A dozen conservative leaders are calling on Republican Gov. Rick Perry of Texas to stop the execution this week of an inmate they claim is “one of the most seriously mentally ill prisoners on death row in the United States.”
Scott Panetti, 56, is scheduled to die by lethal injection on Wednesday night in Texas. In September 1992, dressed in camouflage, Panetti killed his in-laws with a hunting rifle at their Texas home, and forced his wife and toddler daughter to watch. Panetti then engaged in a standoff with the police before eventually surrendering. His wife and 3-year-old daughter were released unharmed.
%22Mr.%20Panetti%20is%20one%20of%20the%20most%20seriously%20mentally%20ill%20prisoners%20on%20death%20row%20in%20the%20United%20States.%22′
During his capital murder trial three years later, Panetti admitted to the act. Jurors convicted him and sentenced him to death.
Twenty-one conservatives joined mental health and death penalty reformers in opposing the execution, and wrote a letter to Perry asking him to change Panetti’s sentence to life in prison. In addition, more than 94,000 people signed an online petition by Tuesday asking the Republican governor to spare the inmate’s life.
“Mr. Panetti is one of the most seriously mentally ill prisoners on death row in the United States. Rather than serving as a measured response to murder, the execution of Mr. Panetti would only serve to undermine the public’s faith in a fair and moral justice system,” they recently wrote.
RELATED: Rick Perry: Not sure if botched Oklahoma execution was ‘inhumane’
Panetti has been admitted to the hospital at least 14 separate times, and has a more than 30-year history of schizophrenia and other mental illnesses. He hasn’t gone through a mental evaluation since 2007. Consequently, his attorneys are seeking to remove him from death row, or at least postpone his execution date to undergo additional psychological testing to determine if he is competent for execution. Panetti’s legal team wasn’t aware of the judge’s decision to execute him on Dec. 3 until they read about the plan in a newspaper article. But they filed a motion earlier this month requesting that Perry stay the execution for 30 days, a period of time they say is sufficient enough for another assessment.
However, the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles on Monday voted unanimously against delaying Panetti’s scheduled execution. Perry can’t reduce the sentence on his own; board members must first recommend clemency, per Texas law.
%22There%20is%20an%20unprecedented%20conservative%20response%20to%20this%20case.%22′
Perry’s office didn’t immediately respond to msnbc’s request for comment.
Panetti previously dressed like a cowboy and acted as his own attorney during his trial. While representing himself, he attempted to subpoena the pope, John F. Kennedy, and Jesus Christ, among hundreds of others. He once nailed shut the curtains in his house and buried his furniture in the backyard because he thought the devil occupied the items.
“There is an unprecedented conservative response to this case,” Marc Hyden, advocacy coordinator for Conservatives Concerned about the Death Penalty, told msnbc. “This is another example of an utterly broken system. This person shouldn’t have been allowed to represent himself.”
“It is clear,” the conservatives continued, “that he has been suffering from severe mental illness since long before he committed the offense that landed him on death row.” But prosecutors argue that Panetti fakes his illness.
Among the nearly two dozen people who signed the recent letter to Perry were former Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli and former presidential candidate Gary Bauer. Republican Attorney General Greg Abbott, who is set to replace Perry as governor in January, represents the state in seeking to uphold the 1995 capital conviction.
RELATED: More drugs, fewer witnesses in Oklahoma executions








