A young Irishman who spent the summer working alongside death row inmates in Austin, Texas tells IrishCentral.com why he thinks the death penalty should be abolished.
When most Irish students contemplate a summer internship in the US, they don’t expect to find themselves face to face with convicted serial killers and rapists. But that is exactly where Dannie Hanna, a young man from Ennis Co. Clare ended up this past August while doing pro bono work for death row inmates in Austin, Texas.
Born in Abu Dhabi to an Irish mother and Lebanese father, Dannie spent the first three years of his life in the United Arab Emirates before moving home to Ennis in Co. Clare. The eldest of three boys he graduated in 2008 with a law degree from the National University of Ireland in Galway before moving to the UK to pursue postgraduate study.
With an inherent interest in philanthropy, the 23-year-old established Rotaract, the largest youth voluntary group of it's kind in the world while he was studying in Galway. With over 800 members, Rotaract raised €40,000 ($55,000) for charitable organisations throughout Ireland during his tenure.
With a background in law and special interest in human rights, the Clare man was studying for his Masters at the University of Cambridge when he first got involved with the NGO Texas Defender Service (TDS). As a result of his efforts he was selected to travel to Texas for a five-week internship with the organization.
Speaking to IrishCentral.com, Dannie explained that prior to his trip to Texas, he already had clear views about capital punishment.
“My initial opinion, arising more from "gut instinct", had always been that the use of the death penalty is an abhorrence to mankind.
“However, it was not until I began work with Texas Defender Service (TDS) and saw first hand the horrors that it manifests, that I was able to truly capture why it was such an abhorrence,” he said.
In preparation for his internship in Austin, Texas Dannie took part in training with two London based NGO's who specialize in death penalty work. He also met with Peter Pringle, an Irish man who was wrongly convicted of murder sentenced to death and later exonerated.
When his plane touched down in Austin amid scorching August temperatures, the Clare man soon established that he was a long way from home, not just in terms of distance.
“Coming from the West of Ireland, and having spent a number of months previously in Chicago, Texas is certainly very different. It very much sees itself as Texas, first and foremost, and America thereafter.
“I found that a small bit hard to come to terms with, as public opinion can be extremely conservative at times,” he added.
Despite his earlier work with TDS and extensive training, Dannie admitted that he learnt more in his first two days in the office than in any training exercise he underwent. For the majority of his internship Dannie was based in the Austin office of the TDS where he worked on reviewing the individual cases of death row inmates.
With a total of 785 employees the Polunsky Unit stands five miles south of Livington in Texas. It is here that male death row inmates await their execution. With almost 3,000 inmates, 463 of which are awaiting execution, the correctional facility is the biggest employer in the area. Dannie described the prison as “emotionally draining” and “upsetting” as he detailed a typical day for a death row inmate.
“They (prisoners) are kept in their cell 23 hours a day, every day, until the day of their execution. Their cells are 10ft in length, and 6ft across. They are allowed one hour of recreation time each day, in which they are led to a cage, with a concrete slab, a basketball hoop and one basketball. They are kept in complete isolation from everyone, even during this recreation time.
“The only time someone will ever physically touch them is when the guard takes off their handcuffs. That, and the day they are executed. They are served breakfast in their cell at 3.30am. If they do not eat breakfast at this time, they are not fed for the day. They are strip searched every time they leave their cell (for recreation time, for showering, for visitors),” he noted.
Death row inmates are kept in complete isolation and experience little human contact while they await their execution. When he visited the prison Dannie admits that suddenly “everything became real”.The countless cases he had been tirelessly working on suddenly came to life before his eyes as he met and spoke some some death row prisoners.
One such prisoner was Patrick Murphy, whom Dannie spent over four hours speaking with.
“Patrick was convicted for rape in the early 1980's and had been sentenced to 50 years for such an offence. In 2000, with six other inmates, broke out from the Connally Unit, culminating in a state wide search that lasted six weeks.
“During the six week period, the seven escapees were involved in the killing of a police officer. While Patrick himself did not commit the crime, the law in Texas states that if the group of individuals are seen to commit capital murder as a "joint effort", then they can all be charged with capital murder. Patrick was such convicted and sentenced to die,” said Dannie.
“The atmosphere was a strange one. When I met the prisoners, they were just so happy to have someone to talk to. Yet the backdrop of the whole prison was emotionally draining,” he added.
For a $3 charge prison officials would take your photo with the offending inmate.
After witnessing prisoners living conditions, speaking with death row inmates and working extensively on their cases, Dannie was utterly convinced execution was not the solution.
“From a deterrent perspective - it simply does not work. Statistics show that murders actually increase on the day of an execution.
“From a human rights perspective, the conditions in which the inmates are subjected to are disgusting.
“Finally, from a justice perspective, the system in which the death verdict is given is nothing short of disgraceful - from the provision of ineffective legal counsel on behalf of state appointed lawyers, to the pedantic nature of some members of the Texas judiciary,” Dannie said.
The alternative for Dannie, similar to any lawyer working a death row appeal is life without parole.
“We never deny that some of our clients have done terrible things, and to this end, must pay through confinement. However executing them does not serve any type of purpose, bar making a bad situation worse,” the law graduate added.
Currently the death penalty is enforced in 35 states within the US. The primary method of execution is lethal injection. Since 1976, 463 prisoners have died by execution in Texas alone. In Texas a death penalty case costs an average of $2.3 million, that is almost three times the cost of imprisoning someone in a single cell at a high security facility for 40 years.
Despite international opposition a recent annual crime survey commissioned by Gallup found that 65% of Americans continue to support the use of the death penalty for persons convicted of murder, while 31% oppose it.
Speaking about the murder case of the Petit family in Connecticut where Steven Hayes was recently convicted of a litany of offences including the murder of a mother and her two young daughters, Dannie told IrishCentral.com why he believes that Hayes should not be executed.
“Having been following this case for some time, I can simply say that the facts around the incident are nothing short of horrific. Having dealt with case similar to this, there is always something that resonates when a capital murder involves anything to do with women, and especially so, with children.
“Mr. Hayes is not like normal people, no normal person would do such a thing. But this does not give us the right, as normal persons, to play God and execute him.
“All we are doing is creating another victim from this atrocity. I thus would believe that life without parole is an appropriate sentence,” the Clare man said.
For now Dannie is settling back into daily life in Dublin where he works as a legal researcher with the Law Reform Commission. He continues to stay in touch with the Texas Defender Service and closely monitors the progress of particular death row cases.
It is only now in the days and weeks that have followed his homecoming that the enormity of the experience has resonated. Having no regrets about his experience with TDS, Dannie admits he feels “fortunate not to live in a society” where the death penalty prevails.
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Switch to the desktop site to post a comment.maloney | Oct 25, 2010, 07:44 PM EDT
You know exactly what is illegal about what you do marthanna. Yes you should stop harrassing me & admit to your illegal activities, beg forgiveness & turn the illegals in before you go to jail.
MarthaAnne | Oct 25, 2010, 02:55 PM EDT
maloney, You are a nut case. Aiding and abetting how? And what? What an evil post. Harrassment, too.
maloney | Oct 25, 2010, 11:30 AM EDT
Aiding & abetting is a crime in America in case you didn't know. Just where is it you live? Your illegal herd will be deported in the near future. Hold your breath for an apology, illegal lover. You may find yourself behind bars for your illegal activity. The knock on the door is coming soon. Tracking your URL.
MarthaAnne | Oct 24, 2010, 08:17 PM EDT
Maloney, Stop the slander. What you said is slanderous:"They would go along great with marthas herd of illegal central & south Americans she harbors & helps, breaking the law I might add." I do not harbor illegals. I am waiting for your apology and retraction, Maloney. I am the proud padrina (Godmother) of a little girl who was born and raised in this country and whose parents are undocumented. Our city is filled with such people, in case you are behind the eight ball. The priests in their parish are of Irish descent and minister to all of these illegal immigrant parents, thousands of them, and are very kind and loving priests. So, let's hear the apology and retraction.
maloney | Oct 24, 2010, 07:00 PM EDT
martha & jam are good candidates for death row inmates penpals. While your at it you can pay to keep them behind bars. Better yet, you should let them live with you. They would go along great with marthas herd of illegal central & south Americans she harbors & helps, breaking the law I might add.
jamthecat | Oct 24, 2010, 04:25 PM EDT
I notice none of the pro-death-penalty posters bother to deal with the fact that innocent people have been executed or sentenced to execution thanks to lies by cops and double-dealing by prosecutors. Instead they wail and bemoan the victims who were killed, as if those who oppose the death penalty don't care about them. This is nonsense, plain and simple. My family's been hit by murder, and I STILL refuse to want the killer killed. To me, life in prison is more than sufficient punishment. As for the "eye for an eye" crap spouted so much -- that's the cry of a sadist, not a Christian.
tessa1946 | Oct 24, 2010, 02:44 PM EDT
So we just forget the people they killed and their families. It's easy to feel sorry for the living. With appeals the murders are only executited about 50 years later if ever and these include people wuo confess. Prison is after all supposed to be punishment. My thoughts would go to helping the families of the murder victoms.
MarthaAnne | Oct 24, 2010, 12:45 PM EDT
A lot of the posters here, and readers, Irish or Irish American, are, IMO, morally culpable for electing officials who support the death penalty. I think that they are moral degenerates. Of course, they are going to be outraged that I say this, but they are. They have the need for vindication at a cruel and unusual level.
GeorgeDillon | Oct 24, 2010, 08:44 AM EDT
Bogsidebunny--As regards Catholic teaching, you appear to have the IQ of a rabbit. We believe that God forgives, we do not ask that a criminal go unpunished on earth. No Catholic doctrine I have ever seen uses the word "remorse"--you clearly are making this stuff up. We speak of penance, forgiveness and redemption. As regards the death penalty, a faith that life comes from God alone can unite our opposition to war, death penalty, abortion and euthanasia. To Catholics' shame, we have not always followed these principles, but we are now however imperfectly striving to keep them in our hearts.
bogsidebunny | Oct 24, 2010, 03:45 AM EDT
The Irish Catholics are anti-death penalty because they believe in the "sanctity of life" and are taught anything you do evil is forgiven as long as you admit your sins and express "genuine remorse". In my opinion disregarding the dead murder victim and making the killer a "victim" is pure nonsensical rot. I believe in "An eye for an eye". Forgiving and forgetting is not in my dictionary.
jacersagain | Oct 23, 2010, 06:35 PM EDT
Death is a penalty for us all, any way you look at it, in case you didn't notice.
Searlit | Oct 23, 2010, 01:17 PM EDT
While I agree with the right to defend oneself, if attacked, the death penalty doesn't due justice. For one thing, it leads to endless appeals which cost much more than keeping someone in prison for life. It makes a killer out of the executioner. Lastly, only poor men are executed, and sometimes they have been innocent. There's simply too much corruption and inequalty, in the legal system, to allow for a death penalty.
maloney | Oct 23, 2010, 10:35 AM EDT
Whack a mole. With modern forensics, DNA if you did it is much easier to determine. If your caught in the act, Kill them the same way they killed on world wide web & TV. Good law abiding people should not have to support criminals, make them work for their keep. Fry them for murder, fry them for rape, fry them if they touch a child. State sanctioned murder, has a nice ring to it. If you murder you die unless defending yourself, your loved ones or your property. If not your property, just wing them.
maireadinmelb | Oct 23, 2010, 01:38 AM EDT
The problem with capital punishment is that when the state works out that it got the wrong person, it is too late!!
JOHNTOBIN | Oct 23, 2010, 12:31 AM EDT
Capital Punishment is both archiac and barbaric.It creates a mindset of revenge.My own Australian state of Queensland abolished it in the year 1922.The last person to be executed in Australia was Ronald Ryan in Melbourne in the year 1968 for the alleged murder of a prison warder during an escape atempt.It is still debated at times if he was the actual person that fired the fatal shot.Just in the last week a person who was executed by hanging in the year 1922 in Melbourne was declared innocent of the rape and murder of a ten year old child.He was found innocent by the process of DNA testing. I have read that a number of the USA States that have Capital Punishment have a higher murder rate than ones that do not have it.Also,that a person of dark skin is more likely to be executed,especially in the southern states than a white skinned person.I would consider Texas to be a southern state.
jamthecat | Oct 23, 2010, 12:17 AM EDT
Okay, you idiots, consider this -- Texas, the state Dannie Hanna worked in, executed a man for a crime that has been proven to not even have been a crime, all based on evidence that did not even rise to the standards of evidence gathering at the time of his conviction. These are facts, and if you don't like them -- tough. Just consider how many people on death row have been exonerated thanks to work by others like Dannie -- people who were convicted by rogue cops, deceitful prosecutors and a judicial system geared solely to making it harder and harder for you to prove your innocence rather than them have to prove your guilt. Dallas Texas' DA's office was so bad, it actually forced the state to start paying out compensation to make up for the fact that the DA withheld exculpatory evidence and cops lied under oath to gain convictions, many of them death row cases. Consider this, too -- 2000 years ago a man was accused of sedition, found innocent of that crime and yet was executed, anyway, for political expediency's sake in direct violation of the law. So what it boils down to is this -- anyone who supports the death penalty, supports state-sanctioned murder. Period. And not one of your arguments to the contrary means anything more than that. And don't you dare say you're a Christian but still support the death penalty; no true Christian can do that, considering Jesus was the man executed even after being found innocent of any crime.
tubbertom | Oct 23, 2010, 12:00 AM EDT
I believe Dannie should study the crime problem in Ireland before he decides to spend e short time in Texas and suggest they change their judicial system. If each US state allowed the death penalty there would be less reciidivism. Why should the state support someone who has committed a crime against the state. The present problem is that it takes so long from conviction to execution because the judicial system allows too many appeals. God knows there are enough lawyers willing to step up and represent these rapists and murderers. I see it from the inside as a law enforcement officer. I see these people on the streets dealing their drugs, committing crimes and being released back into society where there is no place for them except to revert to their old lifestyle. Some animals can't be retrained.
StevieWeavie | Oct 22, 2010, 10:57 PM EDT
The death penalty has always been a tough subject for me. I believe in GOD and I have always believed that no man has the right to take away what GOD has given him (life). Though the bible has a lot to say about murder i.e., For he who said: "You must not commit adultery," said also: "You must not murder". If, now, you do not commit adultery but you do murder you become a transgressor of the law. Keep on speaking in such a way and keep on doing in such a way as those do who are going to be judged by the law of a free people. For one that does not practice mercy will have his judgement without mercy. Mercy exults triumphantly over judgment (James 2:11,12,13). And you must not take no ransom for the soul of a murderer who is deserving to die, for without fail he should be put to death(Number 35:31). Why do they have to hang around so long and cost so much money to do what is bound to happen. There has got to be a better way. There has also got to be a better system to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that someone did commit murder. I'm sure there are many who were accused and died but did not commit the crime. Dannie is a very caring man and someone on a mission. I wish him the best.
mourneman | Oct 22, 2010, 04:44 PM EDT
Hey cabbagehead it doesnt bring the murdered person back but it sure as hell ensure that the murderer wont do it again..
mayoman | Oct 22, 2010, 01:41 PM EDT
The death penalty is merely state-sanctioned barbarity. If there were ever an example of cruel and unhuman punishment; the death penalty has to be it. Over the past decade there have been many inmates on Death Row that have been freed after DNA-testing exonerated them. What does that tell us? It should tell us that the jury does not always get it right, and innocent men and women have been executed unnecessarily. Texas has always been a little bit too zealous about putting its citizens to death.
IrishTierney | Oct 22, 2010, 01:28 PM EDT
We need to make the the execution process swifter and cheaper. There is no reason it should be costing the taxpayer 2.6 million. Nobody told Patrick Murphy to break out of jail, or rape some poor undeserving woman. Rape and murder are inhumane. Dannie, and cabbagehead44 are a couple of candy-asses. The punishment NEEDS to fit the crime. Instead of scum-bags thumbing their noses at the rules of society. When the facts are indesputable, I say hang 'em and hang 'em high. Swift and just! Quit babying criminals. They made their damn bed. While we're at it lets castrate all the pedofiles instead of letting them out continually to repeat their offense! Society has become too soft, and too damn "politically correct".
cabbagehead44 | Oct 22, 2010, 12:20 PM EDT
Danny is right! It's inhumane to take a life of someone who took someone else's life! Does taking the life of the murderer bring back the murdered person or give peace of mind to the murdered person's family? I believe in the biblical statement, "Violence begets violence!" The only way to deter violence is to address the societal problems that such individuals have experienced in their lives- abuse, poverty, drugs, lack of good role models, no jub opportunities etc. The schools should have more psychological services to identify these individuals at an early age and use good and effective counseling to deter violent acts. It is more intelligent to spend tax dollars to stop someone from committing such an act than to spend tax dollars to lock someone up and treat them like like they were less than human! Ignorance, apathy, a lack of respect for another human being are some but not all of the reasons that people support a death penalty!
rcrdskpr@aol.com | Oct 22, 2010, 10:26 AM EDT
inmates with only life sentences, for the most part, have the same privileges as inmates only 2y-4y. in prisons they can still get "sex, drugs, and rock & roll"; ask any person who has worked in corrections. the life in jail isnt too bad: free food, housing, education, library, cable(moerate cost), clothing, muslim teachings. dannie has an "inherent" bent for liberalism, not philanthropy. he seems to froget the misery of the victims family that will continue the rest of their lives knowing that their loved ones' murderer is still alive and doing well.
MotherIrish | Oct 22, 2010, 09:21 AM EDT
Dannie has an inherent interest in philanthropy? Inherent? What gene in his DNA is designated for philanthropy? Dannie would have a whole different opinion if it was his mother or sister (if any) was raped, if his father was the police officer killer. So it was hot in TX - what did he think it was going to be in summer - 80's with cool ocean breezes? Stay in Ireland - please. And Molly you may want to stick to writing the obits for those who have been killed by those on death row. You will have a most different opinion.