Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

May 052016

Florida Court to Hear Argument on Impact of U.S. Supreme Court Ruling Declaring Death Penalty Process Unconstitutional

On May 5, the Florida Supreme Court will hear oral argu­ment in the case of Timothy Hurst, whose death sen­tence was over­turned in the U.S. Supreme Court’s deci­sion Hurst v. Florida. The state court must deter­mine whether the high court’s rul­ing, which struck down Florida’s sen­tenc­ing scheme, enti­tles Hurst to a new sen­tenc­ing hear­ing, reduces his sen­tence to life with­out parole, or requires some oth­er out­come. The case…

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News 

May 042016

Two Capital Cases Involving Innocence Claims Resolved Decades After Conviction

This week, two decades-old cas­es involv­ing men with inno­cence claims reached final res­o­lu­tion: Louisiana inmate Gary Tyler (pic­tured) was released after 42 years in prison and Paul Gatling was exon­er­at­ed in New York more than 50 years after his wrong­ful con­vic­tion. Both men had once faced the death penal­ty. Tyler was con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death for the fatal shoot­ing of a 13-year-old white boy in 1974

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News 

May 032016

U.S. Supreme Court Orders Alabama to Reconsider Constitutionality of Its Death Penalty Sentencing Procedure

The U.S. Supreme Court has vacat­ed a deci­sion of the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals uphold­ing a death sen­tence imposed on Alabama death row pris­on­er Bart Johnson, and has direct­ed the state court to recon­sid­er the con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of Alabama’s death-sen­­­tenc­ing pro­ce­dures. Johnson, rep­re­sent­ed by lawyers from the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI), had chal­lenged the con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of his death sen­tence, which was imposed by…

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News 

May 022016

Florida Judge Sentences Man to Death Under Sentencing Law That Supreme Court Ruled Unconstitutional

A Florida tri­al judge in St. Lucie County sen­tenced Eriese Tisdale to death on April 29 for the killing of a sher­if­f’s sergeant, rely­ing on sen­tenc­ing pro­ce­dures from the ver­sion of Florida’s death penal­ty law that the U.S. Supreme Court declared uncon­sti­tu­tion­al in Hurst v. Florida. The jury in Tisdale’s case con­sid­ered the evi­dence in the penal­ty phase of Tisdale’s tri­al under the old Florida law, vot­ing 9 – 3 to recommend…

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News 

Apr 292016

Texas Inmate Dies Days Before Appeals Court Hearing On His Innocence Claim

On April 24, just days before a Texas fed­er­al appeals courts was to hear his case, Max Soffar — who spent 35 years on death row con­stant­ly main­tain­ing his inno­cence — died of liv­er can­cer at the age of 60. No phys­i­cal evi­dence linked Soffar to the crime for which he was sen­tenced to death, and Soffar — a sev­enth-grade drop-out with brain dam­age from fetal alco­hol syn­drome — said that he con­fessed to police only after hours of…

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Apr 282016

STUDIES: Louisiana Death Penalty Staggeringly Error-Prone, Racially Biased

More than 80% of the 241 death sen­tences imposed in Louisiana since 1976 have been reversed on appeal, and one death row pris­on­er has been exon­er­at­ed for every three exe­cu­tions in the state, accord­ing to a new study by University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Professor Frank Baumgartner and sta­tis­ti­cian Tim Lyman. The study, to be pub­lished in the Southern University Law Center’s Journal of Race, Gender and Poverty, also reveals dra­mat­ic racial disparities…

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News 

Apr 272016

Ruling Expected on Arizona Execution Hold, Amid Systemic Problems With Arbitrariness, Lethal Injection

Arizona’s last exe­cu­tion, the botched lethal injec­tion of Joseph Wood in July 2014, sparked con­tro­ver­sy and legal chal­lenges to the state’s lethal injec­tion pro­ce­dure, and came at a time when Arizona was strug­gling not only with the logis­tics of car­ry­ing out exe­cu­tions, but also broad­er issues of fair­ness and costs. In a sweep­ing piece for The Arizona Republic, Michael Kiefer, who wit­nessed Wood’s exe­cu­tion, describes the…

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News 

Apr 262016

LAW REVIEW: North Carolina Lacks Constitutionally-Sufficient Proportionality Review

A law review arti­cle by Brooks Emanuel (pic­tured), a Law Fellow at the Equal Justice Initiative, argues that North Carolina’s cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment statute vio­lates the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution because it lacks a mean­ing­ful appel­late mech­a­nism to pre­vent the arbi­trary and dis­crim­i­na­to­ry appli­ca­tion of the death penal­ty. Citing exten­sive his­tor­i­cal evi­dence, Emanuel argues that​“racial dis­crim­i­na­tion in North…

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Apr 252016

Missouri Execution Drug Supplier Being Sold After Committing Nearly 2,000 Violations of Pharmacy Regulations

The assets of The Apothecary Shoppe, a Tulsa, Oklahoma com­pound­ing phar­ma­cy that pro­vid­ed lethal injec­tion drugs to Missouri, have been auc­tioned off after the com­pa­ny default­ed on its loans, and is being sold after admit­ting to near­ly two thou­sand vio­la­tions of phar­ma­cy reg­u­la­tions, accord­ing to a report by BuzzFeed News. Inspectors from the fed­er­al Food and Drug Administration and the Oklahoma Board of Pharmacy found that…

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