Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Jan 13, 2017
Mental Health Professionals, Religious Leaders Join Ricky Gray’s Plea for Clemency
Ricky Gray (pictured), who is scheduled to be executed on January 18, is seeking clemency from Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe, and his clemency petition has been joined by a diverse group of mental health professionals and the Virginia Catholic Conference. A letter signed by more than 50 mental health professionals, including two former commissioners of the Virginia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services, urges McAuliffe to commute…
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Jan 12, 2017
REPORT: 5 Florida Counties Disproportionately Impose Death Penalty Against Seriously Mentally Impaired Defendants
Nearly two-thirds of death row prisoners in five Florida counties whose cases were studied by Harvard University’s Fair Punishment Project suffer from serious mental impairments. According to a report released by the project on January 12, 2017, the Florida Supreme Court’s December 2016 ruling in Mosley v. State requires reconsideration of the sentences imposed on approximately 150 people on Florida’s death row who were sentenced to death after the…
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Jan 11, 2017
Texas Set to Execute Christopher Wilkins Despite Lawyers’ Conflicts of Interest
Christopher Wilkins (pictured) is scheduled to be executed in Texas on January 11, even as he has a petition pending before the U.S. Supreme Court arguing that he has been improperly denied the opportunity to develop and present evidence that he suffers from significant cognitive…
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Jan 10, 2017
Denver’s Newly Elected District Attorney Says She Will Not Seek the Death Penalty
Newly-elected Denver, Colorado District Attorney Beth McCann (pictured), sworn into office on January 10, 2017, has said that her administration will not seek the death penalty. Asked by 9News, Denver’s NBC affiliate, whether Denver was “done with the death penalty,” McCann said: “We are under my administration. I don’t think that the state should be in the business of killing…
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Jan 09, 2017
National Black Caucus of State Legislators Call for Repeal of Death Penalty
Saying that “race plays a decisive role in who lives and who dies” in capital cases in the United States, the National Black Caucus of State Legislators (NBCSL) voted at its 40th annual conference on December 14, 2016, to adopt its first ever resolution calling for the abolition of the death penalty. The resolution states that “racial bias in the criminal justice system, including the death penalty and its application, is an undisputed fact,” and notes that “from slavery to…
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Jan 06, 2017
INTERNATIONAL: Human Rights Group, Reprieve Issues Report on Global Executions in 2016
Despite a sharp drop in executions, the United States ranked sixth among the world’s executioners in 2016 behind only China, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, and Pakistan, according to a report by the British-based international human rights group, Reprieve. Maya Foa, a director of Reprieve, said “[i]t is alarming that countries with close links to the UK and [European Union] continue to occupy the ranks of the world’s most prolific executioners in 2016.” Questions of innocence, execution of…
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Jan 05, 2017
California Agency Rejects Proposed Execution Protocol
In a new setback to efforts to restart executions in California, the state’s Office of Administrative Law (OAL) has rejected the new lethal injection protocol proposed by the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. On December 28, 2016, the OAL, which is responsible for reviewing regulatory changes proposed in California, issued a 25-page decision of disapproval, citing inconsistencies, inadequate justification for certain parts of the proposal, and a failure…
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Jan 04, 2017
Texas Sues Food and Drug Administration Over Seizure of Execution Drugs
The Texas Department of Criminal Justice filed suit on January 3, 2017 against the federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA) over the FDA’s continued detention of drugs Texas had attempted to import for…
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Jan 03, 2017
Washington Governor Issues Reprieve, Calls for Abolition of Death Penalty
Citing “serious concerns about the use of capital punishment in the state of Washington,” Governor Jay Inslee (pictured) granted a reprieve to Clark Richard Elmore, whom the state’s Department of Corrections had scheduled for execution on January 19, 2017, and urged the state legislature to abolish capital punishment in the state. The December 29, 2016 warrant of reprieve was the first reprieve order issued under a moratorium…
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Dec 31, 2016
NEW VOICES: Regretting Execution, Murder Victim’s Family Urges Governor to Commute Missouri’s Death Row
When Missouri executed Jeff Ferguson in 2014 for the rape and murder of Kelli Hall, her father said the Hall family “believed the myth that Ferguson’s execution would close our emotional wounds.” At that time, Jim Hall told reporters “It’s over, thank God.” But, he now says, it wasn’t. In an op-ed in the Columbia Daily Tribune, Mr. Hall writes that his family has “come to deeply regret [Ferguson’s] execution” and…
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