Next Monday, on the 6th of December 2010, Judge Kevin Fine (here and here) is scheduled to hold a hearing in the case of John Edward Green to decide if the death penalty in Texas is unconstitutional. I doubt that the hearing will be the end of the death penalty, and I doubt that our country is likely to do so anytime soon. But it is inevitable. 
A Change is Gonna Come. 
Start the music video below, then listen as you read the Huffington Post column I've pasted below.
WASHINGTON -- At a hearing scheduled for Monday, December 6, a  district court in Texas will decide whether the death penalty is  unconstitutional in the state based on the disproportionately high risk  of wrongful convictions in Texas.  This is the first time in the state's  history that a court will examine the problem of innocent people being  executed in a Texas capital trial.
John Edward Green, Jr., the defendant in Texas v. Green, is charged  in the fatal shooting of a 34-year-old Houston woman during a 2008  robbery.  According to legal documents obtained by HuffPost, Green's  defense attorneys will be arguing on Monday that a number of factors in  Texas's legal system increase the risk of wrongful executions there,  including a lack of safeguards to protect against mistaken eyewitness  identification, faulty forensic evidence, incompetent lawyers at the  appellate level, failures to guard against false confessions and a  history of racial discrimination in jury selection.The death penalty in Texas came under fire earlier this month when a DNA test conducted on a single hair  undermined the evidence that convicted a Texas man of capital murder  over ten years ago. The hair had been the only piece of evidence linking  Claude Jones to the crime scene, but the new test results revealed that  the hair likely belonged to the murder victim instead of Jones.
Maurie Levin, a law professor at the University of Texas and an  expert on capital punishment, said she would not be surprised if Judge  Kevin Fine ruled the death penalty to be unconstitutional in Texas on  Monday.
"I would think that Judge Fine would have substantial basis in the  evidence that I'm aware of that would lead to a conclusion that the  Texas death penalty is unconstitutional as applied," she told HuffPost.
Since 1976, twelve people have been exonerated from death row in  Texas out of 139 nationwide, and four study commissions set up by the  Texas government have formally recognized the serious risks of wrongful  convictions there.  Out of the 464 people that have been executed in  Texas, about 70 percent have been minorities, according to the Texas  Department of Criminal Justice.
Andrea Keilen, executive director of Texas Defender Service, said it  is clear to her that the death penalty is handed down unfairly and  erratically in Texas.
"It is my opinion and the opinion of many people close to this issue  that the Texas system is wholly incapable of carrying out the death  penalty in a fair and reliable way," she told HuffPost. "Texas is  remarkably out of step with the rest of the country and certainly out of  step with what the average Texan would expect when dealing with capital  punishment.  We're seeing in case after case that the system is just  inherently prone to the risk of wrongful convictions and has a complete  inability to correct its mistakes."
Keilen said that while the state has a history of strong popular support for capital punishment, she thinks Texans would feel differently about the practice if they knew all the facts.
"I think there is support for the idea of the death penalty among the  average Texan, but that if the average Texan were to get a closeup view  of how the system actually operates, that support would significantly  wane," she said. "It's an abstract concept to most people, but if they  saw how abysmal the quality of representation can be, how the system is  biased racially, how prosecutors can not disclose evidence, or how DNA  testing can be wrong, my opinion is that they as reasonable people would  find it unacceptable."
Ref: The Huffington Post
ADDENDUM: 
For a more thorough article, see Brandi Grissom's work at The Texas Tribune. 
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