Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Sep 17, 2018
Jurors in Henry McCollum Case Reflect on How They Sentenced an Innocent Man to Death
Four years after intellectually disabled brothers Henry McCollum and Leon Brown were exonerated of the 1983 rape and murder of an 11-year-old girl in North Carolina, jurors in McCollum’s case met with members of his defense team and reflected on how they sentenced an innocent man to death. In a September 6 op-ed in the Raleigh News & Observer, Kristin Collins — Associate Director of Public Information for North…
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Sep 14, 2018
Medical Expert: Billy Ray Irick Tortured to Death in Tennessee Execution
Billy Ray Irick (pictured) was tortured to death during his August 9, 2018 execution in Tennessee, according to one the nation’s leading…
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Sep 13, 2018
New DPIC Podcast: Researcher Discusses Implications of Link Between Economic Threats and Support for Death Penalty
In the latest episode of our Discussions with DPIC podcast, Keelah Williams (pictured), assistant professor of psychology at Hamilton College in New York, joins DPIC executive director Robert Dunham to discuss the implications of new research on the death penalty and resource…
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Sep 12, 2018
New UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Condemns Mass Death Sentences Imposed in Egypt
Incoming United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet (pictured), has condemned the mass trial of more than 700 protesters in a Cairo, Egypt, criminal court, in which 75 defendants were sentenced to death. The court also imposed life sentences on 47 others on September 8 and sentenced another 612 defendants to prison terms of 15, 10, or 5 years. The defendants faced charges ranging from “illegal gathering” to murder…
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Sep 11, 2018
Another Louisiana Capital Conviction Overturned for Lawyer Conceding Guilt Over Client’s Objection
The Louisiana Supreme Court has unanimously overturned the conviction of death-row prisoner Brian Douglas Horn (pictured), after Horn’s lawyer conceded — over Horn’s explicit objection — that his client had killed and also may have molested 12-year-old Justin Bloxom. The September 7, 2018 ruling is the latest fallout in Louisiana from the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision earlier this year in McCoy v. Louisiana, which declared that…
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Sep 11, 2018
Defense Moves to Bar Death Penalty in New York Bike-Path Killings, Citing “Nakedly Political” Tweets
Defense attorneys for Sayfullo Saipov (pictured), the man accused of killing eight people by driving a truck onto a Manhattan bike path on October 31, 2017, have asked a New York federal district court to bar the U.S. government from seeking the death penalty against Saipov. Arguing that President Donald Trump has unconstitutionally injected “nakedly political considerations” into the Department of Justice’s charging decision, Saipov’s lawyers on September 6, 2018, filed a…
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Sep 07, 2018
Filming Underway for Movie Adaptation of ‘Just Mercy’
Filming for the movie adaptation of Bryan Stevenson’s best-selling book, Just Mercy, began August 27, 2018 in Montgomery, Alabama. The film will feature Michael B. Jordan (Creed, Black Panther) as Stevenson and Oscar-winner Jamie Foxx (Ray, Django Unchained) as wrongfully convicted death-row prisoner Walter…
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Sep 06, 2018
BOOK: Slavery and the Death Penalty
“It is widely recognized that capital punishment in the United States of America continues to be imbued with the legacy of slavery” and, to end it, American death-penalty abolitionists “should draw on the radicalism of [anti-slavery] abolitionists.” So argues British death-penalty scholar and abolitionist Dr. Bharat Malkani, a Senior Lecturer at the Cardiff University School of Law and Politics, in his new book, Slavery and the Death Penalty: A Study in…
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Sep 05, 2018
Louisiana Death-Penalty Case Tainted by Judge’s Conflict of Interest Returns to U.S. Supreme Court
A Louisiana death-row prisoner is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to review the constitutionality of his conviction and death sentence a second time based upon allegations that the trial judge had an undisclosed conflict of interest. In his petition to review his conviction for a triple-murder involving the death of a New Orleans police officer, Rogers Lacaze (pictured) argues that his right to due process was violated when his trial judge, Frank Marullo,…
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Sep 04, 2018
Nebraska Supreme Court Hears Challenge to Three-Judge Death Sentencing
The Nebraska Supreme Court heard oral argument on August 30, 2018 in a case challenging the constitutionality of the state’s capital sentencing procedure, which requires a three-judge panel to decide whether to impose a death sentence. Attorneys for death-row prisoner John Lotter said the state’s three-judge sentencing violates the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments as applied to Florida’s capital sentencing law in Hurst v. Florida. In…
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