Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Jan 20, 2016
U.S. Supreme Court Reverses 3 Kansas Decisions Overturning Death Penalties
In an 8 – 1 decision in Kansas v. Carr, the U.S. Supreme Court reversed the decisions of the Kansas Supreme Court granting new sentencing hearings in three capital cases, restoring the death sentences of Jonathan Carr, Reginald Carr, Jr., and Sidney Gleason pending further appellate review. The Kansas Supreme Court had vacated the men’s death sentences because the jury had not been…
Read MoreNews
Jan 19, 2016
Report Finds 74% of Florida Death Row Inmates Had Non-Unanimous Death Verdicts
Florida’s death row would be three-quarters smaller if the state followed the practice of all but two other states and required that a jury unanimously agree that a death sentence can be imposed before a defendant can be sentenced to death. Alabama and Delaware also permit judges to impose death sentences following non-unanimous jury recommendations for…
Read MoreNews
Jan 18, 2016
The Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. on the Death Penalty
On Martin Luther King Day, DPIC looks at the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King’s views on capital…
Read MoreNews
Jan 15, 2016
Texas Prepares to Execute Richard Masterson While Autopsy Data Suggests Death Was Not Murder At All
As Texas readies itself to execute Richard Masterson (pictured), his lawyers have filed new pleadings questioning whether any murder occurred at all and are seeking a stay of execution based on what they say is “evidence of State fraud, misconduct, and his actual innocence.” Masterson’s filings challenge the forensic testimony presented by the prosecution in the case, the accuracy of instructions given to jurors, and the constitutionality of Texas’ lethal…
Read MoreNews
Jan 14, 2016
Study Finds Disparities in Race, Gender, and Geography in Florida Executions
Florida executions are plagued by stark racial, gender, and geographic disparities, according to a new University of North Carolina study, with executions 6.5 times more likely for murders of white female victims than for murders of black males. (See graph, left. Click to enlarge.). UNC Chapel Hill Professor Frank Baumgartner examined data from the 89 executions conducted in Florida between 1976 — when the U.S. Supreme Court upheld Florida’s use of the death penalty — and…
Read MoreNews
Jan 13, 2016
60 Minutes Profiles Life After Death Row for Exoneree Anthony Ray Hinton
On Sunday, January 10, 60 Minutes aired an interview with Anthony Ray Hinton, who was exonerated on April 3, 2015 after spending nearly 30 years on Alabama’s death row. In the interview, Hinton described how issues of race permeated his case. Hinton told 60 Minutes correspondent Scott Pelley about a conversation he had with a police lieutenant after having been arrested: “I said, ‘You got the wrong guy.’ And he said, ‘I don’t care whether you did it or…
Read MoreNews
Jan 12, 2016
U.S. Supreme Court Strikes Down Florida’s Death Sentencing Scheme
In an 8 – 1 decision in Hurst v. Florida released on January 12, the U.S. Supreme Court found Florida’s capital sentencing scheme in violation of the 6th Amendment, which guarantees the right to trial by jury. “The Sixth Amendment requires a jury, not a judge, to find each fact necessary to impose a sentence of death,” Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote in the opinion of the Court. The jury and judge in Hurst’s case followed Florida’s statutory sentencing procedure, which…
Read MoreNews
Jan 11, 2016
Connecticut Supreme Court Hears Prosecutors’ Argument Seeking to Overturn Death Penalty Ban
On January 7, the Connecticut Supreme Court heard arguments in State of Connecticut v. Russell Peeler, in which state prosecutors are seeking to overturn the court’s 4 – 3 decision last summer declaring Connecticut’s death penalty unconstitutional. The court ruled in August in State v. Santiago that Connecticut’s prospective legislative repeal of the death penalty, in combination with “the state’s near total moratorium on carrying out executions over…
Read MoreNews
Jan 08, 2016
Harvard Law Professor Chronicles ‘The Death Penalty’s Last Stand’
In a recent article in Slate, Harvard Law School Professor Charles Ogletree, the executive director of the university’s Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice, says “the death penalty is collapsing under the weight of its own corruption and cruelty.” He emphasizes the increasing isolation of capital punishment to a few outlier jurisdictions, particularly highlighting Caddo Parish, Louisiana. Caddo Parish received national attention when, shortly after the exoneration…
Read MoreNews
Jan 07, 2016
More Nations Reject Death Penalty, Even as Use Spikes in Shrinking Minority of Countries
The New York Times reports that the number of countries using capital punishment continued to shrink and its use became more isolated from 2013 to 2014, even as the number of death sentences worldwide rose. 105 countries have abolished the death penalty, most recently Suriname and Mongolia, and the United Nations lists 60 additional countries as “de facto abolitionist” because they have not had any executions in at least 10 years. That leaves just 28 countries that still practice…
Read More