Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Aug 022016

Policy Platform of The Movement for Black Lives Calls for An End to Capital Punishment”

On August 1, The Movement for Black Lives issued a 40-point pol­i­cy plat­form that includes a call for the abo­li­tion of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. The plat­form, which was writ­ten or endorsed by more than 60 activist groups includ­ing the Black Lives Matter Network, describes its pur­pose as​“articulat[ing] our vision of a fun­da­men­tal­ly dif­fer­ent world.” The por­tion of the plat­form seek­ing​“an end to cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment” calls the death penal­ty​“moral­ly repug­nant,” and…

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News 

Aug 012016

Nearly 3/​4 of Kentuckians Support Moratorium on Executions, Majority Prefer Lengthy Prison Terms to Death Penalty

Nearly three-quar­ters of Kentuckians (72.4%) would sup­port a mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions while prob­lems in the admin­is­tra­tion of Kentucky’s death penal­ty are addressed, accord­ing to a new poll released on August 1 by the University of Kentucky Survey Research Center. Nearly two-thirds (62.6%) of those who said they sup­port the death penal­ty were nev­er­the­less in favor of a mora­to­ri­um. The poll also found that 57.8% of respon­dents pre­ferred a lengthy prison…

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News 

Jul 282016

Colorado Law to Speed Up Death Penalty Appeals Has Faltered and Failed

Twenty years ago, frus­trat­ed by what they per­ceived to be the slow pace of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, Colorado leg­is­la­tors adopt­ed a law to​“fix” their death penal­ty by speed­ing up appeals. Proponents and oppo­nents of the state’s death penal­ty agree on one thing: the law has­n’t worked. As The Denver Post reports, the state law intend­ed to stream­line the death penal­ty appeals process by impos­ing a two-year dead­line for deci­sion and consolidating…

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News 

Jul 262016

Defendant Seeks Supreme Court Review of Prosecutorial Ghostwriting, A Widespread Practice in Capital Cases

Doyle Lee Hamm (pic­tured), an Alabama death row pris­on­er, has asked the United States Supreme Court to con­sid­er his case after Alabama’s state and fed­er­al appel­late courts upheld an order in which the tri­al court reject­ed his appeal by adopt­ing word-for-word an 89-page order writ­ten by the state attor­ney gen­er­al’s office. In a process The Marshall Project’s Andrew Cohen described as​“a sham,” the court dis­missed Hamm’s appeal one busi­ness day after…

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News 

Jul 252016

NEW RESOURCE: Political Party Platforms on Capital Punishment

As sup­port for the death penal­ty has waxed and waned over the years, the views of the major U.S. polit­i­cal par­ties, as reflect­ed in their nation­al con­ven­tion plat­forms, has changed. To track those changes, DPIC has cre­at­ed a new resource pre­sent­ing the Democratic and Republican par­ty plat­form posi­tions on crime and the death penal­ty from 1960 to 2016. With the most recent views of both the Republican and Democratic par­ties expressed in their 2016

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News 

Jul 222016

Arkansas Court Puts Lethal Injection Ruling on Hold, Blocking Executions Pending U.S. Supreme Court Review

On July 21, a divid­ed Arkansas Supreme Court vot­ed 4 – 3 to deny a request by state death row pris­on­ers to recon­sid­er its recent deci­sion uphold­ing Arkansas’ lethal injec­tion pro­to­col and secre­cy law, but in anoth­er 4 – 3 vote, the court issued an order stay­ing the man­date, delay­ing the deci­sion from tak­ing effect until the U.S. Supreme Court has an oppor­tu­ni­ty to con­sid­er an appeal. The stay order pre­vents the state from setting new…

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News 

Jul 212016

EDITORIAL: San Jose Mercury News Endorses Death Penalty Repeal, Says Competing Measure Would Magnify Inequity

Weighing in on California’s com­pet­ing death penal­ty bal­lot ini­tia­tives, the San Jose Mercury News edi­to­r­i­al board urged vot­ers to sup­port repeal of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment and reject a pro­pos­al to speed up exe­cu­tions. The edi­to­r­i­al called California’s death penal­ty sys­tem,​“a fail­ure on every lev­el,” not­ing that the state has spent $4 bil­lion to car­ry out just 13 exe­cu­tions and the $150 mil­lion annu­al sav­ings the independent…

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News 

Jul 202016

Stark Decline in Louisiana’s Use of Death Penalty Reflects Broader Trends

A recent arti­cle in The Economist exam­ines the state of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in Louisiana and the state’s strik­ing decline in the use of the death penal­ty. In 1987, its peak year for exe­cu­tions, Louisiana exe­cut­ed eight pris­on­ers. Since 2002, the state has had just one exe­cu­tion. This decline​“is far more pre­cip­i­tous than in neigh­bor­ing states like Mississippi and Alabama,” which the arti­cle says have each exe­cut­ed more than 10

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