Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Aug 19, 2016
Diverse Range of Voices Call for Sparing Jeff Wood, Who Never Killed Anyone, from Execution in Texas
As his August 24 execution date approaches, Jeffrey Wood’s case has garnered mounting attention from groups and individuals calling on the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles and Gov. Greg Abbott to commute Wood’s sentence. These diverse voices include a conservative Texas state representative, a group of evangelical leaders, and the editorial boards of the New York Times, the Washington Post, and several Texas newspapers, among…
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Aug 18, 2016
Defense Attorney Retires from Capital Practice After No Acquittals in 40 Years and 21 Clients Sent to Death Row
Harris County, Texas has sent more people to death row than any other county in the United States and Jerry Guerinot (pictured) was defense counsel for twenty-one of them. His death-sentenced clients included two who were juveniles at the time of the crime and another who was later freed after prosecutors dropped charges against him. Labeled by some as “the worst lawyer in the United States,” in forty years of practice, none of Guerinot’s capital murder…
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Aug 17, 2016
Equal Justice Initiative Memorial Highlights Links Between Lynching and Death Penalty
The Equal Justice Initiative has announced plans to construct a Memorial for Peace and Justice in Montgomery, Alabama to commemorate the victims of terror lynchings in the American South. In a New Yorker profile of EJI executive director Bryan Stevenson, Jeffrey Toobin describes EJI’s criminal defense work and the genesis of the lynching memorial. “There’s no question that we have a long history of seeing people through [a] lens of racial difference. It’s a direct line from slavery…
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Aug 16, 2016
Delaware Attorney General Will Not Appeal Decision Striking Down Death Penalty Statute
Delaware Attorney General Matt Denn (pictured) announced on August 15 that his office will not appeal the Delaware Supreme Court’s August 2 decision in Benjamin Rauf v. State of Delaware, which struck down the state’s death penalty statute. In Rauf, the court found that Delaware’s capital sentencing scheme violated the Sixth Amendment, as interpreted by the U.S. Supreme Court in Hurst v. Florida, by granting judges,…
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Aug 15, 2016
STUDIES: Nebraska’s Death Penalty Costs $14.6 Million Per Year
A new study of Nebraska’s death penalty found that the state spends $14.6 million per year to maintain its capital punishment system. The study, The Economic Impact of the Death Penalty on the State of Nebraska: A Taxpayer Burden?, also estimates that each death penalty prosecution cost Nebraska’s taxpayers about $1.5 million more than a life without parole prosecution. At a press conference announcing the study, principal investigator Dr. Ernest Goss — an…
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Aug 12, 2016
Death Row Exoneree Requests DOJ Investigation of Systemic Prosecutorial Misconduct in Louisiana
Louisiana death row exoneree John Thompson (pictured, center), who was wrongly convicted of two different New Orleans murders as a result of prosecutorial misconduct, has filed a petition with the United States Department of Justice seeking an investigation of more than 100 cases prosecuted by former Orleans Parish assistant district attorney James Williams. Thompson filed his petition on August 2 under provisions of the Law Enforcement Misconduct Statute, which makes it a…
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Aug 11, 2016
NEW VOICES: Latino Evangelical Leaders Call For End to Capital Punishment
Leaders of national Latino evangelical groups are calling for an end to the death penalty, citing both religious convictions and practical concerns about the fairness of capital punishment. Reverend Gabriel Salguero (pictured), founder of the Latino Evangelical Coalition, said, “Given studies on how the death penalty is meted out, particularly for people of color, if it’s not a level playing field, we need to speak out. … The needle has moved for Latinos and evangelicals.” According to the…
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Aug 10, 2016
As Council Reviews Kentucky’s Criminal Justice Policies, Former Prosecutors, Judge Urge Repeal of Death Penalty
Kentucky’s recently-formed Criminal Justice Policy Assessment Council will be examining the state’s criminal code, and is expected to examine a wide range of criminal justice issues — including the death penalty — in the first major overhaul of Kentucky’s criminal code since the 1970s. The council, which was formed by Gov. Matt Bevin, includes legislators, judges, criminal justice experts, and religious leaders, charged with producing a list of recommendations for Kentucky…
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Aug 09, 2016
Defense Lawyers, Former Prosecutors, and Constitutional Rights Groups File Amicus Briefs in Buck v. Davis
Five groups, representing defense lawyers, former prosecutors, and organizations devoted to protecting constitutional liberties have filed amicus briefs in the U.S. Supreme Court in support of Texas death row prisoner Duane Buck. Buck was sentenced to death when a psychiatrist presented by his own lawyer said he posed a greater potential danger to society because he is Black, and the case attained widespread notoriety after the new Texas attorney general…
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Aug 08, 2016
Poll: Majority of Oklahomans Support Replacing Death Penalty With Life Without Parole Plus Restitution
A new survey conducted by SoonerPoll has found that while three-quarters of likely Oklahoma voters say they support the death penalty in theory, a majority (53%) support abolishing capital punishment and replacing it with a sentence of life without parole, plus restitution to victims’ families. Among every political affiliation, more supported the plan to replace the death penalty than favored keeping it, with a majority of Democrats (58%) and independents (57%) supporting…
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