The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, June 27, 1996, Summer Edition, Page 11, Image 11

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    Joubert
Continued from Page 5
Joubert when he was committing crimes. The
other from Sister Helen Prejean, the author of
Dead Man Walking, which was recently made
into a movie.
After Pitre read the letters for the broadcast
media, questions followed.
Again, the question of his chances came up.
“Everyone is telling me 'hey, you don’t have
a snowball’s chance in Hell,”’ he said.
“I’m just going to keep pushing myself.”
More questions, another claim that he made
no attempt to delay the execution, and another
asking why the state was hurrying to execute
Joubert and the press conference ended quietly.
Three blocks away and twenty minutes later,
the Nebraska Civil Liberties Union held a press
conference to talk about actions they filed.
The NCLU, all on Monday, asked the State
Supreme Court for a stay of execution, claimed in
Sarpy County Court that death by electrocution
was cruel and unusual punishment, and raised
other legal appeals in U.S. District Courtin Omaha.
By Wednesday, all three were rejected in
their respective courts.
At the conference, Matt Lemieux, the execu
tive director of the NCLU, showed the media
pictures of bodies after execution by electrocu
tion. The bodies were burned and discolored.
Lemieux, after outlining the court actions and
stats on the few states that use electrocution,
recognized that they would not turn some Nebras
kans away from supporting the electric chair.
“But those Nebraskans who can understand
and recognize the sheer brutality and cruelty of
state-sanctioned death by electrocution... will
surely realize that the electric chair has no place
in our society and our state, no matter how
gruesome the crime,” he said, reading from a
press release.
Again, questions followed, clarifying what
the NCLU was doing. The conference broke up,
and some media headed for another demonstra
tion outside of the governor’s mansion.
Wednesday
It is only noon, but Pitre is already nervous.
The hearing to consider a clemency hearing
is a little more than an hour away.
In the sixth-floor conference room in Gold’s
Galleria, Pitre, two volunteers and only three
media members sit. Pitre, whose hands are shak
ing, but not as bad as the day before, speaks fast.
Today, Pitre reads a letter from Pope John
Paul n’s representative in the United States,
Archbishop Agostino Cacciavillan. The arch
bishop, in the letter, makes a plea for Joubert’s
life on behalf of the Pope.
“The most important spiritual leader in the
western world is appealing to the governor, the
attorney general, the secretary of state of the
State of Nebraska,” Pitre said.
An hour after the conference, Pitre meets all
three face to face.
The Nebraska Pardons Board, made up of Gov.
Ben Nelson, Attorney General Don Stenberg and
Secretary of State Scott Moore awaited Pitre.
Before the hearing, Pitre admitted he was
intimidated, but undaunted. He prayed with
friends before speaking to the board.
In a room with seven TV cameras, three
newspaper photographers, more than 60 people
and the state’s three most powerful men, Pitre
made his plea for a clemency hearing for Joubert.
In a speech that lasted only fifteen minutes,
Pitre told the board he is not an attorney and not
making a legal appeal.
“I have come here not to appeal to the law but
to your hearts,” he said.
Pitre said a hearing was needed so the board
could see Joubert’s change, not read about it in
documents. In a hearing, he said, the board
could hear how he is consumed with remorse.
Joubert’s therapist, Laurel Ban Han, gave
short, unprepared testimony, repeating Pitre’s
plea for a hearing.
Just as board members were to close down
the hearing, Eric Sheers, the executive director of
the Murder, Assault, Rape, Robbery Assis
Tanna Kinnaman/DN
Quoting Bible passages, Jessie Myles, left, and Larry Ball, president of the
Plainsmen, face off Sunday during an anti-death penalty rally held at the State
Capitol Sunday. Myles was against the death penalty, Ball for it.
tance Center, asked to speak. He had a letter from
Judy Eberle, the mother of one of the victims.
In the letter, Eberle said Joubert should be
executed because Joubert gave no thought to
" her son’s pain and suffering. She wrote Joubert
answered her son’s pleas to take him to a hos
pital by stabbing him to death.
“Was Danny asking for something close to
clemency like Joubert is today?” Sheers read to
the board. “I think so, and Danny deserved it.”
Eberle wrote that she lives in fear that Joubert
would get a life sentence and get out on parole.
She wrote she knew Joubert would come for her
if he did get out of prison.
“I don’t want to suffer any longer,” she
wrote. “This is enough. You will help our families
out very much if you just get this over...”
Pitre was given a chance to rebut the mothers
letter, but it did no good.
The board unanimously denied Joubert a
hearing. They then unanimously denied com
muting his sentence.
“I am at peace with the decision,” Nelson said
before the vote. “I am not at peace with the
crimes committed, nor will I ever be. Nor will
anyone ever be.”
In the crush of media outside the hearing
room, Pitre said the result was not unexpected.
“What can I say? People told me this was
going to happen.”
Pitre said he would spend the next days with
Joubert, up to the execution.
He turned, hugged a volunteer, and walked
away from the crowd of media.
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ACROSS
i Pilgrimage
5 Cincinnati’s
river
9 Prospector’s
stakeout
14 Mary’s co-star
in “South
Pacific”
15 Entrepreneur
Griffin
16 Greek
goddesses
17 Author of
“Portnoy’s
Complaint”
18 Medicinal plan
19 Likeness
20 Business-lettei
abbr.
21 Inn man?
23 Salesclerk: Br.
25 Interrogatory
interjection
26 Towel
monogram
27 Large bottle
32-Ababa
35 “Norma
1979 film
36 Greek music
halls
37 Songwriter
Sedaka
38 Not give
40 Trumpeter Al
41 Roman year
that is
palindromic in
Arabic
42 Achieve
43 Scottish
mystery writer
44 Bluefish
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE
Delivery Person part time. Early morning or late evening.
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Dental assistant/receptionist. Monday-Friday, Sam to 12.
Will train. 476-1954,___
Education Majors
Part time position at new teaching supply store. Flexible
hours. Call 421-8900. Ask for Mischele.
46 Marquand’s “H.
M. Pulham,
47 Table scrap
48 In name only
52 Painstaking
man?
57 Bulwer-Lytton
heroine
58 Distant;
reserved
59 Biblical weed
60 Actress Naldi
61 Island in Taiwan
Strait
62 Unique person
63 Craw
64 Former
president of
NOW
65 A1981 film
66 Urges
DOWN
• i Zeus’s wife and
namesakes
2 Mercury, to
alchemists
3 The same
4 Phone man?
5 Siouan people
in Neb.
6 -ofTroy
7 Mangle
8 Eavesdrop
9 Pretentiously
elegant
10 Broad-topped
hill
11 Damascene, e.g
12 Verdi villain
13 Convene
22 Country on the
Red Sea
24 Improperly:
Prefix
27 Imbibed
28 Apple-owning
man?
29 Chief Norse goo
30 Roll-call
response
31 Cole and Turner
32 Ampersands
33 Orlop or poop
34 Half a
Caribbean tree
38 Prize
3» “The Great
-Chaplin
film
43 Adherent
45 Festive
46 Duck downs
48 Spent
49 Tours’s river
90 Composer
Bruckner
51 Harvests
52 Smokers’
products
53 Ancient
kingdom
54 Musical tone
55 Artist Bonheur
56 Rooster on a
spire