Will the execution of Saddam Hussein have any impact on the
fate of convicted cop killer Ronell Wilson? Jurors who on
December 20 convicted Wilson of the deaths of undercover
detectives Rodney Andrews and James Nemorin will be weighing the
death penalty as an option when the penalty phase of the trial
begins January 10.
Although the death penalty is in legislative limbo in New York,
Staten Island's district attorney, Daniel Donovan, turned over
the trial to federal jurisdiction, which does allow for death
sentencing. Whatever one may think about the death penalty here
in America, the hanging of Saddam can only be viewed as justice
long delayed.
Still, I felt sadness upon hearing the news - not for Saddam, but
for a world that allowed such evil to go unpunished for so long.
What, pray tell, do we have the United Nations for if it allows
the slaughter of a people by its ruler? How could countries like
France and Russia have signed oil contracts with this despotic
murderer of the Iraqi people? Why on earth did we waste such
valuable time trying to secure a U.N. war resolution that was
doomed to be rejected by Saddam's business partners?
Perhaps the American public did not know what was going on in
Iraq, but journalists knew, and they elected to keep quiet so
they could maintain their access to Baghdad. After Saddam's
regime was ousted, CNN's chief news executive, Eason Jordan, felt
safe enough to admit that the cable news giant kept quiet about
the decades of gut-wrenching torment that he had witnessed on his
many trips to Baghdad. So he admitted that appalling human
cowardice, and most of the world yawned.
The brutal slayings of those undercover police officers may not
bear any comparison to the genocide of the Kurds of Iraq and the
slaughter of thousands of Iraqi citizens, but there is a relation
between how the perpetrators of these acts are perceived.
Ronell Wilson is a young thug, a creature of the streets who
apparently had little regard for life. He and his ilk are not
alone. The rising murder rate in New York City is testament to
that. Life is cheap when society values material objects more
than principles, and unfortunately cop killers gain an unseemly
cachet with neighborhood youth.
In the classic 1938 film "Angels with Dirty Faces,"
James Cagney portrays a hood who's viewed as a hero by the
children in his Hell's Kitchen neighborhood even when he's
sentenced to death for a murder he committed. They expect him to
go out like the tough guy he's been all his life. On his way to
the electric chair, however, persuaded by a priest to be mindful
of how he would be remembered, he feigns terror, screaming for
mercy so the children will not follow in his footsteps.
Unfortunately, Saddam showed no such compulsion to tarnish his
tough image, thus leaving his followers with his
"martyred" image. Over the next few weeks, we can
expect global condemnation of his hanging from various sources. I
wasn't surprised at the reports that a Vatican spokesman had
denounced the execution by saying that capital punishment cannot
be justified "even when the person put to death is one
guilty of grave crimes."
When one examines exactly how grave Hussein's crimes against
humanity were, one must ask whether they would have been possible
if a more judgmental international community existed. The tyrants
of the world have long escaped the fates they have inflicted on
their victims. Many retire in exile to a life of luxury and die
of old age. That Saddam is the first to be brought to justice
after receiving a fair trial is a testament to the new Iraqi
government, President Bush, and our brave military.
Let his death be a warning to the despots of the world that good
people will no longer stand by and do nothing while human beings
are being fed into wood chippers feet first so that their screams
can fill the air; while schools are ordered to send children to
be raped by the despot's evil sons, and while mass graves are
filled with the bodies of innocent men, women, and children.
Surely, the Vatican can recognize that even God had his warrior
Archangel Michael battle Satan, and there has been no better
disciple of Satan than Saddam.
The traditional teaching of the Church does not exclude recourse
to the death penalty, if this is the only possible way of
effectively defending human lives against an unjust aggressor. In
the case of Saddam, the death penalty was certainly justified.
The jury deciding Ronell Wilson's fate will be facing a much more
difficult choice.