Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Dec 18, 2015
Report: 75% of 2015 Executions Raised Serious Concerns About Mental Health or Innocence
Three quarters of American executions in 2015 involved cases of “crippling disabilities and uncertain guilt,” according to a report by the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice at Harvard University. Saying that the 2015 executions revealed “a broken capital punishment system,” the report found that, “[o]f the 28 people executed [in 2015], 75% were mentally impaired or disabled, experienced extreme childhood trauma or abuse, or were of questionable guilt.” It said seven…
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Dec 17, 2015
Federal Court Removes Intellectually Disabled Man from Louisiana Death Row
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit has ruled in favor of Kevan Brumfield, upholding the decision of a Louisiana federal district court that he is intellectually disabled and therefore ineligible for execution. Louisiana’s state courts had initially denied Brumfield resources to investigate evidence of his intellectual disability and then dismissed his case without an evidentiary hearing, finding that he had not presented sufficient evidence to…
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Dec 16, 2015
DPIC Releases Year End Report: Historic Declines in Use of Death Penalty in 2015
On December 16, DPIC released its annual report on the latest developments in capital punishment, “The Death Penalty in 2015: Year End Report.” The death penalty declined by virtually every measure in 2015. 28 people were executed, the fewest since 1991. Death sentences dropped 33% from last year’s historic low, with 49 people being sentenced to death this year. There have now been fewer death sentences imposed in the last decade than in the decade before the U.S. Supreme…
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Dec 15, 2015
Arizona Executions to Remain on Hold as Court Challenge to Lethal Injection Secrecy Moves Forward
Arizona officials have agreed not to schedule any executions until a federal court challenge to the state’s lethal injection protocol and secrecy policy is resolved. U.S. District Court Judge Neil V. Wake had previously put the lawsuit on hold while Arizona rewrote its execution protocol. He said the execution hold was necessary to prevent what he called “crisis litigation” — artificially forcing the court to decide issues in the 60 days before an execution was scheduled to…
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Dec 14, 2015
NEW VOICES: South Dakota Republican Legislator to Propose Death Penalty Repeal Bill
South Dakota state Senator Arthur Rusch (R‑Vermillion, pictured), a former trial court judge who presided over a capital trial in which a defendant was sentenced to death, said he will be introducing legislation next year to repeal the state’s death penalty. Rusch said he supports repeal because of the emotional toll of capital trials on juriors and because of the financial impact of capital punishment. As a former Lincoln County circuit court judge, Rusch presided over the…
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Dec 11, 2015
Court Decisions Reflect Continuing Ambivalence Towards State Lethal Injection Secrecy Laws
Recent court decisions in cases from Georgia and Arkansas reflect continuing judicial uncertainty regarding lethal injection secrecy. On October 12, an Arkansas trial court overturned the state’s execution secrecy law and ordered the state Department of Corrections to disclose the drugs that it intends to use in executions and the source of those drugs. In a December 3 opinion requiring disclosure by the following day, Pulaski County Circuit…
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Dec 10, 2015
STUDIES: Electoral Pressures Influence Judges’ Decisions in Capital Cases
“[E]lectoral pressures influence judges’ decisions in capital cases,” according to a new report by the Brennan Center for Justice at the New York University School of Law. That report, How Judicial Elections Impact Criminal Cases, surveyed numerous empirical studies that had reviewed the effects of judicial elections on outcomes in criminal cases. The vast majority of criminal defendants — including capital defendants — face elected judges at trial and on appeal. According…
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Dec 09, 2015
Study Shows Trends in Executions, Death Sentences Closely Track Drop in Public Support for the Death Penalty
Historical trends in executions and new death sentences closely track changes in public attitudes about the death penalty and crime in general, according to a comprehensive University of North Carolina analysis of national public opinion surveys on the death…
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Dec 08, 2015
Missouri Supreme Court Overturns Conviction of Reginald Clemons
The Missouri Supreme Court ruled 4 – 3 on November 24 to vacate the conviction and death sentence of Reginald (Reggie) Clemons (pictured), who has been on death row for 22 years for the interracial rape and murder of two sisters. The court said that Clemons, did not receive a fair trial because of prosecutorial misconduct. In particular, the court was troubled by what it concluded was a deliberate failure by prosecutiors to provide Clemons’ defense with evidence that he had…
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Dec 07, 2015
After 3 Trials and Recanted Testimony, Georgia Set to Execute Man Who May Be Innocent
UPDATE: Terrell was denied clemency on Dec. 7 and executed just before 1:00 a.m. on December 9. The Atlanta Journal Constitution reported that it took a nurse an hour to find a vein for the lethal injection IV and that, as the execution drug was being administered, Terrell mouthed the words: “Didn’t do it.” EARLIER: After three trials, Georgia is set to execute Brian Keith Terrell (pictured) on December 8, unless the Georgia Board of…
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