Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
May 01, 2015
NEW VOICES: Citing Innocence, Misconduct, Creator of Lethal Injection Protocol Calls Death Penalty “Problematic”
Dr. Jay Chapman, the Oklahoma medical examiner who created the three-drug lethal injection protocol that was used from 1982 to 2010, recently told The Guardian that he has doubts about the death penalty.“I am ambivalent about the death penalty – there have been so many incidents of prosecutorial misconduct, or DNA testing that has proved a prisoner’s innocence. It’s problematic,” Chapman said. He said he believed lethal injection would be a more humane method of execution, “At that…
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Apr 30, 2015
LAW REVIEW: Stephen Bright on Race, Poverty, Arbitrariness and the Death Penalty
In an article for the University of Richmond Law Review, Stephen Bright (pictured), President and Senior Counsel at the Southern Center for Human Rights, describes the arbitrary factors that continue to influence the death penalty. Bright first describes the historical context that led the Supreme Court to strike down the death penalty in 1976. He draws comparisons between lynchings, which he says were “used to maintain racial control after the Civil War,” and capital…
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Apr 29, 2015
Supreme Court Hears Challenge to Oklahoma’s Lethal Injection Protocol
On April 29, the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral argument in Glossip v. Gross, a case challenging the use of midazolam in lethal injections. Midazolam was used as the first drug in three botched executions in 2014, including the execution of Clayton Lockett in Oklahoma exactly one year ago. Prisoners on Oklahoma’s death row argued that midazolam should not be used in executions because it could not reliably anesthesize the prisoner to prevent him or…
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Apr 28, 2015
Florida Supreme Court Strikes Down Mentally Ill Defendant’s Death Sentence as Disproportionate
In a case spotlighting issues of mental illness and the death penalty, the Florida Supreme Court on April 23 unanimously overturned the death sentence imposed on a severely mentally ill death-row inmate, Humberto Delgado (pictured). Delgado, who was convicted of killing a Tampa police officer, will be resentenced to life without parole. The court said, “We do not downplay the fact that Corporal Roberts lost his life as a result of Delgado’s actions. However ……
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Apr 27, 2015
Nebraska Repeal Vote Reflects Growing Republican Opposition to Death Penalty
Nebraska’s unicameral legislature recently voted 30 – 13 in favor of repealing the State’s death penalty, advancing the bill to a second round of legislative review. (In Nebraska, a bill must pass three times before it is sent to the Governor.) A majority (17 out of 30) of Republican legislators voted in favor of the bill, which was also supported by 12 Democrats and one Independent legislator. Sen. Colby Coash (R‑Lincoln), said, “If any other system in our government was as ineffective and…
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Apr 24, 2015
NEW VOICES: Effects of the Death Penalty on Those Who Carry It Out
Four retired death-row prison officials — two wardens, a chaplain, and an execution supervisor — recently described the effect that carrying out executions has had on…
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Apr 23, 2015
NEW VOICES: Leading Pharmacists Oppose Participation in Lethal Injections
In a recent op-ed in The Hill, three leading pharmacists wrote in support of the resolution by the American Pharmacists Association (APhA), discouraging pharmacist participation in executions. Leonard Edloe, former CEO of Edloe’s Professional Pharmacies, William Fassett (pictured), professor emeritus of pharmacology at Washington State University, and Philip Hantsen, professor emeritus at the…
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Apr 22, 2015
Death Penalty Disproportionately Imposed by, Increasingly Isolated to, Small Number of Counties
(Click image to enlarge) The Atlantic reports that death sentences are heavily concentrated in a small number of heavy-use counties. According to DePaul University law professor Robert J. Smith, “1 percent of counties accounts for roughly 44 percent of all death sentences” since the reinstatement of the death penalty in 1976. Death-sentencing rates in those counties are not a product of their population or murder rates, Smith points out. For example, from 2004 to 2009, “Miami-Dade…
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Apr 21, 2015
Sentence Reversal, Exoneration, and Natural Death More Likely Than Execution For Pennsylvania Death Row Inmates
(Click here to enlarge image). According to Bureau of Justice Statistics, Pennsylvania is less likely to execute a death row inmate than any other state that has carried out any executions. A Reading Eagle analysis of BJS data from 1973 through 2013 shows that the Commonwealth has executed fewer than 1% of all death-sentenced defendants since 1973, with execution the least likely of 5 possible outcomes for people sentenced to…
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Apr 20, 2015
FBI Acknowledges Flawed Forensic Testimony Affected At Least 32 Death Penalty Cases
(Click on image to enlarge). The Federal Bureau of Investigation has formally acknowledged that examiners from the FBI Laboratory’s microscopic hair comparison unit for decades provided flawed forensic testimony purportedly matching crime scene hair evidence to the hair of defendants charged with those crimes. As part of an ongoing review of inaccurate forensic evidence, the FBI admitted that, in the 268 trials examined so far, its forensic experts systematically overstated…
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