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Such a pretty summer day. #nofilter  (Taken with Instagram at Columbia University)

Such a pretty summer day. #nofilter (Taken with Instagram at Columbia University)

This article is precisely why I cannot support capital punishment for crimes such as this one.

It is a tragedy that this research could not have been done earlier, to save Carlos DeLuna’s life before he was wrongly executed. However, I am grateful that Columbia Law students took this task upon themselves.

At 11 p.m Monday, the Columbia Human Rights Law Review (at Columbia University) published and posted its Spring 2012 issue — devoted entirely to a single piece of work about the life and death of two troubled and troublesome South Texas men. In explaining to their readers why an entire issue would be devoted to just one story, the editors of the Review said straightly that the “gravity of the subject matter of the Article and the possible far-reaching policy ramifications of its publication necessitated this decision.”

The article is titled “Los Tocayos Carlos: Anatomy of a Wrongful Execution” and it was written by James S. Liebman, Shawn Crowley, Andrew Markquart, Lauren Rosenberg, Lauren Gallo White, Lauren Rosenberg and Daniel Zharkovsky. Los Tacayos can be translated from Spanish as “namesakes” and the two men at the heart of the story were, indeed, named Carlos DeLuna and Carlos Hernandez.. On December 7, 1989, this intense piece establishes beyond any reasonable doubt, Texas executed the former for a murder the latter had committed.

The Review article is an astonishing blend of narrative journalism, legal research, and gumshoe detective work. And it ought to end all reasonable debate in this country about whether an innocent man or woman has yet been executed in America since the modern capital punishment regime was recognized by the Supreme Court in 1976. The article is also a clear and powerful retort to Justice Scalia in Kansas v. Marsh: Our capital cases don’t have nearly the procedural safeguards he wants to pretend they do.

Soon to be published as a book, Los Tacayos Carlos is a seminal piece of online advocacy as well. Not only is the article itself now available on the web in its entirety (at www.thewrongcarlos.net) but so are all of its supporting materials. “The web version of the Article contains approximately 3,469 footnotes,” the Review editors tell us, which in turn “provide hyperlinks to view the cited sources,” including a great deal of the evidence relevant to the case. Now, everyone in the world who is interested can learn how bad it all can go when human beings try to administer what’s supposed to be a fair, just and accurate death penalty.

What hath night to do with sleep?

I am a product of long corridors, empty sunlit rooms, upstairs indoor silences, attics explored in solitude, distant noises of gurgling cisterns and pipes, and the noise of wind under the tiles. Also, of endless books.

I think the pale blue fire escape is pretty :) 108th b/t Manhattan Ave & Columbus #nofilter (Taken with instagram)

I think the pale blue fire escape is pretty :) 108th b/t Manhattan Ave & Columbus #nofilter (Taken with instagram)

LIVING IN THE CITY IN THE SUMMER

howdoiputthisgently:

As always, Michael Scott understands me.
Yes. Ugh, a thousand times, yes. Put the silly assumptions about Psych majors away, World.

Yes. Ugh, a thousand times, yes. Put the silly assumptions about Psych majors away, World.

There is something in the New York air that makes sleep useless.

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