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Claude Eric MATURANA
Date of Birth: July 1,
1957
Defendant: Caucasian
Victim: Caucasian
Inmate Deceased 12-26-02
Maturana, age 32, and his co-defendant
Stephen Ballard, were angry with Glenn Estes, a 16-year-old boy who
lived with his mother, because he had stolen a car manifold from them.
On the night of July 5, 1990,
Maturana and Ballard went to Estes' home and lured him away with the
promise that they would "party" in the desert.
They then drove him to an
extremely remote location, where Appellant shot Estes 12 times, and
Ballard cut his throat. They tossed his body in a water tank, where it
was discovered the next morning by a ranch hand. Ballard, who was age
20, was given a life sentence.
PROCEEDINGS
Presiding Judge: Michael D. Alfred
Prosecutor: Kenneth Peasley
Start of Trial: February 20, 1992
Verdict: February 26, 1992
Sentencing: April 13, 1992
Aggravating Circumstances:
Prior crime of violence
Especially cruel, heinous or depraved
Mitigating Circumstances:
None
PUBLISHED OPINIONS
State v. Maturana, 180 Ariz. 126, 882 P.2d 933 (1994).
French national in
Arizona
The case of French
national Claude Maturana has provoked controversy in the legal and
ethical debate over the medication of prisoners considered mentally
incompetent to be executed.
Claude Maturana was
convicted of murdering Glenn Estes in July 1990 over a series of minor
disputes. Estes, who was in his late teens, was allegedly tricked into
accompanying Maturana and co-defendant Stephen Ballard to a remote spot
in the desert where he was shot repeatedly and then partially
decapitated. Ballard received a sentence of life imprisonment. Maturana
was sentenced to death in April 1992, the aggravating circumstances
being a prior crime of violence and the especially heinous nature of the
murder.
In 1994, Maturana's
mental heath began to deteriorate noticeably and by 1997 communication
with him became all but impossible. He became delusional, reciting
strings of numbers in what he considers to be codes. In January 1999, a
Superior Court judge concurred with the findings of two court-appointed
doctors and declared Maturana mentally incompetent. As prescribed by
state law, Maturana was transferred from death row to a special unit on
the grounds of the Arizona State Hospital for ''competency restoration
treatment …until the prisoner becomes competent to be executed''.
The chief medical
officer of the state hospital entrusted with supervising Claude
Maturana's treatment has refused on the grounds of medical ethics to
administer therapy, other than medication required to keep Maturana in a
comfortable condition. Diagnosing Maturana as suffering from chronic
paranoid schizophrenia, the same doctor has suggested in a report to the
court that the death sentence be commuted to life imprisonment in this
case. To date, the hospital administration has been unable to find an
Arizona Department of Health professional willing to administer
treatment directed at rendering Maturana competent for execution.
The Attorney General's
office has contested the claim of mental incompetence and has argued
that, under state law, the hospital is required to provide a doctor
willing to restore Maturana to a degree of mental competence sufficient
to allow his execution. Arizona heath officials recently engaged a
doctor from the state of Georgia who after evaluation has concluded that
Maturana is seriously ill but competent to be executed. He is also said
to have expressed his willingness to administer any further competency
restoration treatment. The doctor is reported to be the medical director
of the company that provides mental health care to inmates in Georgia's
prisons.
Due to Maturana's state
of mental health and privacy laws regarding immigration records, little
is known about his background. He is believed to have been born in
France in July 1957, but details of his arrival in the United States are
scant. Records suggest that his mother may have lived in Florida but is
now deceased and no family members have come forward. Although French
authorities are reported to have recognised Maturana as a French
national, the possibility exists that he later obtained US citizenship
through naturalisation.
Amnesty International
has been informed of an alleged episode of the activation of a remote
control electro-shock stun belt Maturana was made to wear during his
transportation to a court hearing in June 1999. Maturana is reported to
have suffered a seizure, during which he badly bit his tongue.
The state's case against
Maturana for the murder of Glen Estes is currently stayed pending
resolution of the issue of mental competence.
Mentally Ill Man Awaits Execution
Milwaukee Journal
Sentinel / Associated Press
May 8, 2001
PHOENIX - Arizona prison
officials had a problem: They couldn't execute convicted killer Claude
Maturana unless they first could treat his paranoid schizophrenia and
restore his mental competence.
So two
years ago, they sent out letters to all 1,400 of
Arizona's psychiatrists and advertised in a local
newspaper for a doctor to treat Maturana.
No one came forward. The
ethical concerns over whether the state should treat someone in
order to put him to death were too strong.
Only months later, after the
search had been expanded nationwide, did a doctor from Georgia agree
to examine Maturana.
The doctor's declaration
that Maturana was competent - defined by state law as having an
awareness of his death sentence and why it was imposed - gave
Arizona the opening it needed to maintain his status on death row.
That was in 1999. And that
is pretty much where the case has been since then, with Maturana
still held on the grounds of the state mental hospital.
On May 23, however, the case
will move forward when his attorney plans to argue before the state
Supreme Court that the more rigorous standards for mental competency
during a trial should apply to her client. Those standards require
that the defendant be able to assist in his own defense.
The case has stirred a
debate over the legal and ethical propriety of treating an inmate in
order to make him suitable for execution.
Since the U.S. Supreme Court
allowed capital punishment to resume in 1976, no death row inmate in
the United States has been found incompetent and then treated by
government doctors in an attempt to restore his competency and allow
his execution, said Kent Cattani, who oversees death penalty appeals
for the Arizona Attorney General's office.
"It contravenes
international standards to execute someone with any form of mental
impairment,'' said Ajamu Baraka, who coordinates Amnesty
International's anti-death penalty efforts. "The idea that a state
would go to such length to make someone well and transform them for
the sole purpose of then imposing punishment strikes us as absurd
and immoral.''
Cattani argues that somebody
who can be competent with more medication should not be spared: "I
don't think the penalty should be reduced on what could be short-term
incompetence.''
Maturana, a 44-year-old
French citizen, is years away from execution because his appeals
have not run their course.
His lawyer Carla Ryan said
Maturana spends his days talking about visits from his mother, who
died 30 years ago, and has hallucinations that he is already dead.
"He doesn't have a clue
where reality is,'' said Ryan, who refused a request to interview
Maturana. "It doesn't make sense to me why they should spend so much
time and money to kill him.''
Maturana was sentenced to
death in 1992 for the murder of 16-year-old Glen Estes near Tucson.
Maturana suspected Estes of stealing an auto part from him. He shot
Estes and tried to decapitate him with a machete in the desert.
In January 1999, Maturana
was declared incompetent by two doctors after Ryan requested a
psychiatric evaluation. He
was sent to a prison unit on the grounds of the Arizona State
Hospital in Phoenix.
Doctors there kept him on
the same drug he has been on for years to control his condition but
refused to try to restore his competence with more aggressive
medication because it conflicted with the American Medical
Association code of ethics. The organization deems it unethical to
treat someone to restore competence in such a case because it is the
equivalent of participating in an execution.
"It's very clear it's an
ethical violation,'' said Dr. Jack Potts, the chief forensic
psychiatrist in Maricopa County, who turned down a request to treat
Maturana. "Our role is do no harm. It wasn't a hard call.''
It was only through extensive
networking that the hospital found Dr. Nelson Bennett of Atlanta.
Bennett's surprise diagnosis that
Maturana wa s competent - therefore not needing more aggressive
treatment - shocked Dr. Jerry Dennis, who had been medicating him.
Bennett did not return several calls for comment.
"A person who says he's dead
already, how can he have an adequate understanding of being killed?''
Dennis said.
Gov. Jane Hull signed a bill
last month that bans the execution of mentally retarded criminals, and
the U.S. Supreme Court is preparing to debate the same issue in a push
death penalty foes hope will eventually spare the mentally impaired from
capital punishment.