Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Mar 16, 2016
Judge Finds Ronell Wilson Has Intellectual Disability, Removes His Federal Death Sentence
United States District Court Judge Nicholas Garaufis (pictured) ruled on March 15 that federal death row inmate Ronell Wilson is ineligible for the death penalty because he has intellectual disability. In 2002, the U.S. Supreme Court held in Atkins v. Virginia that the death penalty constituted cruel and unusual punishment when applied to people diagnosed with intellectual disability, then known as mental retardation. Wilson was first sentenced to death in…
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Mar 15, 2016
Ohio Justice, Death Row Exoneree Say Innocence Is Reason Enough to Abolish Capital Punishment
In two separate op-eds, an Ohio Supreme Court Justice and a death row exoneree from Ohio expressed concerns about wrongful convictions that have led them to believe the death penalty should be abolished. In The Highland County Press, Justice Paul Pfeifer (pictured, r.) wrote about the “long and complex” case of Thomas Keenan, who was granted a new trial because prosecutors illegally withheld evidence. Pfeifer points to the misconduct…
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Mar 14, 2016
Darryl Hunt, North Carolina Exoneree Who Narrowly Escaped Death Sentence, Dies 12 Years After Release
Darryl Hunt (pictured), an exoneree and anti-death penalty advocate, was found dead in Winston-Salem, North Carolina on March 13, 2016. Hunt was wrongfully convicted of the 1984 rape and murder of Deborah Sykes, a newspaper copy editor. Prosecutors sought the death penalty against him, but he received a life sentence because a single juror refused to vote for death. His conviction was overturned in 1989 and prosecutors offered Hunt a deal for time served, in…
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Mar 11, 2016
BOOKS: “13 Ways of Looking at the Death Penalty”
The recent book, 13 Ways of Looking at the Death Penalty, by Mario Marazziti, explores the United States’ continuing use of the death penalty in a world community that is increasingly rejecting the practice. The Philadelphia Inquirer calls the book “an interesting, compelling look at the cultural and religious underpinnings of the death penalty and how we got here. More important, [Marazziti’s] interviews with U.S. death-row inmates — living…
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Mar 10, 2016
NEW VOICES: Former Utah Prosecutor Urges Death Penalty Repeal
Creighton Horton spent 30 years as a prosecutor with the Salt Lake District Attorney’s Office and Utah Attorney General’s Office before retiring in 2009. In a recent op-ed, he said his experience handling capital cases led him to believe Utah should abolish the death…
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Mar 09, 2016
Texas About to Execute Inmate Despite Evidence of Intellectual Disability
UPDATE: Wesbrook was executed on Mar. 9. EARLIER: Coy Wesbrook is scheduled to be executed in Texas on March 9. If the execution proceeds, it will be the eighth in the U.S. this year, half of which have been in Texas. Wesbrook killed five people after a confrontation with his ex-wife. The U.S. Supreme Court has held that defendants with intellectual disability (formerly referred to as “mental retardation”) are exempt from the death penalty.
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Mar 08, 2016
EDITORIALS: Kentucky Newspaper Reverses Position on the Death Penalty
The Lexington Herald-Leader, Kentucky’s second-largest newspaper, announced it was ending its long-held support for the death penalty, and now believes the state legislature should abolish capital punishment. Describing its previous position as “keep it but fix it,” the editors stated, “we must now concede that the death penalty is not going to be fixed and, in fact, probably cannot be fixed at any defensible cost to taxpayers.” Citing the 2011 American Bar Association assessment of…
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Mar 07, 2016
U.S. Supreme Court Grants New Trial to Louisiana Death Row Inmate
The U.S. Supreme Court issued a per curiam decision on March 7 granting a new trial to Louisiana death row inmate Michael Wearry as a result of multiple acts of misconduct by prosecutors in his case. No physical evidence linked Wearry to the murder. His conviction was based largely on the testimony of an informant, Sam Scott, who came forward two years after the crime with an account that did not match the details of the crime. Scott altered his story over the course of four…
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Mar 04, 2016
Florida Legislature Passes Bill Requiring Agreement of 10 Jurors Before Judge May Impose Death Sentence
UPDATE: Gov. Rick Scott signed the bill into law on March 7. Previously: The Florida legislature passed a bill on March 3 to restructure its death penalty statute in response to the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in Hurst v. Florida, which declared the state’s death penalty procedures unconstitutional. The bill modifies Florida’s practice of permitting judges to impose death sentences without the unanimous agreement of jurors by requiring that at least…
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Mar 03, 2016
Alabama Judge Rules Capital Sentencing Scheme Unconstitutional
Jefferson County, Alabama Circuit Judge Tracie Todd (pictured) ruled on March 3 that Alabama’s capital sentencing procedure violates the U.S. Constitution. Judge Todd barred the death penalty for four capital murder defendants, saying that Alabama’s use of judicial override violates the Sixth…
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