Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Apr 01, 2020
Colorado District Attorneys Drop One Capital Prosecution, Continue a Second, After State Abolishes Death Penalty
After ignoring health risks posed by lengthy court proceedings during the coronavirus pandemic and facing criticism that a capital prosecution following the state’s abolition of capital punishment would amount to a politically partisan waste of taxpayer dollars, prosecutors in Adams County, Colorado have announced that they will drop the death penalty in a high-profile case involving the killing of a sheriff’s…
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Mar 31, 2020
Texas Appeals Court Rejects Recommendation for New Trial for Death-Row Prisoner
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (TCCA) has once again rejected the findings of a trial court that a death-row prisoner was entitled to relief from his conviction or death…
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Mar 30, 2020
After Unanimous House Passage, Florida Senate Fails to Enact DNA Reforms
After receiving unanimous support in the Florida House of Representatives, a bill that would have expanded access to postconviction DNA testing failed in the Florida Senate when the legislative body adjourned its 2020 legislative session without taking up the…
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Mar 27, 2020
Coronavirus Pandemic Halts Executions, Perhaps for the Foreseeable Future
The public health crisis from the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic has halted executions in the United States and, legal experts say, is likely to continue to do for the foreseeable…
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Mar 26, 2020
United Kingdom Supreme Court Rules Britain Cannot Provide Evidence to U.S. for Use in Death-Penalty Cases
In a decision that exposed the deep divide between the United States and its European allies on capital punishment issues, the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom unanimously ruled that the British government unlawfully provided information to the United States about two suspected Islamic State members without first obtaining assurances that the information would not be used to impose or carry out the death…
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Mar 25, 2020
Georgia Death-Row Prisoner Asks Supreme Court to Strike Down Law That Evades Prohibition on Executing the Intellectually Disabled
Georgia death-row prisoner Billy Daniel Raulerson, Jr. (pictured) is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to strike down a state law that, he argues, is permitting Georgia to unconstitutionally execute individuals with Intellectual Disability. On March 27, 2020, the Court is scheduled to consider whether to hear the case of Raulerson v. Warden and to review the constitutionality of Georgia’s evidentiary requirement that capital defendants prove they are…
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Mar 24, 2020
Colorado Becomes 22nd State to Abolish Death Penalty
On March 23, 2020, Colorado became the 22nd U.S. state to abolish the death penalty, as Governor Jared Polis (pictured) signed legislation repealing the state’s capital punishment statute and commuted the sentences of the state’s three death-row prisoners to life without possibility of parole. The state was the tenth to legislatively or judicially abolish capital punishment in the past fifteen…
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Mar 23, 2020
Alabama Judge Denies New Trial for Toforest Johnson
A Birmingham judge has denied a new trial to Alabama death-row prisoner Toforest Johnson (pictured, center), saying he had not proven his claim that his conviction and death sentence for the killing of a sheriff’s deputy in 1995 were the product of prosecutorial…
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Mar 20, 2020
Showing Coronavirus Symptoms, ‘Likely Innocent’ Death-Row Prisoner Seeks Emergency Medical Care
Exhibiting symptoms of the coronavirus, a Philadelphia death-row prisoner who prosecutors now acknowledge is “likely innocent” and whose potential release has been delayed by the Philadelphia courts has filed an emergency motion to obtain testing and independent medical treatment for…
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Mar 19, 2020
Ohio Death-Row Prisoner Granted New Trial After Lawyer Allowed Racially Biased Juror to Sit on Jury
The Ohio Supreme Court has granted a new trial to a Cincinnati death-row prisoner whose lawyer’s inaction permitted a racially biased juror to serve in his case. In a 5 – 2 opinion issued February 27, 2020, the court ruled that defense counsel for Glen Bates (pictured) had been ineffective for failing to question a juror about her racial bias, challenge her for cause, or exercise one of his remaining discretionary strikes to prevent her from serving in the case, in violation of…
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