Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Feb 13, 2017
Former Federal Appeals Judge Urges Caution as Ohio Reschedules Executions
In a guest column for the Cleveland Plain Dealer, retired federal appeals court judge Nathaniel R. Jones (pictured) urged Ohio to “reconsider its race to death” in scheduling executions while the constitutionality of the state’s lethal injection process remains in question. Jones, who served on the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit from 1979 to 2002, criticized the state’s proposed use of the drug midazolam in executions,…
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Feb 10, 2017
POLL: Nearly Two-Thirds in Utah Prefer Life-Sentencing Alternatives to the Death Penalty
According to a new poll, nearly two-thirds of Utah residents say they prefer some form of life sentence, rather than the death penalty, as the punishment for murder, and a majority support replacing the death penalty with a sentence of life without possibility of…
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Feb 09, 2017
Capital Sentencing Reform Bills Advance in Florida, Alabama
Legislative committees in Florida and Alabama have voted to advance bills that would reform capital sentencing procedures in those states that have been the subject of extensive constitutional challenges. In Florida, the Senate Criminal Justice Committee by a vote of 6 – 0 approved a bill that would require a jury to unanimously recommend a death sentence before the trial judge could sentence a defendant to death. The bill would bring Florida’s…
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Feb 08, 2017
Problems in Florida, Arizona Crime Labs Renew Questions About Reliability of Forensic Testimony
More than 2,600 Florida cases — including at least one capital case — may have been tainted by erroneous fingerprint analysis by a long-term employee of the Orange County Sheriff’s Office, according to letters sent to defense counsel by the Orange-Osceola State Attorney’s Office. The revelations were another in a series of events raising questions about the reliability of forensic evidence that is being used in capital prosecutions across the United States. In early February…
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Feb 07, 2017
EDITORIALS: New York Times Hails Prosecutors’ Changing Views on Death Penalty
In a February 6 editorial, The New York TImes hails the reform efforts of the “new generation” of state and local prosecutors who are working to change the United States’ criminal justice system, and especially the use of the death penalty. The Times highlights the comments of two newly elected local prosecutors, Beth McCann, the new prosecutor in Denver, Colorado, and Kim Ogg, the new district attorney in Harris County, Texas. McCann has…
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Feb 06, 2017
Fifty Years After Australia’s Controversial Final Execution, Opposition to Death Penalty Is Strong
On February 3, Australia marked 50 years since its last execution. That execution — the hanging of Ronald Joseph Ryan on February 3, 1967 for the murder of a prison guard during an escape attempt — came at a time in which support for capital punishment in the country was already waning. The state of Victoria, where Ryan was executed, had not had an execution since 1951. Though certain crimes carried a mandatory death sentence, the state government cabinet had commuted 34 of the…
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Feb 03, 2017
At Least Seven States Introduce Legislation Banning Death Penalty for People with Severe Mental Illness
Bills to exempt individuals with severe mental illness from facing the death penalty are expected in at least seven states in 2017. Legislators in Idaho, Indiana, North Carolina, Ohio, South Dakota, Tennessee, and Virginia have either introduced such legislation or announced that they plan to. Six of the seven states have sponsorship from Republican legislators, indicating…
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Feb 02, 2017
Federal Court Stays Texas Execution After Appeal Lawyer Abandons Prisoner
A Texas federal appeals court has upheld the ruling by a U.S. district court judge to stay the execution of John Henry Ramirez, who had been scheduled to be executed in Texas on February 2. The District Court had ruled that Ramirez was entitled to a stay so new lawyers could seek clemency on his behalf after Michael Gross, the lawyer initially appointed to represent Ramirez in his state and federal habeas corpus proceedings, had failed to…
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Feb 01, 2017
Bishops Ask Georgia Prosecutor to Respect Wishes of Murdered Priest, Drop Death Penalty
Prosecutors in Augusta, Georgia are seeking the death penalty against a man accused of murdering the Rev. Rene Robert (pictured), despite their knowledge that the Franciscan priest had requested that the death penalty not be used “under any circumstances” if he were killed. On January 31, Catholic Bishops from Georgia and Florida traveled to Augusta to meet with Hank Sims, the acting district…
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Jan 31, 2017
Texas Sought Execution Drugs from Company Raided by India for Illegal Drug Sales
A BuzzFeed News investigation reports that Texas sought to import execution drugs from a supplier in India that the Indian Narcotics Control Bureau shut down for allegedly selling psychotropic drugs and opioids illegally to customers in the United States and…
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