Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Jan 28, 2015
STUDIES: Death Penalty Overwhelmingly Used for White-Victim Cases
According to a new study principally authored by Prof. Frank Baumgartner of the University of North Carolina, the death penalty is far more likely to be used if the underlying murder victim was white rather than black. The study examined every U.S. execution from 1976 – 2013 and found, “The single most reliable predictor of whether a defendant in the United States will be executed is the race of the victim.… Capital punishment is very rarely used where the victim is a Black male, despite the…
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Jan 27, 2015
Justice Stevens Says Texas Executed an Innocent Man
In a discussion at the University of Florida Law School, former U.S. Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens said that recent research reveals that Texas almost certainly executed an innocent man in…
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Jan 26, 2015
Supreme Court Agrees to Review Oklahoma’s Lethal Injections
On January 23 the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear a challenge to Oklahoma’s lethal injection procedures, particularly its use of midazolam that was used in three botched executions in 2014. Four Oklahoma inmates asked the Court to review the state’s procedures, but one of them, Charles Warner, was executed before the Court agreed to take the case. It is likely the other three defendants will be granted stays. When Warner was executed,…
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Jan 23, 2015
UPCOMING EXECUTION: Texas Defendant with Low IQ Would Be Spared in Other States
UPDATE: (1/27). Ladd was denied a stay by the TX Ct. of Crim. Appeals. Robert Ladd is scheduled to be executed in Texas on January 29, despite having an IQ of 67, an indication of intellectial disability rendering him ineligible for execution. Howver, Texas courts rejected Ladd’s previous appeal because the state has a unique way of evaluating intellectual disability. Courts in Texas often consider what is called the “Briseño…
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Jan 23, 2015
The Difficulties in Selecting Impartial Jury for Boston Bombing Trial
According to a recent article in the New Yorker, it has been diffcult selecting a jury for the trial of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, who is accused of the Boston Marathon bombing. Many of the 1,350 people who filled out a juror questionnaire have been eliminated from service based on their written answers. But even of those who remain, only a few have been found sufficiently impartial regarding Tsarnaev’s guilt or innocence and on potential sentences, putting the selection…
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Jan 21, 2015
U.S. Supreme Court Grants Missouri Inmate New Attorneys for Federal Appeal
On January 20 the U.S. Supreme Court (7 – 2) granted Missouri death row inmate Mark Christeson new attorneys to assist him in pursuing his federal appeal. Christeson’s appointed attorneys missed a crucial filing deadline for his federal appeal, not even meeting with him until a month after the deadline. New attorneys offered to represent Christeson, arguing that his current attorneys had a conflict of interest, since advocating for him would…
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Jan 20, 2015
EDITORIALS: St. Louis Post-Dispatch Voices Death Penalty Opposition Even in Murder of Fellow Journalist
A recent editorial in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reiterated its opposition to the death penalty, even as Missouri prepares to execute the man convicted of killing a former Post-Dispatch reporter. Marcellus Williams is scheduled to be executed on January 28 for the murder of Lisha Gayle (pictured), who left her job as a journalist three years before she was killed. The paper noted Gayle’s likely opposition to the death penalty: “It would be surprising, in…
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Jan 19, 2015
Georgia Sets Execution Date for Inmate with Intellectual Disabilities
Georgia has set an execution date of January 27 for Warren Hill, an inmate diagnosed with intellectual disabilities (formerly referred to as “mental retardation”). If Hill was convicted in any other state in the country, he almost certainly would be ineligible for the death penalty. The U.S. Supreme Court banned the execution of people with intellectual disabilities in Atkins v. Virginia (2002), but allowed states to set procedures for determining…
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Jan 16, 2015
Supreme Court Allows Defendant to Present All Grounds Showing Ineffective Counsel
On January 14, the U.S. Supreme Court (6 – 3) handed down a ruling in Jennings v. Stephens, a capital case from Texas dealing with ineffective assistance of counsel. The Court held that when a defendant wins relief in a lower federal court and the state appeals, the defendant may offer theories rejected by the lower court as part of his defense of the relief granted. He does not have to file a new appeal on that rejected theory. In his…
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Jan 15, 2015
NEW VOICES: Anesthesiologist Points to Risks in Upcoming Executions
As Oklahoma prepared to carry out its first execution on January 15 since the botched execution of Clayton Lockett in April 2014, anesthesiologist Dr. Mark Heath of Columbia University Medical School expressed serious concerns about the drugs it will use, particularly one that paralyzes the inmate: “Oklahoma and other states … should abandon the barbaric use of paralyzing drugs entirely.” He explained that when the prisoner is given…
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