Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Oct 132017

Former Arkansas Death-Row Prisoner Rickey Dale Newman Exonerated After Nearly 17 Years in Prison

An Arkansas tri­al judge has dis­missed all charges against for­mer death-row pris­on­er, Rickey Dale Newman (pic­tured), set­ting him free on October 11 after hav­ing spent near­ly 17 years in cus­tody fol­low­ing the February 2001 mur­der of a tran­sient woman in a​“hobo park” on the out­skirts of Van Buren, Arkansas. Newman became the 160th per­son since 1973 to be exon­er­at­ed after hav­ing hav­ing been wrong­ly con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death.

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News 

Oct 112017

U.N. Secretary-General, European Union Ambassador Call for Abolition of Barbaric” Death Penalty

In sep­a­rate state­ments issued in con­nec­tion with the 15th World and European Day against the Death Penalty on October 10, United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres and European Union U.S. Ambassador David O’Sullivan have called upon all nations to halt sched­uled exe­cu­tions and abol­ish the death penal­ty. In his first ever state­ment on cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment since becom­ing Secretary-General on January 1, 2017, Guterres described capital…

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News 

Oct 102017

Texas Set to Execute Robert Pruett for Prison Murder Despite Corruption and Lack of Physical Evidence

Though no phys­i­cal evi­dence links him to the crime, Texas is set to exe­cute Robert Pruett (pic­tured) on October 12 for the 1999 stab­bing death of a state cor­rec­tion­al offi­cer who was at the cen­ter of a prison cor­rup­tion inves­ti­ga­tion. Results of a DNA test of the mur­der weapon in 2015 found DNA that matched nei­ther Pruett nor the victim,…

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News 

Oct 092017

Prosecutors Seeking Death Sentences for Aging Defendants Despite Taxpayer Cost, Likelihood of Dying Before Execution

Two cas­es in which pros­e­cu­tors have elect­ed to pur­sue the death penal­ty against aging or infirm defen­dants who will almost cer­tain­ly nev­er be exe­cut­ed have raised ques­tions about the costs and ben­e­fits of cap­i­tal charges and the arbi­trary exer­cise of pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al dis­cre­tion. Federal pros­e­cu­tors in Missouri are seek­ing the death penal­ty against 61-year-old Ulysses Jones Jr., a man with ter­mi­nal renal dis­ease, for the 2006 killing of…

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News 

Oct 062017

US Votes Against UN Resolution Condemning Death Penalty for Religious Speech, Sexual Orientation

The United States has vot­ed against an his­toric res­o­lu­tion passed by the United Nations Human Rights Council con­demn­ing the crim­i­nal­iza­tion of and use of the death penal­ty for apos­ta­sy, blas­phe­my, adul­tery, and con­sen­su­al same-sex rela­tions and call­ing on nations in which the death penal­ty is legal to ensure that it is not imposed​“arbi­trar­i­ly or in a dis­crim­i­na­to­ry man­ner.” The res­o­lu­tion also called for an end to the…

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News 

Oct 042017

Duane Buck, Whose Death Sentence Was Tainted by Racial Bias, Is Resentenced to Life

Duane Buck (pic­tured), the Texas death-row pris­on­er whose con­tro­ver­sial racial­ly taint­ed death sen­tence was reversed by the U.S Supreme Court in February, has been resen­tenced to life in prison. In a plea deal entered in a Harris County (Houston) court­room on October 3, Buck, who is 54, pled guilty to two new counts of attempt­ed mur­der that each car­ried terms of 60 years in prison to be served con­cur­rent­ly with two life…

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News 

Oct 032017

BOOKS: End of Its Rope — How Killing the Death Penalty Can Revive Criminal Justice

The death penal­ty in the United States is at the end of its rope [and] its abo­li­tion will be a cat­a­lyst for reform­ing our crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem.” So argues University of Virginia Law Professor Brandon L. Garrett in his wide­ly antic­i­pat­ed new book, End of Its Rope: How Killing the Death Penalty Can Revive Criminal Justice, which ana­lyzes the rea­sons behind the steep decline in cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in over the last 25 years. With…

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News 

Oct 022017

Federal Appeals Court Upholds Alabama Judge’s Race-Based Override of Jury’s Life Sentence

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit has upheld the death sen­tence imposed by an Alabama tri­al judge who dis­re­gard­ed the jury’s 10 – 2 vote in favor of a life sen­tence and sen­tenced Bobby Waldrop (pic­tured) to death because of his race. When he imposed Waldrop’s death sen­tence, Randolph County Circuit Court Judge Dale Segrest, who is white, referred to three pri­or cas­es in which he had over­ri­den jury life verdicts…

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