Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Dec 11, 2017
State Attorney Aramis Ayala’s First Capital Prosecution Ends in Deal for Life in Prison
There will be no death penalty in the first capital prosecution authorized under the administration of Orange and Osceola County, Florida, State Attorney Aramis Ayala. In a case that rekindled the political confrontation between State Attorney Ayala and Governor Rick Scott over the use of the death penalty, Emerita Mapp (pictured) pleaded no contest on December 8 to one count of murder and a second count of attempted murder in exchange for a sentence of…
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Dec 08, 2017
Texas District Attorney Asks State to Spare Life of Man She Prosecuted Under Controversial “Law of Parties”
The Texas prosecutor who sought and obtained the death penalty almost 20 years ago against Jeffery Wood (pictured), a man who never killed anyone, has now asked that his sentence be reduced to life in prison. In a letter to the Texas Board of Pardons and Parole, sent in August and obtained December 7 by the Texas Tribune, Kerr County District Attorney Lucy Wilke asked the board to recommend that Governor Greg Abbott grant Wood…
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Dec 07, 2017
Co-Chairs of Oklahoma Commission Praise Steps Towards Death-Penalty Reform
Two of the co-chairs of the bipartisan Oklahoma Death Penalty Review Commission have praised organizations in the state for taking “essential steps” towards implementing some of the Commission’s recommendations to reform Oklahoma’s death-penalty system. In an article published December 7 in the Tulsa World, former Oklahoma Governor Brad Henry (pictured, left) and Andy Lester (pictured, right), a prominent Oklahoma…
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Dec 06, 2017
NEW RESOURCE: Academy for Justice Report on Reforming Criminal Justice Tackles the Death Penalty
The Academy for Justice has recently released a new four-volume study, Reforming Criminal Justice, featuring research and analysis by leading academics and a wide range of proposals for criminal justice reform. The project, funded with a grant from the Charles Koch Foundation and produced with the support of Arizona State University and ASU’s Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law, contains more than fifty chapters covering a wide range of subjects within the areas of criminalization,…
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Dec 05, 2017
No Executions in the “Capital of Capital Punishment” for First Time in 30 Years
Harris County (Houston), Texas, has executed 126 prisoners since the U.S. Supreme Court upheld Texas’s capital punishment statute in 1976, more than any other county in the United States and, apart from the rest of Texas, more than any state. But in 2017, no one will be sentenced to death in Harris County and, for the first time since 1985, no one sentenced to death in the county will be…
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Dec 04, 2017
Lawsuit: Nebraska Vote to Restore Death Penalty Does Not Apply to Those Previously Sentenced to Death
The ALCU of Nebraska, the ACLU Capital Punishment Project, and the law firm O’Melveny & Myers, LLP, have filed a lawsuit on behalf of the state’s eleven death-sentenced prisoners seeking to bar Nebraska “from carrying out any executions or taking steps toward carrying out any executions” under the November 2016 voter referendum that restored that state’s death-penalty law. The lawsuit, filed in Lancaster County District Court on December 4, argues that…
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Dec 01, 2017
Underfunding of Capital Defense Services in Louisiana Leaves Defendants Without Lawyers
Facing court challenges for underfunding the state’s public defender system and pressure from prosecutors angered by the zealous capital representation provided in the state by non-profit capital defense organizations, the Louisiana legislature enacted a law last year redirecting $3 million to local public defenders that had previously been allocated to fund capital defenders. As it has nearly every winter, however, the Louisiana public defender system has run out of money,…
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Nov 30, 2017
History of Lynchings of Mexican Americans Provides Context for Recent Challenges to U.S. Death Penalty
From 1846 to 1870, more than 100 men and women were hanged on the branches of the notorious “Hanging Tree” in Goliad, Texas. Many were Mexicans or Mexican Americans and many were killed by…
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Nov 29, 2017
Louisiana Justice Recused From “Angola 5” Death-Penalty Appeal After Radio Interview Commenting on the Case
Louisiana Supreme Court Justice Scott Crichton (pictured) will not participate in deciding the appeal of a prisoner sentenced to death in a controversial, high-profile prison killing, after Crichton publicly commented on the case during an appearance on a local radio program. On November 21, Crichton recused himself from the pending appeal of death-row prisoner David Brown, one day after Brown’s lawyers sought his removal from the case…
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Nov 28, 2017
Senior U.N. Official Assails Death-Penalty Secrecy As Obstruction of Human Rights
A senior United Nations human rights official has criticized the secrecy with which countries carry out the death penalty and called for greater transparency by countries that still employ capital punishment. “There is far too much secrecy,” United Nations Assistant Secretary-General for Human Rights Andrew Gilmour (pictured) said in an interview released November 21 by the U.N. News Centre, “and it’s quite indicative the fact that although many countries are…
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