Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Sep 162015

In New Book, Media Interviews, Justice Breyer Addresses International Opinion, Arbitrariness of Death Penalty

In his new book, The Court and the World: American Law and the New Global Realities, and in media inter­views accom­pa­ny­ing its release, Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer dis­cuss­es the rela­tion­ship between American laws and those of oth­er coun­tries and his dis­sent in Glossip v. Gross, which ques­tioned the con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of the death penal­ty. In an inter­view with The National Law Journal, Breyer sum­ma­rized the core…

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News 

Sep 152015

USA Today Chronicles Declining Death Penalty: It May Be Living on Borrowed Time”

In a sweep­ing look at the cur­rent state of the U.S. death penal­ty, USA Today reporters Richard Wolf and Kevin Johnson high­light sev­er­al recent sto­ry lines that col­lec­tive­ly illus­trate a dra­mat­ic decline in the coun­try’s use of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. Their conclusion: The death penal­ty in America may be liv­ing on bor­rowed time.” Wolf and Johnson recount recent cas­es in which high-pro­­file crimes result­ed in a life with­out parole sen­tence, in many instances because vic­tims’ families…

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News 

Sep 142015

Former Alabama Death Row Inmate Freed on Evidence of Innocence Glad to Be Alive”

Montez Spradley, sen­tenced to death by an Alabama judge in 2008 over a jury’s 10 – 2 rec­om­men­da­tion for life with­out parole, was freed from prison on September 4. Spradley spent 9.5 years incar­cer­at­ed, includ­ing 3.5 years on death row. He was grant­ed a new tri­al in 2011 as a result of mul­ti­ple evi­den­tiary errors in his tri­al. The state’s key wit­ness against Spradley, his ex-girl­friend, Alisha Booker, lat­er tes­ti­fied that she had lied at tri­al because Spradley…

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News 

Sep 112015

Richard Glossip’s Innocence Claim Draws Growing Attention [UPDATED]

UPDATE: Former Oklahoma Senator Tom Coburn (pic­tured), for­mer Oklahoma Sooners and Dallas Cowboys foot­ball coach Barry Switzer, and John W. Raley, Jr., the for­mer chief fed­er­al pros­e­cu­tor for the Eastern District of Oklahoma, have joined with inno­cence advo­cates Barry Scheck, Co-Director of the Innocence Project, and Samuel Gross, edi­tor of the National Registry of Exonerations, in a letter…

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News 

Sep 102015

Southern California Tops Deep South in New Death Sentences Amid Mounting Evidence of Misconduct

Riverside County, California is the buck­le of a new Death Belt,” says Professor Robert J. Smith of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, pro­duc­ing 7 death sen­tences in the first half of 2015. This, Smith says, is more than California’s oth­er 57 coun­ties com­bined, more than any oth­er state, and more than the whole Deep South…

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News 

Sep 092015

Former Judge: Pennsylvania Moratorium is Appropriate” and Reasonable”

Robert Cindrich, a for­mer U.S. District Judge and U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Pennsylvania, recent­ly wrote an op-ed for the Harrisburg Patriot-News call­ing Governor Tom Wolf’s mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions in Pennsylvania appro­pri­ate” and rea­son­able.” Expressing concerns about mul­ti­ple, seri­ous prob­lems with the death penal­ty” in Pennsylvania, Judge Cindrich says Governor Wolf was absolute­ly cor­rect” that no executions…

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News 

Sep 082015

Why Missouri is an Outlier in Execution Trends

As nation­al exe­cu­tion num­bers drop to his­toric lows and a grow­ing num­ber of states halt exe­cu­tions or repeal the death penal­ty alto­geth­er, Missouri has recent­ly increased the num­ber of exe­cu­tions it is car­ry­ing out and over­tak­en Texas for the high­est per-capi­­ta exe­cu­tion rate. Missouri and Texas have car­ried out all of the last 15 exe­cu­tions in the U.S. and 80% of exe­cu­tions through September 1 of this year. A report by The Marshall Project explores why Missouri is…

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News 

Sep 042015

Federal Judge: Delaware Execution Highlights Profound Failings in Our Judicial Process”

U.S. District Court Judge Gregory M. Sleet has crit­i­cized the lack of judi­cial review pro­vid­ed by the state and fed­er­al courts pri­or to Delawares 2012 exe­cu­tion of Shannon Johnson, say­ing Johnson’s execution high­lights pro­found fail­ings in our judi­cial process.” In an arti­cle in the American Bar Association’s Criminal Justice mag­a­zine, Judge Sleet — who was Chief Judge at the time of the case — called “[t]he Johnson case, and its result,…

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News 

Sep 032015

ANALYSIS: Do Recent Connecticut and U.S. Supreme Court Decisions Portend Downfall of Capital Punishment?

In an op-ed for The New York Times, Pulitzer Prize win­ning legal com­men­ta­tor Linda Greenhouse ana­lyzes the sig­nif­i­cance of and inter­play between the recent Connecticut Supreme Court deci­sion strik­ing down the state’s death penal­ty and Justice Stephen Breyer’s dis­sent in the U.S. Supreme Court case Glossip v. Gross. “[T]he Connecticut Supreme Court not only pro­duced an impor­tant deci­sion for its own juris­dic­tion; but it addressed the United…

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