Politics & Government

Former San Quentin Warden Speaks Out On Death Penalty

Jeanne Woodford says a life sentence gives prisoners a chance to rehabilitate and make restitution.

Former San Quentin State Prison Warden Jeanne Woodford, who now heads an anti-death-penalty group, said at a conference in San Francisco on Wednesday that she believes the time has come to end executions in the nation.

"I have had the opportunity to view this issue from every point of view," Woodford said during a panel discussion on the future of the death penalty.

"I absolutely am passionate about the position that it's time to end the death penalty in the United States," she said.

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Woodford, 56, of Benicia, spent nearly 30 years in the corrections field and presided over four executions while warden of San Quentin between 1999 and 2004.

This month, she became executive director of Death Penalty Focus, a San Francisco-based national organization that opposes capital punishment.

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The panel discussion was part of a daylong criminal justice conference convened by San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi.

Woodford said an alternative to execution, life in prison without possibility of parole, "is a real sentence," but one that "gives inmates opportunity to change, to work, to give back to state, and to make restitution to the victims' families."

She was asked by panel moderator Matt Gonzalez, the chief attorney in Adachi's office, whether she had observed that executions gave victims' families a sense of closure.

The former warden said she could not speak for the victims' families, but said her observation was that an execution did not appear to provide closure.

Woodford said the murders for which inmates are executed are often "horrific crimes" and said she felt compassion for the families, but said, "I don't think there's anything an execution can do for them.

"I think they come there with high hopes ... and it just doesn't happen," she said.

— Bay City News


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