Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Jun 06, 2017
Recent Jury Trials in Dallas Highlight Death Penalty Decline Across Texas
From 2007 to 2013, Dallas sentenced twelve capitally charged defendants to death — more than any other county in Texas—and Dallas ranks second nationally, behind only Harris County (Houston), in the number it has executed since 1972. But the county has not imposed any new death sentences since then, and the recent life sentences in the capital trials of Justin Smith and Erbie Bowser highlight a statewide trend…
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Jun 05, 2017
Federal Court Grants Lethal-Injection Stay to Alabama Prisoner With Claims of Attorney Abandonment, Flawed Forensics
Robert Melson (pictured), an Alabama death-row prisoner whose clemency petition alleges that abandonment by his post-conviction lawyers prevented him from adequately challenging the flawed forensic evidence in his case, received a stay of execution from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit on a challenge to Alabama’s lethal-injection protocol. Melson was convicted of three murders at a Popeye’s restaurant in 1994. A survivor of the crime recognized…
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Jun 02, 2017
Indiana Appeals Court Voids State’s Lethal-Injection Protocol
The Indiana Court of Appeals has voided the state’s lethal-injection protocol. In a ruling on June 1, 2017, the state intermediate appeals court held that the Indiana Department of Corrections (DOC) had failed to comply with state rulemaking procedures when it adopted a never-before-used execution protocol without public notice or comment. In 2014, the DOC announced that it had adopted a new execution protocol “informally as an internal DOC policy.” The protocol called for a…
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Jun 01, 2017
South Carolina Killer Pleads Guilty to 7 Murders in Deal to Avoid Death Penalty
Todd Kohlhepp (pictured) pleaded guilty to seven South Carolina murders on May 26, 2017 and was sentenced to seven consecutive life sentences, plus 60 additional years for the kidnapping and sexual assault of surviving victim Kala Brown. Kohlhepp made a deal with prosecutors to avoid the death penalty, providing information that solved four murders at a motorcycle store in 2003 and sparing Brown and the families of the murder victims from enduring a lengthy trial and appeals…
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May 31, 2017
Las Vegas Prosecutor Who Obtained Wrongful Capital Conviction Engaged in Pattern of Misconduct
A Las Vegas, Nevada, judge — who, as a prosecutor, committed misconduct in several death-penalty trials — now faces judicial misconduct charges arising out of another murder case in which a defendant he prosecuted has been granted a hearing to prove her…
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May 30, 2017
Alabama Governor Signs Law Shortening Death-Penalty Appeals
On Friday, May 26, Alabama Governor Kay Ivey (pictured) signed into law a statute denominated the “Fair Justice Act,” which is designed to shorten the state death-penalty appeals process. The law constricts the amount of time death-row prisoners have to file appeals, imposes time limits for judges to rule on appeals, and requires prisoners to pursue their direct appeal and post-conviction appeal simultaneously, including raising claims of appellate counsel’s ineffectiveness…
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May 26, 2017
Texas Appeals Court Rules State Must Disclose Identity of 2014 Execution Drug Supplier
The Texas 3rd District Court of Appeals has rejected claims made by state corrections officials that disclosure of the identity of its supplier of the execution drug pentobarbital would expose the company to a “substantial threat of physical harm.” Finding these claims to be “mere speculation,” the appeals court ruled on May 25, 2017, that Texas must disclose the identity of the compounding pharmacy that supplied execution drugs to the state in…
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May 25, 2017
30 Years After Murder, 14 Years After Supreme Court Ruling, Pennsylvania Drops Death Penalty At Request of Victim’s Family
Thirty years after the crime that sent him to Pennsylvania’s death row and 15 years after his case was argued in the U.S. Supreme Court, David Sattazahn was resentenced to life without parole — the sentence he initially received in his first trial in 1991. Prosecutors, defense attorneys, and the victim’s family all agreed that a life sentence was the best outcome at this point in the case. Sattazahn was convicted of first-degree murder and the court sentenced…
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May 24, 2017
Alabama Prisoner Facing Eighth Execution Date Claims Innocence, Challenges Execution Procedures
Tommy Arthur (pictured), an Alabama death-row prisoner whose 35-year journey through the court system has frustrated both proponents and opponents of the death penalty, is scheduled to be executed on May 25, 2017, the eighth time Alabama has set an execution date in his…
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May 23, 2017
U.S. Supreme Court Lets Stand Florida Decision Barring Death Sentences Based on Non-Unanimous Jury Votes
On May 22, the U.S. Supreme Court denied Florida’s petition for a writ of certiorari in Florida v. Hurst, refusing to disturb a decision of the Florida Supreme Court that had declared it unconstitutional for judges to impose death sentences after one or more jurors in the case had voted for life. The ruling effectively ends Florida prosecutors’ efforts to reverse the state court ruling — which could overturn approximately 200 death sentences in the state — requiring that…
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