Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Jul 08, 2016
ABA Criminal Justice Report Covers Key Death Penalty Trends
In a chapter from the recently released American Bar Association publication, The State of Criminal Justice 2016, Ronald J. Tabak, chair of the Death Penalty Committee of the ABA’s Section of Individual Rights and Responsibilities, describes significant trends and recent cases related to capital punishment. Tabak highlights the ongoing declines in death sentences and executions across the United States, as well as the increasing concentration of the death penalty in a small number of…
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Jul 07, 2016
Status of Arkansas Death Penalty Uncertain Following Expiration of Lethal Injection Drugs
Just days after a split Arkansas Supreme Court upheld the state’s execution protocol, Arkansas’ supply of vecuronium bromide — a paralytic agent used in the state’s three-drug lethal injection protocol — expired, leaving the status of future executions unclear. At that time, Governor Asa Hutchinson said that he wanted the Department of Correction to obtain a new supply of the drug rather than change the state’s method of execution. In 2015, the state spent $25,000 for lethal…
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Jul 06, 2016
Decline in “Resource-Draining” Death Penalty Trials in Amarillo Texas Mirrors Trends in State, Nation
Forty years after Gregg v. Georgia ushered in the modern era of capital punishment in the United States, the death penalty is in decline across the country and in Texas. The Lone Star State continues to lead the nation in executions — with nearly half of all executions in the U.S. this year — but the Amarillo Globe-News reports that fewer Texas prosecutors are seeking death sentences and fewer juries are imposing them. According to the…
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Jul 05, 2016
Arizona Lethal Injection Challenge Proceeds As State Refuses to Rule Out Future Use of Controversial Execution Drug
A federal judge has rebuffed an attempt by Arizona to dismiss a lawsuit filed by the state’s death row prisoners challenging the state’s execution practices. The state argued at a hearing in the case in U.S. District Court on June 29, that the prisoners’ lawsuit should be declared moot because Arizona’s supply of midazolam — the first drug in one of the state’s four execution protocols — had expired and that the state has been unable to obtain a new supply of…
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Jul 01, 2016
A Mid-Year Review: Halfway Through 2016, Execution Pace Remains at Historic Low
Six months into 2016, the pace of executions in the United States remains at the same level as the 24-year low set in 2015. Fourteen executions have been carried out so far this year in five states — Texas (6), Georgia (5), and one each in Alabama, Florida, and Missouri — while 23 other scheduled executions have been halted by stays or reprieves. States carried out 28…
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Jun 30, 2016
Fair Punishment Project Issues Report on Deadliest Prosecutors
A new report by Harvard Law School’s Fair Punishment Project has found that a small number of overzealous prosecutors with high rates of misconduct have a hugely disproportionate impact on the death penalty in the United States. The report, America’s Top Five Deadliest Prosecutors: How Overzealous Personalities Drive the Death Penalty, shows that, by themselves, these prosecutors are responsible for more than 440 death sentences, the equivalent of 15% of the entire U.S. death row…
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Jun 29, 2016
BOOKS: “Executing Grace”
In his new book, Executing Grace, evangelical Christian speaker, activist, and author Shane Claiborne weaves together personal narratives, theology, and research to make a Christian case against the death penalty. Claiborne says “[t]he death penalty did not flourish in America in spite of Christians but because of us.” Arguing that “[w]e can’t make death penalty history until we make death penalty personal,” he tells the stories of people…
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Jun 28, 2016
Arizona Lacks Supply of Execution Drugs, “Presently Incapable of Carrying Out” Executions
In a court filing in the federal lawsuit challenging its execution procedures, Arizona officials have declared that the state does not have the drugs necessary to carry out an execution, and is currently unable to obtain them. The filing states, “the Department’s lack of the drugs and its current inability to obtain these drugs means that the Department is presently incapable of carrying out an…
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Jun 27, 2016
World Congress Against the Death Penalty Renews Call for Global Moratorium, Pope Sends Message of Support
Delegates to the Sixth World Congress Against the Death Penalty, held in Oslo, Norway from June 21 to June 23, 2016, have renewed the organization’s call for a global moratorium on capital punishment. The event, attended by more than 1300 representatives from 80 countries, featured discussions by death penalty stakeholders from around the world. Participants included human rights officials from the United Nations and European Union, as well as Justice Ministers from both abolitionist and…
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Jun 24, 2016
Divided State Court Upholds Arkansas Lethal Injection Protocol and Secrecy Law, Potentially Opening Path to Eight Executions
A divided Arkansas Supreme Court voted 4 – 3 on June 23 to uphold the state’s lethal injection protocol and secrecy policy. The decision potentially opens the path for the state to move forward with eight executions that had been stayed pending the outcome of this litigation. However, it is unclear whether executions will resume because Arkansas’ supply of lethal injection drugs expires on June 30, and the supplier from which it obtained those drugs has indicated that it will…
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