Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Jan 30, 2017
Missouri Set to Execute Death Row Prisoner Who Was Denied Federal Review
Missouri plans to execute Mark Christeson (pictured) on January 31, without his case ever receiving substantive review in a federal…
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Jan 27, 2017
STUDIES: At Least 201 Florida Death Row Prisoners May Be Eligible for Resentencing, 134 Had Non-Unanimous Juries
A new study reports that at least 201 Florida death row prisoners — including at least 134 whom judges sentenced to death after juries had returned non-unanimous sentencing recommendations — may be eligible for resentencing hearings as a result of recent rulings by the United States and Florida Supreme Courts declaring the state’s death sentencing practices…
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Jan 26, 2017
Federal Magistrate Judge Rules Ohio Lethal Injection Protocol Unconstitutional
After receiving evidence during a five-day hearing, U.S. Magistrate Judge Michael R. Merz ruled on January 26 that Ohio’s lethal injection process will create a substantial and objectively intolerable risk of serious harm in violation of the Eighth Amendment. Based on that ruling, the court issued a preliminary injunction staying the executions of Ronald Phillips, Raymond Tibbetts, and Gary Otte. Ohio has not conducted an…
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Jan 25, 2017
Texas Prisoner Seeks Stay of Execution Based on Claims of Innocence, Discriminatory Jury Selection, Junk Science
Alleging wrongful prosecution, Texas death row prisoner Terry Edwards (pictured), who is scheduled for execution on January 26, is seeking a stay of execution and an opportunity to present new evidence that his case was tainted by racially-discriminatory jury selection, prosecutorial misconduct, and false and misleading forensic testimony. Edwards was prosecuted by Dallas County assistant district attorney Thomas D’Amore, who, the defense says, was lead…
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Jan 24, 2017
Anesthesiologist Says Lethal Injection Creates Moral Dilemma for Physicians
Lethal injection as practiced in U.S. executions “is an impersonation of medicine populated by real doctors who don’t acknowledge the deception,” Dr. Joel Zivot (pictured), an anesthesiologist and associate professor of anesthesiology at Emory University School of Medicine, writes in an op-ed for CNN. Setting aside the question of the rightness or wrongness of capital punishment itself, he says, “it’s time to reject lethal injection” as the method of…
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Jan 23, 2017
Texas Court Orders Release of Former Death Row Prisoner Who Spent 32 Years in Prison Without a Valid Conviction
A Texas Court of Appeals ruled on January 19, 2017 that all charges against Jerry Hartfield should be dismissed with prejudice after the state had kept the intellectually disabled former death row prisoner in prison for 32 years without retrying him after his conviction had been overturned. Calling the situation a “criminal judicial nightmare,” the court ruled that the three-decade delay in trying Hartfield violated his constitutional right to a speedy trial.
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Jan 20, 2017
Isaiah McCoy Exonerated from Delaware Death Row, the 157th Death Row Exoneration Since 1973
Isaiah McCoy (pictured), a former Delaware death row inmate, was exonerated on January 19, 2017, when a judge acquitted him at a retrial. He is the 157th person exonerated from death row in the United States, the first in 2017, and the first in…
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Jan 19, 2017
Alabama Faith Leaders Hold Panel on Death Penalty, Spotlight ‘Rocky’ Myers’ Case of Possible Innocence
Inspired by the case of Robin “Rocky” Myers (pictured), an intellectually disabled and possibly innocent Alabama death row prisoner whom an elected state judge sentenced to death despite a 9 – 3 jury recommendation for life, a panel of faith leaders gathered in Montgomery, Alabama to discuss religious views on the death penalty and the intersection of faith and justice. Before the discussion began, the faith leaders and the audience viewed a…
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Jan 18, 2017
President Obama Commutes Two Death Sentences
On January 17, 2017, President Barack Obama (pictured) commuted the death sentences of Abelardo Arboleda Ortiz, a federal death row prisoner, and Dwight Loving, a military death row prisoner. The two men were among 209 commutations and 64 pardons announced by the White House on the 17th. Ortiz’s lawyers sought clemency from the President on the grounds that Ortiz was intellectually disabled, his right to consular notification under the Vienna…
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Jan 17, 2017
With Bipartisan Sponsors, Washington Attorney General, Governor Propose Bill to Abolish State’s Death Penalty
With the support of a bipartisan group of state officials and legislators, Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson (pictured) and Governor Jay Inslee have proposed legislation to repeal the state’s death penalty and replace it with a sentence of life without parole. At a news conference announcing the bill, Ferguson, a Democrat, was joined by former Attorney General Rob McKenna, a Republican, in calling for abolition. The bill will be…
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