Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Sep 14, 2016
New Podcast: Jeffery Wood and the Texas Law of Parties, With Expert Guest Kate Black
Today, DPIC launches a new podcast series,“Discussions With DPIC,” which will feature monthly, unscripted conversations with death penalty experts on a wide variety of topics. The inaugural episode features a conversation between Texas Defender Services staff attorney Kate Black (pictured) and DPIC host Anne Holsinger, who discuss the case of Jeffery Wood and Texas’ unusual legal doctrine known as the…
Read MoreNews
Sep 13, 2016
Roger King, Former Philadelphia Prosecutor Who Once Held Record For Most Death Penalty Convictions, Dies
Roger King, a former prosecutor in Philadelphia who at one point was responsible for 20% of all the death sentences imposed in Pennsylvania, died of kidney cancer on August 24. When King retired in 2008, he held the record for most death sentences obtained by a single Pennsylvania prosecutor. None of the men he sent to death row has ever…
Read MoreNews
Sep 12, 2016
NEW VOICES: Former Ohio Attorney General Jim Petro Says Death Penalty Unfixable, “Not Worth It Any More”
In a recent commentary in the Columbus Dispatch, former Ohio Attorney General Jim Petro (pictured) criticized the state’s death penalty as“a broken system that currently serves only the interest of Ohio prosecutors” and said that keeping“the death penalty is just not worth it any more.” As a state legislator, Petro helped write Ohio’s current death-penalty law and he oversaw eighteen executions as Attorney General from…
Read MoreNews
Sep 09, 2016
Wrongful Capital Convictions May Be More Likely in Cases of Judicial Override, Non-Unanimous Death Verdicts
New data suggests that states that capital sentencing statutes that permit judges to impose death sentences by overriding jury recommendations for life or after juries have returned non-unanimous recommendations for death may increase the risk of…
Read MoreNews
Sep 08, 2016
OUTLIER COUNTIES: Official Misconduct, Race Bias Permeate Death Penalty in Clark County, Nevada
The geographic arbitrariness, high rates of official misconduct, racial discrimination, and poor defense representation characteristic of outlier jurisdictions that disproportionately seek and impose the death penalty in the United States are all present in Clark County, Nevada’s administration of the…
Read MoreNews
Sep 07, 2016
National Hispanic Caucus of State Legislators Calls for Abolition of Death Penalty
Calling racial bias in the administration of the death penalty“an undisputed fact,” the National Hispanic Caucus of State Legislators (NHCSL), a group of 320 Hispanic legislators, has passed a resolution urging legislative action in all state and federal jurisdictions to repeal the death penalty across the United States. The legislators note that the criminal justice system subjects“Black, Latino, Native Americans, and all people of color” to…
Read MoreNews
Sep 06, 2016
Mississippi Attorney General Tries to Remove Defense Lawyers Who Challenged Suspect Bitemark Evidence
Attorneys for Mississippi death row prisoner Eddie Lee Howard (pictured) are seeking to prove his innocence and challenging the questionable expert bite mark testimony that persuaded jurors to convict him and sentence him to death in 1992. As part of the attack on that evidence, Howard’s lawyers recently deposed Michael West, the discredited forensic odontologist who testified against Howard and many other defendants in the 1990s,…
Read MoreNews
Sep 02, 2016
OUTLIER COUNTIES: Maricopa, Arizona — “Outrageously Exploited Power,” “Crippled” Defense, and Five Exonerations
Maricopa County, Arizona imposed 28 death sentences between 2010 and 2015 and, as described in a BuzzFeed news analysis of a new report on outlier death penalty practices,“stands out for its stark examples of the problems found across the counties that most often sentence…
Read MoreNews
Sep 01, 2016
BOOKS: Justice Breyer’s Dissent in Glossip v. Gross, Edited and Contextualized
In a new book, Against the Death Penalty, Professor John Bessler of the University of Baltimore School of Law presents Justice Stephen Breyer’s historic dissent in Glossip v. Gross, which questioned the continuing constitutionality of capital punishment in the United States, in a new format intended to make the opinion more accessible to a broad audience.“I tried to contextualize the opinion by doing a longer…
Read MoreNews
Sep 01, 2016
Florida Prosecutor, Public Defender Tied to Outlier Death Penalty Practices Suffer Landslide Election Loss
In a primary election described as reshaping the political landscape of Northeast Florida, the region voted in a landslide Tuesday to oust State Attorney Angela Corey (pictured) and Public Defender Matt Shirk. The pair’s controversial policies had made Duval County one of the most prolific death sentencing counties in the country and had led to national derision of its criminal…
Read More