U.S. to Globalist Court: Keep Your Nose out of Our Business
NewsMax.com Wires
Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2003
THE HAGUE, Netherlands The United States, asking the United
Nations' highest legal body not to interfere in its criminal
justice system, demanded Tuesday that it throw out a case filed by
Mexico over the death penalty.
International Court of Justice is hearing a suit that
alleges 52 Mexican citizens on U.S. death row were denied a fair
trial because they weren't told they had a right to help from the
Mexican consulate.
Mexico asked the court on Monday to order the men's cases be
returned to the moment of their arrest and started again.
But representing the United States, William Taft, great-grandson of President and Chief Justice William Howard Taft, said the request was "unprecedented" and the international court
was "not a criminal appeal court."
The court already "traveled a considerable distance" in a
previous rulings against the United States, Taft said. "The United
States urges that it go no further."
International Court of Justice, also known as the world
court, is the U.N. judicial body for resolving disputes between
countries.
At the center of Mexico's claim is the Vienna Convention, a 1963
treaty signed by both countries that says people traveling or
living abroad have the right to contact their consulates when they
are accused of a serious crime.
Mexico argued Monday that because consular help "could have, in
capital proceedings, made the difference between life and death"
for the men, the only fair way to repair the wrong was to start the
legal process over.
But Taft argued Tuesday that in a similar case in 2001, the
court had ruled that the remedy "must be left to the United
States. Must be."
He said that otherwise, U.S. police and prosecutors in every
jurisdiction would be "held hostage" while they coordinated their
criminal investigations with foreign consulates.
In the 2001 case, the court found that the United States had
failed to inform a German citizen of his right to consular
assistance.
But Walter LaGrand had already been executed in Arizona, in
defiance of an injunction by the international court.
Hearings in the Mexico case conclude Friday. No date has been
set for a ruling.
The case drew international attention in February, when the
court's 15-judge panel unanimously ordered the United States to
delay the executions of three men until it could hear the case in
full.
Mexicans Cesar Fierro, Roberto Ramos and Osbaldo Torres remain
on U.S. death row, and none has had an execution date set.
In November, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal
based on the Vienna Convention from Torres, who was convicted of
killing two people during a burglary in Oklahoma City in 1993.
Clintonista Breyer Sides With the Globalists
But in a dissenting opinion, Justice Stephen Breyer wrote that
it was "manifestly unfair" for U.S. courts to ignore such
appeals.
"It surely is reasonable to presume that most foreign nationals
are unaware of the provisions of the Vienna Convention (as are, it
seems, many local prosecutors)," Breyer wrote.
Fierro and Ramos are on death row in Texas, Fierro for
shooting a taxi driver to death, and Ramos for killing his wife and
two children with a hammer.
The other 51 Mexicans named in the suit are imprisoned in
California, Texas, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Nevada, Ohio,
Oklahoma and Oregon.
In all, there are 120 foreign nationals from 29 countries on
death row in various states, according to Death Penalty
Information Center.
Mexican President Vincente Fox canceled a visit with President
Bush last year after the execution in Texas of a Mexican man who
was not included in the petition.
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