Oken May Be First
Execution in Ehrlich Administration
By Sarah and Justin Palk
Capital News Service
Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2003
ANNAPOLIS - A death warrant will be signed by the end of today
for Steven Oken, his defense lawyer said, making him the
first Maryland man to face execution during Gov. Robert
Ehrlich's term.
Baltimore County Circuit Judge John G. Turnbull II is expected to
sign Oken's death warrant by the end of business today after a
request from prosecutor Anne Bropts, said Mike Lawlor, an associate
with Fred Bennett, lead counsel for Oken.
The death warrant signals an end to a death penalty moratorium
imposed by former Gov. Parris N. Glendening in May 2002. Glendening
issued an executive order for a stay of execution for death row
inmate Wesley E. Baker pending review of the results from a
University of Maryland study on racial and geographical disparities
in the application of the death penalty.
As a result of the stay of execution, death sentences were not up
for review by Glendening before the study was finished.
The study was released Jan. 7; it found racial and geographic
bias in the application of the ultimate penalty.
Unlike Glendening, Ehrlich, who took office last week, has
consistently said he would lift any ban on executions - which,
technically, applies only to Baker because a stay of execution
requires an executive action to overturn. Once a death warrant is
signed, Ehrlich has the obligation to review it. He could allow the
sentence to proceed, commute the sentence or issue a stay.
Leaving the State House Tuesday, Ehrlich declined to discuss the
case saying he would "talk about (Oken) tomorrow."
Oken, convicted in 1991 in Baltimore County Circuit Court for the
1987 murder of Dawn Marie Garvin, could be put to death by lethal
injection during the week of March 17, 2003, according to Bennett.
Bennett confirmed a death warrant was requested and said, "We have
additional motions that we'll be filing."
"I received a call from the judge today . . . that the state had
filed a motion for the warrant and the real question was timing" of
the execution date, Bennett said.
Bennett had asked for the maximum amount of time allowed before
the execution to prepare his motions. He plans to raise issues
related to the university study showing disparities, as well as a
constitutional challenge against the death penalty. Turnbull could
not be reached for comment. "The system is broken, " said
Delegate Salima S. Marriott, D-Baltimore, a leading General Assembly death
penalty opponent and sponsor of legislation to reinstitute the moratorium.
"I am basically a firm supporter of the moratorium because with
the study in front of us we know there is a systemic problem,"
Marriott said. "No one should be executed until we have taken every
measure to remove the bias that currently exists. This is an
unfortunate situation."
"I'm always concerned, and now I'm particularly concerned. The
General Assembly needs to have an opportunity to review the study,"
she added.
Fred and Vicki Romano, of Harford, founders of the Maryland
Coalition for State Executions, are glad the wait is over.
"I hope he enjoys his ride to hell. I hope it burns. I am
ecstatic," said Romano, the brother of Oken's victim. "My quest does
not end here. I am here for the victim's families. This brings
justice for my sister but my mission isn't over."
"I am so happy. (The Romano) family has been through so much. And
I am glad that this is finally over," said Vicki Romano.
"(Oken) did it, and he should pay the consequences. Maybe now the Oken family will feel the pain that the Romano family has felt," she
added.
Copyright ©
2003 University of Maryland Philip Merrill College of Journalism
Top of Page | Home Page
|