down to mercy. In a few days, the board members will be receiving Larry Robisons final petition for clemency, which they can recommend to Governor Bush. Larrys mother says she still has hope. Governor Bush has the authority to order one thirty-day stay of execution. The Board can urge the Governor to grant clemency. One can only hope that Lois Robison is right. Perhaps the Board and the Governor will choose compassion and reason over ideology and political expediency. Based on the record of the Board, this Governor, and the state of Texas, there is little reason to think so. M.K. Originally published in the Texas Observer on August 6, 1999 Go Back to the The Bush Files home page. Or go to the Texas Observer and get the best information on politics and culture in the south.
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