Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Jun 222017

Decisions Not to Seek Death in Two New Orleans Cases Highlights Louisiana’s Trend Away From Capital Punishment

The New Orleans District Attorney’s office has decid­ed not to pur­sue the death penal­ty in two high-pro­­­file mur­der cas­es, high­light­ing a trend in Louisiana away from the use of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. In a one-week peri­od, Leon Cannizzaro (pic­tured), the District Attorney for Orleans Parish, announced that his office would not seek the death penal­ty against Travis Boys, charged with fatal­ly shoot­ing a New Orleans…

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News 

Jun 212017

BOOKS: The History of the Death Penalty in Colorado”

When University of Colorado Boulder soci­ol­o­gy pro­fes­sor Michael Radelet began doing research on the death penal­ty in the 1970s, the not­ed death-penal­­­ty schol­ar tells Colorado Public Radio, he did­n’t have an opin­ion about cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment and​“did­n’t know any­thing about it.” After research­ing issues of race, inno­cence, and the death penal­ty, he came to have…

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News 

Jun 202017

Nevada Death-Row Prisoner Released on Plea Deal After Medical Evidence Suggests No Crime Occurred

Ha’im Al Matin Sharif (pic­tured), for­mer­ly known as Charles Robins, has been released from Nevada’s death row, near­ly 30 years after he was con­vict­ed of killing his girl­friend’s 11-month-old daugh­ter, after med­ical evi­dence revealed that the baby died from infan­tile scurvy, rather than from phys­i­cal abuse. Prosecutors agreed to amend the charges against Sharif and release him on time served after a pros­e­cu­tion doc­tor con­firmed that Brittany…

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News 

Jun 152017

NEW VOICES: A Psychologist — a War Veteran with Schizophrenia — Urges Adoption of a Death Penalty Exemption for Severe Mental Illness

In a recent com­men­tary arti­cle in Medium, psy­chol­o­gist Dr. Frederick J. Frese, III (pic­tured) — a Marine Corps vet­er­an who has him­self been diag­nosed with para­noid schiz­o­phre­nia — argues that Congress and state leg­is­la­tures should pass laws exempt­ing peo­ple with severe men­tal ill­ness from the death penal­ty.​“Supporters and oppo­nents of the death penal­ty agree that it should only be reserved for the most cul­pa­ble and delib­er­ate of crim­i­nals who commit…

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Jun 142017

Intellectually Disabled Ex-Death Row Prisoner Released from Texas Prison After Decades Without a Valid Conviction

, an intel­lec­tu­al­ly dis­abled pris­on­er whose con­vic­tion and death sen­tence was over­turned in 1980, was freed from prison in Texas on June 12, 2017, hav­ing spent 35 years in jail with­out a valid con­vic­tion and with­out being retried. Hartfield, whose IQ is in the 50s or 60s, was con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death in 1977 on charges that he had mur­dered a bus sta­tion work­er. Hartfield con­fessed to the crime, but has long asserted his…

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News 

Jun 122017

Kentucky Attorneys Argue to Expand Juvenile Death Penalty Exemption, Citing Neurological Studies

Defense attor­neys for Travis Bredhold, a Kentucky defen­dant fac­ing the death penal­ty for a mur­der com­mit­ted when he was 18 years old, are ask­ing a judge to extend the death-penal­­­ty exemp­tion for juve­nile offend­ers to those younger than age 21. In 2005, the U.S. Supreme Court (pic­tured) ruled in Roper v. Simmons that the death penal­ty was uncon­sti­tu­tion­al­ly cru­el and unusu­al pun­ish­ment when applied to offenders…

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News 

Jun 092017

Duane Buck’s Lawyer Discusses How Future Dangerousness Taints Texas Death Penalty System

Thirty years ago, film­mak­er Errol Morris, who direct­ed the doc­u­men­tary​“The Thin Blue Line,” helped to exon­er­ate Texas death-row pris­on­er Dale Adams, false­ly accused of mur­der­ing a police offi­cer. During the course of mak­ing the film, Morris met the noto­ri­ous Texas pros­e­cu­tion psy­chi­a­trist, Dr. James Grigson, who rou­tine­ly tes­ti­fied that cap­i­tal defen­dants — includ­ing the inno­cent Mr. Adams — posed a risk of future…

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