Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Nov 06, 2019
After Being Reversed Twice, Texas Appeals Court Takes Intellectually Disabled Prisoner Off Death Row
After being reversed twice by the United States Supreme Court, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (CCA) has resentenced intellectually disabled death-row prisoner Bobby James Moore to life in prison. In a three-page decision issued on November 6, 2019, 39 years after Moore was sentenced to death in Houston for a 1980 murder during a supermarket robbery, the CCA conceded that the U.S. Supreme Court has determined that“Moore … is a person…
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Nov 05, 2019
Idaho Prosecutor Says State’s Longest-Serving Death-Row Prisoner Should Not Be Executed
The prosecutor who sent Thomas Creech, Idaho’s longest-serving death-row prisoner, to jail 37 years ago now says that Creech and others sentenced to death in the Gem State should…
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Nov 04, 2019
South Dakota Prisoner Executed After Supreme Court Denies Review of Anti-Gay Bias, Denial of Mental Health Expert
Whether South Dakota death-row prisoner Charles Rhines (pictured) lives or dies may depend less on whether he was constitutionally convicted and sentenced to death and more on whether the courts value finality more than they value fairness. As Rhines filed two separate petitions in the U.S. Supreme Court and an appeal in the South Dakota Supreme Court on November 1, the South Dakota Department of Corrections announced that…
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Nov 01, 2019
DPIC Analysis: States Scheduled Ten Executions for October 2019 — Why Nine Did Not Happen
Ten executions were scheduled to take place in October 2019, more than in any other month in the last two years. As the month closed, however, nine of those executions were not carried out. The 90% rate of warrant failures symbolizes the death penalty’s continuing decline and the widespread problems states are having with its implementation. And with eight active execution dates pending and two other stays of execution in place in November and December, 2019 is…
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Oct 31, 2019
Georgia Supreme Court, Ohio Governor Provisionally Halt Three Executions
Three U.S. executions were halted on October 30, 2019, as the Georgia Supreme Court issued a day-of-execution stay to Ray Jefferson Cromartie and Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (pictured) granted warrants of reprieve to the next two death-row prisoners scheduled for execution in Ohio. The actions capped a tumultuous October in which nine of ten scheduled executions did not take place and federal…
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Oct 30, 2019
Victims’ Family Members Ask for Clemency for Federal Death-Row Prisoner Daniel Lee
When Attorney General William Barr announced in July 2019 that the federal government planned to execute five prisoners in a five-week span from December 9, 2019 to January 15, 2020, he declared that“we owe it to the victims and their families to carry forward the sentence imposed by our justice system.” In at least two of those cases, however, the victims’ families and community have said they don’t want the death…
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Oct 29, 2019
More Than 250 Conservative Leaders Join Call to End Death Penalty
More than 250 conservative leaders from across the country have signed on to a statement expressing their opposition to capital punishment as administered across the United States and issued a“call [to] our fellow conservatives to reexamine the death penalty and demonstrate the leadership needed to end this failed policy.” Conservatives Concerned About the Death Penalty (CCATDP) released the statement in conjunction with an October 28, 2019…
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Oct 28, 2019
Georgia Prisoner Says He is Not the Shooter, Seeks Stay of Execution to Permit DNA Testing
Supported by the murder victim’s daughter, a Georgia death-row prisoner who is scheduled for execution October 30, 2019 is asking the federal courts to grant him a stay to permit DNA testing that, he says, will prove that he did not commit the killing for which he is on death row. Ray Cromartie (pictured) admits his involvement in the robbery in which Richard Slysz was murdered, but maintains that his co-defendant…
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Oct 25, 2019
Tennessee Court to Decide Whether to Test DNA that Could Exonerate Man Executed in 2006
A Shelby County (Memphis) judge has heard argument and will rule on November 18, 2019 whether to allow DNA testing in a case that could show whether the state of Tennessee executed an innocent man in June of 2006. On October 14, lawyers from the Innocence Project, representing the estate of Sedley Alley (pictured) and his daughter, April Alley, urged Criminal Court Judge Paula Skahan to release for DNA testing physical evidence…
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Oct 24, 2019
Courts Grant Stays of Execution on Procedural Grounds in Two Cases Raising Significant Guilt-Related Questions
Courts in Texas and Florida have granted stays of execution to two men who faced imminent execution despite serious questions as to their involvement in the murders for which they were sentenced to death. On October 22, 2019, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (CCA) stayed the execution of Ruben Gutierrez (pictured, left), which had been scheduled for October 30. The following day, the U.S. District Court for the Middle…
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