Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Oct 252018

NEW PODCAST: The Death Penalty and Human Dignity; Lessons From the Anti-Slavery Movement

[T]he issue of race and the death penal­ty is not unique to the death penal­ty, it’s part of the broad­er prob­lem with the crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem,” says Bharat Malkani (pic­tured), author of the 2018 book Slavery and the Death Penalty: A Study in Abolition, in a new Discussions With DPIC pod­cast. In the October 2018 DPIC pod­cast, Malkani — a senior lec­tur­er in the School of Law and Politics at Cardiff University in the United…

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News 

Oct 242018

Following Washington Death Penalty Abolition, Op-eds Encourage Other States to Follow Suit

Following the Washington Supreme Court’s October 11, 2018 deci­sion declar­ing the state’s death penal­ty uncon­sti­tu­tion­al, news out­lets have ques­tioned what comes next. Op-ed writ­ers in North Carolina, Texas, and California have respond­ed, urg­ing their states to recon­sid­er their cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment laws. The Washington court cit­ed racial bias,​“arbi­trary deci­­­sion-mak­ing, ran­dom impo­si­tion of the death penal­ty, unre­li­a­bil­i­ty, geographic rarity,…

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News 

Oct 222018

Gallup Poll — Fewer than Half of Americans, a New Low, Believe Death Penalty is Applied Fairly

Fewer than half of Americans now believe the death penal­ty is fair­ly applied in the United States, accord­ing to the 2018 annu­al Gallup crime poll of U.S. adults, con­duct­ed October 1 – 10. The 49% of Americans who said they believed the death penal­ty was​“applied fair­ly” was the low­est Gallup has ever record­ed since it first includ­ed the ques­tion in its crime poll in 2000. The per­cent­age of U.S. adults who said they believe the death penal­ty is unfairly…

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News 

Oct 192018

Texas Court Stays Execution of Mentally Ill Prisoner with Schizophrenia

The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals on October 19, 2018 stayed the exe­cu­tion of Kwame Rockwell (pic­tured), a severe­ly men­tal­ly ill death-row pris­on­er suf­fer­ing from schiz­o­phre­nia, who had been sched­uled to die on October 24. The court found that Rockwell had raised​“sub­stan­tial doubt that he is not com­pe­tent to be exe­cut­ed” and reversed a rul­ing by the Tarrant County District Court that had rejected…

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News 

Oct 192018

As Capital Retrial Begins, Former Judge Says Defendant Should Not Be Convicted

As Seminole County pros­e­cu­tors seek the death penal­ty against Clemente Javier Aguirre-Jarquin a sec­ond time despite sub­stan­tial evi­dence impli­cat­ing anoth­er sus­pect, the Florida judge who ini­tial­ly sen­tenced Aguirre-Jarquin to death now says he should not be con­vict­ed. Retired Judge O.H. Eaton (pic­tured), who presided over Aguirre-Jarquin’s dou­ble-mur­der tri­al in 2006, said he now believes that the case is a​“poster…

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News 

Oct 172018

ABA Panel Explores History, Morality of Death Penalty

Has the death penal­ty evolved into an anachro­nism?” asked a pan­el at the August 2, 2018 American Bar Association Annual Meeting in Chicago. Moderator Ronald Tabak, chair of the ABA Death Penalty Committee, and pan­elists Cardinal Blase J. Cupich of the Archdiocese of Chicago; Karen Gottlieb, co-direc­­­tor of the Florida Center for Capital Representation; Meredith Martin Rountree, senior lec­tur­er at the…

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News 

Oct 162018

73% of North Carolina’s Death Row Sentenced Under Obsolete Laws, New Report Says

Most of the 142 pris­on­ers on North Carolina​’s death row were con­vict­ed under obso­lete and out­dat­ed death-penal­­­ty laws and would not have been sen­tenced to death if tried today, accord­ing to a new report by the Center for Death Penalty Litigation. The report by the Durham-based defense orga­ni­za­tion, titled Unequal Justice: How Obsolete Laws and Unfair Trials Created North Carolina’s Outsized Death Row, says that nearly three-quarters…

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News 

Oct 152018

Nebraska County Raises Property Taxes, Seeks State Bailout to Pay Wrongful Conviction Compensation

A Nebraska coun­ty has raised prop­er­ty tax­es on its res­i­dents and asked the state leg­is­la­ture for a bailout to help pay a $28.1 mil­lion civ­il judg­ment it owes to six men and women wrong­ly con­vict­ed of rape and mur­der after hav­ing been threat­ened with the death penal­ty. The so-called ​“Beatrice Six” (pic­tured) suc­cess­ful­ly sued Gage County for offi­cial mis­con­duct that led to their…

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News 

Oct 122018

Washington Supreme Court Declares State’s Death Penalty Unconstitutional

Finding that the death penal­ty​“is imposed in an arbi­trary and racial­ly biased man­ner,” a unan­i­mous Washington Supreme Court has struck down the state’s cap­i­­­tal-pun­ish­­­ment statute as vio­lat­ing Washington’s state con­sti­tu­tion­al pro­hi­bi­tion against​“cru­el pun­ish­ment.” The court’s rul­ing, authored by Chief Justice Mary E. Fairhurst and issued on October 11, 2018, declared:​“The death penal­ty, as admin­is­tered in our state, fails to…

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