I am beginning to feel the squeeze. Florida is scaring me.
They have a blood lust almost on the scale of Texas and California. Not only do
they seek to execute but execute quickly and I almost wonder if it is because
they are afraid someone will catch a mistake.
They scare me now more so than ever before. I have felt
scared for Tiffany Cole on Florida death row. I had a long standing friendship
with Tiffany Cole for many years. While this girl is anything but innocent, she
doesn’t deserve to die. She was another instance of little girl lost, as Dawn
Schiller (the infamous porn star John Holmes’s teen concubine) has said – a throw
away teen. Those girls always find themselves mixed up in some terrible
situation because no one ever taught them how to stay out of one.
Tiffany and the state of Florida have been in a long, bloody
battle of appeals for many years now. Tiffany has a crazy, erratic Aunt who
threatened me and ranted about incoherent nonsense on a pretty regular basis.
She began to stalk me and harass me on social networks. I have since ended my
relationship with Tiffany but still worry about her.
While Tiffany is special to me and I don’t believe she
should die for her crimes, it isn’t her that concerns me most in Florida.
My biggest fear is that Florida will execute Dane Abdool. The
Timely Justice Act has me scared shitless.
The Timely Justice Act is designed to
significantly expedite executions by statutorily mandating the Florida governor
sign “death warrants” on every death sentenced prisoner who has
completed his/her first round of state and federal appeals within 30 days.
Under this new law at least 125 Florida death row prisoners,
including Dane and Tiffany, become immediately “death warrant eligible” as of July
1, 2013, with all 125+ executions to be scheduled within 6 months.
The Florida Supreme Court took a lovely little summer
vacation while my stomach knotted up and I developed a chronic nervous cramp in
my gut.
Dane’s appeal I wrote about this summer, when he was being
shuffled all over the state, was an appeal of the Timely Justice Act, which for
all intents and purposes, is unconstitutional. The actual challenge to the act
can be found here. http://www.docstoc.com/docs/159604367/Challenge-to-Timely-Justice-Act
Dane and I became friends almost 4 years ago when we began correspondence
about newsletters and penpal programs. I helped him find the things he needed
and we began to get to know each other. Most often, when I receive inmate mail,
it is in request for something vital.
I try my best to get these people what they need. Sometimes it’s
a book or toiletries, sometimes they ask for help for their family on the
outside or for a penpal. More often than not, I don’t hear from them again
until a new need arises. Albeit this is the nature of my work, it is required
because of the sheer amount of mail.
Every now and again, something special will happen. A spark
ignites, a connection is made and a friendship happens. Throughout the years of
work as an inmate liaison, I have only experienced this a few times. Dane is
one of those cases.
Dane’s case called to me from the very beginning. I was in
shock that he was convicted at all, much less at such a young age. I saw, at
first glance, a scared little boy. He shouldn’t be there. What happened was
never meant to happen. It was all a terrible, careless, waste of two young
lives.
Over these years I have grown closer to Dane than many
people I see every day. He has shared his life with me and I with him. I know
in my heart that he is no ruthless killer but only an exhibition in the
devastation of reckless youth.
This man has so much left to give the world, if even from
behind bars. There is so much he can provide to make up for the pain and suffering
he has caused. I know this because Dane has helped me see inside myself at some
very difficult times in my life. He’s helped me find strength and perseverance when
I had none.
So, still I wait. Wait for Florida to say they can kill this
beautiful soul for killing another. It would be laughable if it weren’t so
tragic.
You should include the details of the crimes when you write about them, especially when describing a guy who burned his girlfriend alive as a "beautiful soul." Perhaps his ex thought he was sweet too, before he poured gasoline in her and lit the match. Be fair.
ReplyDeleteThis is my blog. It tells my stories and my thoughts and my beliefs. I have enough faith in the intelligence of my readers to tknow that if they want to search out more than my opinion on a case they can do their own research. Thats pretty fucking fair.
ReplyDelete