Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Apr 13, 2016
Texas Comptroller Denies Compensation to Death-Row Exoneree Alfred Brown
Texas State Comptroller Glenn Hegar has rejected an application for compensation filed by death-row exoneree Alfred DeWayne Brown, asserting that the court proceedings leading to his release did not constitute a determination that he was “actually innocent.” Brown had applied for approximately $1.9 million in cash and annuity payments under Texas’ exoneration compensation law. Harris County prosecutors dismissed charges against Brown in June 2015, after he…
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Apr 12, 2016
Georgia Set to Execute Intellectually Disabled Inmate Whose Trial Was Tainted By Racism and Poor Representation
Georgia is preparing to execute Kenneth Fults (pictured) on April 12, following the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles denial of his clemency application. Fults’ current lawyers presented evidence to the Board that Fults is intellectually disabled and “functions in the lowest 1 percent of the population.” They also argued that Fults’ trial lawyer failed to present this evidence to the jury, as well as extensive evidence that Fults endured a childhood of…
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Apr 11, 2016
Virginia Governor Rejects Mandatory Use of Electric Chair, Proposes Lethal Injection Secrecy
Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe rejected a bill that would have employed the electric chair as the state’s method of execution if lethal injection drugs are unavailable. Instead, he offered amendments that would permit the Commonwealth’s Department of Corrections to enter into confidential contracts to obtain execution drugs from compounding pharmacies, whose identities would be concealed from the public. His proposal is similar to…
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Apr 08, 2016
Orange County Prosecutors Drop Death Penalty in Misconduct-Plagued Case, May Avoid Surrendering DNA Evidence
Kenneth Clair (pictured), whose California death sentence was overturned last year, says he is innocent and that the Orange County District Attorney’s office is withholding DNA evidence that would prove it. His prosecutors have declared that they will not seek the death penalty against Clair in a new sentencing hearing, and in so doing may avoid pretrial discovery proceedings in which they could have been required to turn over the potentially…
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Apr 07, 2016
Texas Court Finds Marcus Druery Mentally Incompetent, Spares Him From Execution
A Texas court has found that a severely mentally ill death-row inmate, Marcus Druery (pictured), is incompetent to be executed. Druery’s attorneys presented more than 150 pages of reports from mental health professionals arguing that, as a result of major mental illness, Druery does not understand why he is being punished, making it unconstitutional to execute him. His “paranoid and grandiose delusions…deprive him of a rational…
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Apr 06, 2016
Amnesty International Reports Concentrated Spikes in Executions Amidst Continuing Trend Towards Global Death Penalty Abolition
Amnesty International reported that worldwide executions spiked by 54% to at least 1,634 — a 25-year high — in 2015, even as the number of countries abolishing the death penalty reached record…
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Apr 05, 2016
Victim’s Cousin in Oklahoma Death Penalty Case Speaks of “Awful” Guilt Upon Learning Defendants Were Actually Innocent
After Debbie Carter was raped and murdered in Ada, Oklahoma in 1982, police and prosecutors told her cousin, Christy Sheppard (pictured) that Ron Williamson and Dennis Fritz were guilty of the crime. In 1988, Williamson was convicted and sentenced to death; Fritz received a life sentence. Eleven years later, the pair were exonerated when DNA testing excluded them as perpetrators and pointed to another man who had once been a suspect. Sheppard, now a criminal…
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Apr 04, 2016
Arbitrariness Remains Pervasive 40 Years After Court Decision Upholding Capital Punishment
Forty years after the U.S. Supreme Court upheld newly enacted death penalty statutes in Gregg v. Georgia and two other cases, Professor Evan J. Mandery of the John Jay College of Criminal Justice says arbitrariness continues to plague the administration of capital punishment across the United States. In a piece for The Marshall Project, Professor Mandery revisits the death penalty in light of the constitutional defects that led the Supreme Court to overturn existing capital…
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Apr 01, 2016
Recent Executions May Have Denied Key Evidence to Defendants in Pending Innocence Cases
According to a report by Raw Story, two recent executions may have irreparably impaired efforts by several prisoners to prove their innocence, preventing them from presenting testimony from potential alternate suspects. Rodney Lincoln was convicted of the 1982 murder of JoAnn Tate and assaulting her two young daughters and was sentenced to two life terms. The primary evidence against him was the testimony of Melissa Davis, Tate’s eight-year-old daughter who survived the attack. Years…
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Mar 31, 2016
Board Denies Clemency for Death Row Inmate Whose Co-Defendant Received Life Sentence
The Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles announced on March 31 that it had denied clemency to Joshua Bishop. Bishop had asked that his death sentence be reduced to life without parole because his co-defendant, who was nearly twice Bishop’s age at the time of the crime, and had a history of violent crime while Bishop did not, was given a plea deal resulting in a life sentence. Bishop is scheduled to be executed in Georgia on March 31. Seven of the twelve…
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