Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Apr 122019

New Hampshire Senate Passes Death-Penalty Repeal With Veto-Proof Majority

In a vote death-penal­­ty oppo­nents praised as his­toric,” a veto-proof super­ma­jor­i­ty of the New Hampshire leg­is­la­ture gave final approval to a bill that would repeal the state’s death penal­ty statute. By a vote of 17 – 6, the sen­a­tors vot­ed on April 11, 2019 to end cap­i­tal pros­e­cu­tions in the Granite State, exceed­ing the two-thirds major­i­ty nec­es­sary to over­ride an antic­i­pat­ed veto by Governor Chris Sununu. In March, the state House of Representatives passed the same abolition…

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Apr 112019

Missouri Supreme Court Grants New Sentencing Trial to Man Who Was Sentenced to Death Despite 11 Jurors’ Votes for Life

The Missouri Supreme Court has ordered a new sen­tenc­ing tri­al for Marvin D. Rice (pic­tured), a for­mer sheriff’s deputy whose tri­al judge sen­tenced him to death despite the votes of 11 of his 12 jurors to sen­tence him to life. On April 2, 2019, the court vacat­ed the death sen­tence imposed by St. Charles County Judge Kelly Wayne Parker in 2017 under the state’s controversial hung jury” sen­tenc­ing pro­vi­sion. Under that law, the tri­al judge has…

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News 

Apr 092019

Texas Court Stays Execution of Prisoner Whose Lawyer Deliberately Excluded Black Jurors

The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has stayed the exe­cu­tion of Mark Robertson (pic­tured), a Dallas death-row pris­on­er whom Texas had sched­uled for exe­cu­tion on April 11, 2019. The court’s April 8 stay order did not spec­i­fy the rea­son it halt­ed the exe­cu­tion, but Robertson’s lawyers had filed an appeal seek­ing review of their claim that his court-appoint­ed tri­al lawyer, Michael Byck, had engaged in pur­pose­ful dis­crim­i­na­tion” by deliberately…

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News 

Apr 082019

In Act of Christian Forgiveness,’ Tennessee Victim’s Daughter Asks Governor for Mercy for Her Mother’s Killer

A Tennessee mur­der victim’s daugh­ter is ask­ing Governor Bill Lee to hon­or their shared faith by spar­ing the life of her mother’s killer. In what they describe as an excep­tion­al” clemen­cy plea, lawyers for Tennessee death-row pris­on­er Don Johnson (pic­tured) write that Cynthia Vaughn, the daugh­ter of Connie Johnson, has request­ed a meet­ing with Gov. Lee to tell him her story of Christian for­give­ness” and ask that he com­mute Johnson’s sentence…

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News 

Apr 052019

Commentators Question Why Supreme Court Stopped One Execution, But Not Another With Identical Religious Exercise Issues

Legal schol­ars and com­men­ta­tors across the polit­i­cal spec­trum have crit­i­cized the U.S. Supreme Court for its seem­ing­ly con­tra­dic­to­ry actions, less than two months apart, in two near­ly iden­ti­cal reli­gious free­dom claims from death-row pris­on­ers. On February 7, 2019, the Court vacat­ed a stay of exe­cu­tion and per­mit­ted Alabama to exe­cute death-row pris­on­er Domineque Ray (pic­tured, left), who had claimed that the Alabama Department of Corrections…

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News 

Apr 042019

Utah Supreme Court Grants Death-Row Prisoner Hearing on Damning Revelations” of Police Misconduct

Citing damn­ing rev­e­la­tions” that police and pros­e­cu­tors have used bribes and threats to secure tes­ti­mo­ny in a three-decades-old cap­i­tal case, the Utah Supreme Court has ordered a Utah County court to con­duct a hear­ing to deter­mine whether death-row pris­on­er Douglas Stewart Carter should receive a new tri­al. Carter has spent 33 years on Utah’s death row. Although police found fin­ger­prints and blood at the crime scene, no phys­i­cal evi­dence tied Carter to the…

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News 

Apr 032019

Discriminatory Use of Death Penalty Against Gays Raises Concerns Globally and in the U.S.

As human rights activists raise alarms about a new law in Brunei that would pun­ish homo­sex­u­al­i­ty by death by ston­ing, the U.S. Supreme Court con­sid­ers whether to hear a case in which jurors who exhib­it­ed anti-gay big­otry sen­tenced a gay defen­dant to death. Charles Rhines (pic­tured), a South Dakota death-row pris­on­er, is ask­ing the U.S. Supreme Court to review his case, after a low­er fed­er­al court denied him the oppor­tu­ni­ty to present juror…

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Apr 022019

Badly Divided Supreme Court Denies Execution Challenge by Prisoner With Rare Disease

In a divi­sive 5 – 4 deci­sion that exposed ran­cor and deep rifts among the jus­tices, the U.S. Supreme Court has giv­en Missouri the go-ahead to exe­cute a pris­on­er whose blood-filled tumors in his head, neck, and mouth could burst if the state car­ries out his exe­cu­tion by its cho­sen method. Russell Bucklew (pic­tured), who suf­fers from the rare med­ical con­di­tion, cav­ernous heman­gioma, had argued that Missouri’s lethal injec­tion procedures would…

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News 

Apr 012019

California Justices Criticize Dysfunctional” Death Penalty as Poll Shows Public Overwhelmingly Prefers Life Sentence

Within two weeks of California Governor Gavin Newsom’s announce­ment that he was halt­ing exe­cu­tions in the state, the deci­sion to issue the mora­to­ri­um has been bol­stered from two unre­lat­ed and inde­pen­dent sources. A statewide poll under­way at the time of Newson’s mora­to­ri­um announce­ment and released by the Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC) on March 27, 2019 found that by a record 2:1 mar­gin, Californians pre­ferred life without…

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