Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Jan 112018

Idaho County Considers Leaving State Defense Fund As Way to Deter Capital Prosecutions

To deter future use of the death penal­ty in their coun­ty, the Blaine County, Idaho County Commissioners on January 2 vot­ed to con­sid­er with­draw­ing from the state’s Capital Crimes Defense Fund as a way to choke off state fund­ing in capital prosecutions. This is a way for our coun­ty to say we don’t sup­port the death penal­ty, and that we don’t want the pros­e­cu­tor seek­ing it in Blaine County,” said Commissioner Larry Schoen (pic­tured), who proposed the…

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News 

Jan 102018

Murder Victims’ Family Members Speak of Moving Forward, Without the Death Penalty 

Family mem­bers of mur­der vic­tims share no sin­gle, uni­form response to the death penal­ty, but two recent pub­li­ca­tions illus­trate that a grow­ing num­ber of these fam­i­lies are now advo­cat­ing against cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. In From Death Into Life, a fea­ture arti­cle in the January 8, 2018 print edi­tion of the Jesuit mag­a­zine America, Lisa Murtha pro­files the sto­ries of how sev­er­al promi­nent vic­­tim-advo­­cates against the death penal­ty came to hold those views. And in a recently…

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News 

Jan 102018

U.S. Supreme Court Orders Federal Appeals Court to Reconsider Case Involving Racially Biased Juror

The U.S. Supreme Court has direct­ed a fed­er­al appeals court to recon­sid­er whether Georgia death-row pris­on­er Keith Tharpe (pic­tured) is enti­tled to fed­er­al court review of his claim that he was uncon­sti­tu­tion­al­ly sen­tenced to death because he is black. On January 8, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a 6 – 3 opin­ion send­ing Tharpe’s case — in which a racist juror used an offen­sive slur to describe the defen­dant and doubt­ed whether African Americans have souls — back to…

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News 

Jan 082018

Conservative Voices Continue to Call for End of Death Penalty

From October 2016 to October 2017, sup­port for cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment among those iden­ti­fy­ing them­selves as Republicans fell by ten perc­etage points. Two op-eds pub­lished towards the end of the year illus­trate the grow­ing con­ser­v­a­tive oppo­si­tion to the death penal­ty. Writing in The Seattle Times on December 27, Republican State Senator Mark Miloscia (pic­tured, l.) called for bipar­ti­san efforts to repeal Washington’s death-penal­­ty statute. In a December…

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News 

Jan 052018

Retired Lt. General: Exclude Mentally Ill Vets from the Death Penalty

Saying that the death penalty should be reserved for the worst of the worst in our soci­ety,’” retired Marine Corps Lieutenant General John Castellaw (pic­tured) has urged the Tennessee state leg­is­la­ture to adopt pend­ing leg­is­la­tion that would bar the death penal­ty for peo­ple with severe men­tal ill­ness­es. In an op-ed in the Memphis news­pa­per, The Commercial Appeal, General Castellaw writes that the death penalty should not be pre­scribed for those…

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News 

Jan 032018

Virginia Governor Commutes Death Sentence of Mentally Incompetent Death-Row Prisoner

Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe com­mut­ed the sen­tence of men­tal­ly incom­pe­tent death-row pris­on­er William Joseph Burns (pic­tured) on December 29, 2017, after mul­ti­ple men­­tal-health experts said Burns was unlike­ly to regain suf­fi­cient com­pe­ten­cy for his death sen­tence to ever be car­ried out. Burns, whose sen­tence was con­vert­ed to life in prison with­out the pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole, became the fifth death-row pris­on­er to have been grant­ed clemen­cy in the…

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News 

Jan 022018

Former Death-Row Prisoner Exonerated in Illinois, Seized by ICE

Former Illinois death-row pris­on­er Gabriel Solache (pic­tured), a Mexican nation­al whose death sen­tence was one of 157 com­mut­ed by Governor George Ryan in January 2003, was exon­er­at­ed on December 21, 2017 after twen­ty years of wrong­ful impris­on­ment, but imme­di­ate­ly seized by agents of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement…

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News 

Dec 282017

Judge Finds New Jersey Federal Capital Defendant Intellectually Disabled, Bars Death Penalty

A New Jersey U.S. dis­trict court judge has barred fed­er­al pros­e­cu­tors from seek­ing the death penal­ty against Farad Roland, find­ing that Roland is intel­lec­tu­al­ly dis­abled and there­fore inel­i­gi­ble for cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. After an eigh­­teen-day evi­den­tiary hear­ing fea­tur­ing six­teen wit­ness­es, Judge Esther Salas ruled on December 18 that Roland — accused of five killings in con­nec­tion with a drug-traf­­fick­­ing gang — had abun­dant­ly sat­is­fied his bur­den of proving his…

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News 

Dec 272017

Death-Row Exoneree’s Foundation Fights Wrongful Convictions, Provides Post-Release Health Care

When Anthony Graves (pic­tured) was exon­er­at­ed from death row in Texas in 2010, he decid­ed that he would use his per­son­al expe­ri­ence as a cat­a­lyst for redressing the injus­tice of the jus­tice sys­tem.” After receiv­ing $1.45 mil­lion as com­pen­sa­tion for the 18 years he was wrong­ly incar­cer­at­ed, includ­ing twelve years on death row, the nation’s 138th death-row exoneree cre­at­ed the Anthony Graves Foundation. Over the past two…

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