Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
May 08, 2017
After Remand from U.S. Supreme Court, Georgia Federal Court Vacates Brain-Damaged Prisoner’s Death Sentence
The U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia has overturned the death sentence imposed on Lawrence Jefferson, saying that his trial counsel had been ineffective for failing to investigate and present available mitigating evidence in his case, including evidence related to “a head injury he sustained as a child when an automobile rolled over his head.” The court also found that the state courts had denied Jefferson a “full and fair” hearing on…
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May 05, 2017
Death-Row Exoneree, Law Professor, Attorney Voice Opposition to Alabama’s “Fair Justice Act”
Soon after passing legislation to make death penalty trials fairer by preventing judges from overriding jury recommendations of life sentences, the Alabama legislature is taking steps to enact a bill that critics say would make capital appeals far less fair. The bill, denominated the “Fair Justice Act,” would constrict the amount of time death-row prisoners have to file appeals, impose deadlines for judges to rule on appeals, and require prisoners to pursue…
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May 04, 2017
Supreme Court Tells Alabama to Reconsider the Factors It Has Used to Determine Intellectual Disability
The U.S. Supreme Court has vacated the Alabama state courts’ rejection of a prisoner’s claim that he is ineligible for the death penalty because of intellectual disability, and directed the state to reconsider his claim in light of the Court’s recent decision in Moore v. Texas requiring states to employ scientifically accepted standards in determining whether a death-row prisoner is intellectually disabled. On May 1, 2017, the U.S. Supreme Court…
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May 02, 2017
Former Prosecutor on Trial on Charges that His Misconduct Led to Wrongful Execution of Cameron Willingham
John Jackson, the former Navarro County, Texas prosecutor and judge, is on trial for ethics violations in the 1992 capital trial of Cameron Todd Willingham (pictured), which many believe led to the execution of an innocent…
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May 02, 2017
Review Commission Report: Oklahoma Death Penalty Cases Cost Triple That Of Non-Capital Cases
An independent study of the costs of seeking and imposing the death penalty in Oklahoma, prepared for the Oklahoma Death Penalty Review Commission, has concluded that seeking the death penalty in Oklahoma “incurs significantly more time, effort, and costs on average, as compared to when the death penalty is not sought in first degree murder cases.” The report — prepared by Seattle University criminal justice professors Peter A. Collins and Matthew J. Hickman and law professor…
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May 01, 2017
BOOKS: “The Trials of Walter Ogrod” Chronicles Pennsylvania Possible Innocence Case
Walter Ogrod was convicted and sentenced to death in Philadelphia in 1996 for the 1988 murder of a 4‑year-old girl, whose body was found in a discarded television box. Ogrod, who is developmentally disabled, has long maintained his innocence, but despite significant irregularities in the case and amidst allegations of official misconduct, local prosecutors have fought efforts to obtain DNA testing of the physical evidence and to investigate the role a discredited prison informant played in…
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Apr 28, 2017
Lawyers Call for Investigation of “Horrifying” Arkansas Execution After Witnesses Report “Coughing, Convulsing”
Calling eyewitness accounts “horrifying,” attorneys for Arkansas prisoner Kenneth Williams (pictured) are seeking the preservation of evidence and “a full investigation” into what they described as Williams’ “problematic…
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Apr 27, 2017
Study: Texas’ ‘Harsh and Inhumane’ Death-Row Conditions Amount to ‘Torture’
The conditions in which prisoners on Texas’ death row are confined are “harsh and inhumane,” violate international human rights norms, and amount to “a severe and relentless act of torture,” according to a new study by the University of Texas School of Law Human Rights…
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Apr 26, 2017
Bipartisan Oklahoma Report Recommends Moratorium on Executions Pending ‘Significant Reforms’
After spending more than a year studying Oklahoma’s capital punishment practices, the Oklahoma Death Penalty Review Commission has unanimously recommended that the state extend its current moratorium on executions “until significant reforms are accomplished.” The bipartisan commission issued its report on April 25, 2017, reaching what it characterized as “disturbing” findings that “led Commission members to question whether the death penalty can be…
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Apr 25, 2017
Arkansas Performs Double Execution Amid Allegations of Botched Lethal Injection
Arkansas carried out the nation’s first double execution in nearly 17 years on April 24, 2017. The state executed Jack Jones (pictured, l.) and Marcel Williams (pictured, r.) about three hours apart, with Williams’ execution delayed following allegations that Jones’ execution may have been…
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