Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Jul 122019

Florida Capital Sentencing Juries Return Four Life Verdicts in Two Weeks

In the span of two weeks, juries in four unre­lat­ed cas­es in which Florida pros­e­cu­tors had sought the death penal­ty have instead returned life sen­tences. The cas­es — which were con­sid­ered prob­a­ble death ver­dicts if judges were per­mit­ted to impose sen­tence — illus­trate the impact of the changes in Florida law in 2016 and 2017 ban­ning judi­cial death sen­tences based on non-unan­i­­­mous jury rec­om­men­da­tions for death. Between June 27, 2019 and July 11,…

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News 

Jul 112019

NEW RESOURCES: Capital Punishment and the State of Criminal Justice 2019

The American Bar Association’s Criminal Justice Section will soon release its annu­al report on issues, trends, and sig­nif­i­cant changes in America’s crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem. The new pub­li­ca­tion, The State of Criminal Justice 2019, includes a chap­ter by Ronald J. Tabak, chair of the Death Penalty Committee of the ABAs Section of Civil Rights and Social Justice, describ­ing sig­nif­i­cant death penal­ty cas­es and capital…

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News 

Jul 102019

Spring 2019 Death Row USA” Documents Further Shrinking of U.S. Death-Row Population

The num­ber of peo­ple on death row or fac­ing cap­i­tal resen­tenc­ing in the United States has con­tin­ued its 19-year decline, accord­ing to a new death-row cen­sus by the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund (LDF). The Spring 2019 edi­tion of Death Row USA, released in ear­ly July, reports that 2,673 peo­ple in 32 states or in U.S. fed­er­al or mil­i­tary cus­tody were on death rows across the U.S. as of April 1, 2019. That total reflects a 2.6% drop from the…

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News 

Jul 092019

Texas Sets Execution Date For Jewish Prisoner Who Alleges Judge Was Racist and Anti-Semitic

A Texas coun­ty court has set an exe­cu­tion date for a Jewish death-row pris­on­er despite his pend­ing fed­er­al appeal alleg­ing that the judge who presided over his tri­al and sen­tenc­ing should have been removed from the case because of his big­ot­ed racist and anti-Semitic views. On July 3, 2019, Dallas County Judge Lela Mays set an October 10 exe­cu­tion date for Randy Halprin, while he is active­ly lit­i­gat­ing a claim that for­mer Judge Vickers Cunningham…

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News 

Jul 082019

Books: Lethal State — A History of the Death Penalty in North Carolina

The death penal­ty and lynch­ing were instru­ments of​“white suprema­cist polit­i­cal and social pow­er” in North Carolina, diverg­ing in form but not in func­tion. So writes University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill American Studies Professor Seth Kotch In his new­ly released book, Lethal State: A History of the Death Penalty in North Carolina. Lethal State tracks North Carolina’s use of the death penal­ty from post-Civil War Reconstruction to the present. Kotch…

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News 

Jul 052019

Kentucky Trial Court Again Strikes Down State’s Execution Protocol

A Kentucky tri­al court has issued an order declar­ing the Commonwealth’s exe­cu­tion pro­to­col uncon­sti­tu­tion­al. It was the third time in a decade the state courts have ruled in favor of death-row pris­on­ers in their chal­lenges to the pro­to­col. The July 2, 2019 rul­ing by Franklin Circuit Court Judge Phillip J. Shepherd came in response to a claim brought by the state’s death-row pris­on­ers that Kentucky’s exe­cu­tion reg­u­la­tions could allow…

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News 

Jul 042019

Judge Finds Federal Death-Row Prisoner Bruce Webster Intellectually Disabled, Vacates Death Sentence

An Indiana fed­er­al dis­trict court judge has vacat­ed the death sen­tence imposed on fed­er­al death-row pris­on­er Bruce Webster, find­ing that Webster is inel­i­gi­ble for the death penal­ty because he is intel­lec­tu­al­ly dis­abled. After a five-day hear­ing in April 2019, in which the court heard live tes­ti­mo­ny from sev­en men­tal health experts and con­sid­ered depo­si­tion tes­ti­mo­ny from three oth­ers, Senior Judge William T. Lawrence of the Southern District…

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News 

Jul 032019

New Podcast: New Hampshire Rep. Renny Cushing on Empowering Crime Survivors and Repealing the Death Penalty

Being the sur­vivor of a homi­cide vic­tim has a pain for which there aren’t any words,” says New Hampshire Representative Renny Cushing (pic­tured), in the lat­est episode of the Death Penalty Information Center pod­cast, Discussions with DPIC. But “[f]illing anoth­er cof­fin doesn’t do any­thing to bring our loved ones back, it just widens the cir­cle of pain. There’s a big dif­fer­ence between jus­tice and vengeance,”…

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News 

Jul 022019

New Mexico Supreme Court Ruling Removes Final Prisoners from State’s Death Row

The New Mexico Supreme Court has cleared the state’s death row, vacat­ing the death sen­tences imposed on the state’s final two death-row pris­on­ers, and direct­ing that they be resen­tenced to life in prison. The rul­ings, issued by a divid­ed court on June 28, 2019 in the cas­es of Timothy Allen (pic­tured, left) and Robert Fry (pic­tured, right), came almost ten years to the day after New Mexico’s death-penal­­­ty abo­li­tion, signed into…

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News 

Jul 012019

DPIC MID-YEAR REVIEW: At Midpoint of 2019, Death Penalty Use Remains Near Historic Lows

At the mid­point of 2019, death sen­tences and exe­cu­tions remain near his­toric lows in the United States, with exe­cu­tions and pend­ing exe­cu­tion dates con­cen­trat­ed heav­i­ly in a few south­ern states. The year’s exe­cu­tions and new death sen­tences have dis­pro­por­tion­al­ly involved defen­dants or pris­on­ers with men­tal ill­ness, brain dam­age, and/​or severe child­hood trau­ma, and those with inad­e­quate rep­re­sen­ta­tion. New Hampshire became the 21st state to abolish the…

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