Speaking at the American Bar Association’s Thurgood Marshall Awards Dinner in Illinois, Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens said that the death penalty has “serious flaws.” He recalled the late Justice Marshall in remarking how much the country has learned about the risks in death cases: “Since his retirement, with the benefit of DNA evidence, we have learned that a substantial number of death sentences have been imposed erroneously,” Stevens said during the ceremony. He added that Supreme Court cases have revealed that “a significant number of defendants in capital cases have not been provided with fully competent legal representation at trial.” He also questioned the fairness of the jury selection process in capital cases, which eliminates potential jurors who are opposed to the death penalty. (Associated Press, August 7, 2005). Read Justice Stevens’ Remarks. See Innocence and New Voices.