Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Jan 082016

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…

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News 

Jan 072016

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…

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News 

Jan 062016

Report Finds Failure of Leadership’ by Orange County District Attorney’s Office in Jailhouse Informant Scandal

A new report by a spe­cial com­mit­tee cre­at­ed by Orange County, California District Attorney Tony Rackauckas (pic­tured) cites a fail­ure of lead­er­ship” as the root cause of a mul­ti-decade his­to­ry of pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al mis­con­duct involv­ing jail­house infor­mants. Documents obtained by defense lawyers and The Orange County Register had revealed what the paper called a secret and well-orga­nized net­work of snitch­es” that had been hid­den from defense coun­sel and the courts. In…

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News 

Jan 052016

Prosecutor Says Change Needed if Wyoming Wants to Keep the Death Penalty

Natrona County, Wyoming District Attorney Mike Blonigen (pic­tured) recent­ly called for a recon­sid­er­a­tion of the state’s death penal­ty after a fed­er­al judge over­turned the death sen­tence of Dale Wayne Eaton, a decade after Blonigen obtained it in 2004. At the time U.S. District Judge Alan B. Johnson reversed Eaton’s sen­tence in 2014, Eaton was the only per­son on Wyoming’s death…

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News 

Dec 302015

Missouri Juror Who Voted for Death Says New Evidence Would Have Changed Sentencing Decision

In 1997, a St. Louis County, Missouri jury unan­i­mous­ly vot­ed to sen­tence David Barnett to death. Eighteen years lat­er, after learn­ing hor­rif­ic details of the phys­i­cal and sex­u­al abuse to which Barnett had been sub­ject­ed as a small child, Andrew Dazey — the jury fore­man in Barnett’s tri­al — says “[t]here’s no way” he would have vot­ed for death. At tri­al, Barnett’s lawyer pre­sent­ed some evi­dence of his clien­t’s abuse, men­tal ill­ness, and sui­cide attempts. However, he failed to…

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News 

Dec 292015

NEW VOICES: Why Prosecutors in Texas, Pennsylvania Are Seeking Death Penalty Less Often

Prosecutors across the coun­try are seek­ing the death penal­ty less fre­quent­ly and in recent inter­views two dis­trict attor­neys, one from Texas and one from Pennsylvania, have giv­en some of their rea­sons why. Randall County, Texas District Attorney James Farren (pic­tured) told KFDA-TV in Amarillo that his expe­ri­ence han­dling one par­tic­u­lar­ly lengthy and cost­ly cap­i­tal case has changed how he will make deci­sions in future cas­es that are eligible…

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News 

Dec 232015

Despite Executions, Death Penalty is in Decline in the New Georgia”

Although Georgia car­ried out 5 of the 28 exe­cu­tions in the U.S. in 2015, it imposed no new death sen­tences and a sig­nif­i­cant­ly changed legal land­scape points to a new Georgia” with the death penal­ty in decline. The Georgia legal pub­li­ca­tion, Daily Report, dubbed the decline in death sentences its news­mak­er of the year,” and explored the rea­sons for the…

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