Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Aug 052015

NEW RESOURCES: Capital Punishment and the State of Criminal Justice 2015

The American Bar Association has released a new pub­li­ca­tion, The State of Criminal Justice 2015, exam­in­ing major issues, trends, and sig­nif­i­cant changes in America’s crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem. The chap­ter devot­ed to cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment was writ­ten by Ronald Tabak, an attor­ney at Skadden Arps and board mem­ber of the Death Penalty Information Center. Tabak presents evi­dence of the declin­ing use of the death penal­ty in death sen­tences and executions,…

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News 

Aug 042015

New Study Shows Discrimination in Colorado Prosecutors’ Use of Death Penalty

A new study to be pub­lished in the University of Denver Law Review shows that whether pros­e­cu­tors seek the death penal­ty in Colorado depends to an alarm­ing extent on the race and geo­graph­ic loca­tion of the defen­dant.” The study — based upon 10 years of data col­lect­ed by attor­ney Meg Beardsley and University of Denver law pro­fes­sors Sam Kamin and Justin Marceau and soci­ol­o­gy pro­fes­sor Scott Phillips — shows…

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News 

Aug 032015

Former Prosecutor Says Texas Can Live Without the Death Penalty”

Former Texas pros­e­cu­tor, Tim Cole — described by the Dallas Morning News as a no-holds-barred law­man” in 4 terms as District Attorney for Archer, Clay, and Montague coun­ties — now says that Texas should join the 19 U.S. states where the death penal­ty has been abol­ished.” In an op-ed in The Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Cole says Texas’ dra­mat­ic decline in impos­ing the death penal­ty, from a record 49 death sen­tences in 1994 and 48 in 1999 to…

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News 

Jul 312015

Justice Ginsburg Discusses Glossip Dissent

In an inter­view at Duke Law School, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg reflect­ed on the past term at the U.S. Supreme Court. She dis­cussed sev­er­al land­mark cas­es from the past year, includ­ing Glossip v. Gross, in which she joined Justice Stephen Breyer in a dis­sent that ques­tioned the con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of the death penal­ty. Ginsburg said she had wait­ed to take such a stance on the death penal­ty because past justices, took them­selves out of…

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News 

Jul 302015

After Prior Jury’s Life Verdict, Washington Prosecutors Drop Death Penalty in One of the Worst Crimes We’ve Ever Had”

King County (Washington) Prosecutor Dan Satterberg (pic­tured) announced that his office will no longer seek the death penal­ty against Michele Anderson after a jury returned a life sen­tence for her co-defen­­dant, Joseph McEnroe. McEnroe and Anderson were charged with killing six mem­bers of Anderson’s fam­i­ly in 2007 in what Satterberg called one of the worse crimes we’ve ever had in King County.” Satterberg explained his deci­sion in a news con­fer­ence on July 29, say­ing, To…

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News 

Jul 292015

Delaware Prosecutor Suspended for Misconduct in Capital Trial

The Supreme Court of Delaware vot­ed unan­i­mous­ly on July 27 to sus­pend for­mer Deputy Attorney General R. David Favata as a result of his mis­con­duct dur­ing a recent cap­i­tal tri­al. With a sin­gle dis­sent as to the length of the sus­pen­sion, the Court banned Favata from the prac­tice of law for six months and one day for inten­tion­al mis­con­duct dur­ing the cap­i­tal tri­al of Isaiah…

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News 

Jul 272015

Citing High Cost of Death Penalty Appeals, California Prosecutor Agrees to Reduce Prisoner’s Sentence to Life Without Parole

Citing the high cost of death penal­ty appeals and dif­fi­cul­ty obtain­ing cus­tody of an out-of-state pris­on­er, the Kern County, California District Attorney’s office has agreed to reduce the 1989 death sen­tence imposed upon Clarence Ray (pic­tured) to a sen­tence of life with­out parole. Ray’s lawyers had filed a peti­tion chal­leng­ing the con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of his California con­vic­tion and death sen­tence. The par­ties reached agree­ment that Ray’s death sen­tence would be reversed in…

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News 

Jul 242015

CNN Legal Analyst Calls Sanity of the Death Penalty” Into Question

Philip Holloway, a CNN legal ana­lyst who has been both a pros­e­cu­tor and crim­i­nal defense attor­ney, says in a recent op-ed that it is hard not to ques­tion the ratio­nal­i­ty — indeed the san­i­ty” of the death penal­ty. Holloway says there are sev­er­al prac­ti­cal rea­sons why the death penal­ty just does­n’t make sense any longer, if it ever real­ly did in the first place,” and out­lines five rea­sons why he believes the United States should recon­sid­er cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. First, he says…

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News 

Jul 232015

One Year After Botched Execution, Many States Still Haven’t Resumed Executions

On July 23, 2014, Arizona’s exe­cu­tion of Joseph Wood was botched, tak­ing near­ly two hours from the time the state began inject­ing him with lethal drugs until he was final­ly pro­nounced dead. Witnesses report­ed that Wood gasped more than 640 times dur­ing the course of the exe­cu­tion, and an offi­cial report lat­er revealed that he was inject­ed with 15 dos­es of the exe­cu­tion drugs. Michael Kiefer, a reporter for the Arizona Republic, who wit­nessed Wood’s exe­cu­tion, described it,…

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