Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Mar 30, 2016
Volunteer Death Penalty Review Commission to Examine Oklahoma’s Death Penalty
A group of prominent Oklahomans have announced the creation of a 12-member Oklahoma Death Penalty Review Commission to conduct a comprehensive review of the state’s death penalty. The all-volunteer commission will be led by three co-chairs, former Governor Brad Henry (pictured), retired Court of Criminal Appeals Judge Reta Strubhar, and former U.S. Magistrate Judge Andy…
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Mar 29, 2016
Finding Prosecutorial Misconduct, Alabama Courts Grant Relief from Two Capital Convictions
In one week, courts in unrelated cases have granted relief to two Alabama death row inmates because of prosecutorial…
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Mar 28, 2016
Texas Capital Juror Regrets Vote to Sentence Defendant to Death
In an interview with The Marshall Project, Texas death penalty juror Sven Berger says he would not have voted to sentence capital defendant Paul Storey to death in 2008 had he known about Storey’s “borderline intellectual functioning,” history of depression, and other evidence that Storey’s lawyer failed to present at trial. Berger and 11 other Texas jurors unanimously voted to sentence Storey to death, but Berger says that at the…
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Mar 25, 2016
Federal Judge Overturns South Carolina Death Sentence Because of Prosecutor’s Racist Arguments
A South Carolina federal district court has vacated the death sentence imposed on Johnny Bennett, an African-American defendant condemned by an all-white jury after prosecutor Donald Myers (pictured) had “made multiple statements clearly calculated to excite the jury with racial imagery and…
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Mar 24, 2016
Missouri Judge Orders State to Reveal Source of Lethal Injection Drugs
Cole County, Missouri Circuit Judge Jon Beetem ruled on March 21 that Missouri must release the names of pharmacies that have provided lethal injection drugs for executions. Judge Beetem ruled in favor of the ACLU of Missouri and several media organizations that had filed three separate suits against the state. The media plaintiffs included the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, The Kansas City Star, the Springfield News-Leader,…
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Mar 23, 2016
American Bar Association Urges Reprieve to Allow Full Investigation of Kevin Cooper’s Innocence Claims
American Bar Association President Paulette Brown has sent a letter to California Govenor Jerry Brown urging him to grant a reprieve to death row inmate Kevin Cooper to permit a full investigation of Cooper’s possible innocence. The ABA President wrote: “Mr. Cooper’s arrest, prosecution, and conviction are marred by evidence of racial bias, police misconduct, evidence tampering, suppression of exculpatory information, lack of quality defense counsel, and a…
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Mar 22, 2016
Texas Scheduled to Execute Severely Mentally Ill Death-Row Prisoner
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit says that “Adam Kelly Ward (pictured) has been afflicted with mental illness his entire life.” Yet Texas will execute him on March 22 unless the U.S. Supreme Court grants him a stay to review his case. Ward’s lawyers argue that the execution of a person who is severely mentally ill constitutes cruel and unusual punishment and that, for that reason, Ward should not be executed. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals…
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Mar 21, 2016
Baptist Theologian Says Death Penalty Does Not Fit With Christian Theology
Baptist ethicist and theologian Dr. Roger E. Olson (pictured) recently issued a call “for Christian churches to publicly stand against the death penalty for Christian reasons.” A professor of Christian Theology and Ethics at Baylor University’s George W. Truett Theological Seminary, Dr. Olson writes in an essay for the theology website Patheos.com that “authentic Christians must oppose the death penalty.” He says that, while “[t]here are many secular reasons to abolish the death penalty,”…
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Mar 18, 2016
STUDIES: South Carolina’s Death Penalty Still Arbitrary 40 Years After Gregg
A new article by Cornell Law School Professor John Blume (pictured) and Lindsey Vann of Justice 360 analyzes South Carolina’s experience with the death penalty over the last 40 years and argues that capital punishment in the Palmetto State continues to exhibit the same arbitrary and discriminatory features that led the U.S. Supreme Court to strike down the death penalty in 1972. Using Justice Stephen Breyer’s dissent in…
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Mar 17, 2016
After Initial Botched Execution of Romell Broom, Ohio Supreme Court Gives Approval for State to Try Again
In a divided 4 – 3 decision, the Ohio Supreme Court on March 16, 2016 authorized the state to try for a second time to execute death row inmate Romell Broom (pictured, after the state’s failed first attempt to execute him). The court majority held that a second execution attempt would not violate constitutional protections against twice placing a defendant in jeopardy of life, nor constitute cruel and unusual…
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