Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Jan 142015

NEW VOICES: Kentucky Judge Calls for Legislation to End the Death Penalty

Speaking from the bench at a hear­ing in a Kentucky cap­i­tal case, Fayette Circuit Judge Pamela Goodwine said, Something needs to be done leg­isla­tive­ly in Kentucky and in every state in the U.S. I think the death penal­ty prob­a­bly should not be a penal­ty, ever.” Despite her per­son­al views, Goodwine ruled that the death penal­ty could be sought against a man accused of par­tic­i­pat­ing in a mur­der, even though he did not shoot the victim. As the law in Kentucky…

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News 

Jan 132015

Neuroscience Research Indicates Susceptibility to Influence in Younger Defendants

A grow­ing body of research into ado­les­cent brain devel­op­ment indi­cates that the brains of even those over the age of 18 con­tin­ue to phys­i­cal­ly change in ways relat­ed to cul­pa­bil­i­ty for crim­i­nal offens­es. The Supreme Court referred to such sci­en­tif­ic evi­dence regard­ing those under the age of 18 when it struck down the death penal­ty for juve­niles in 2005 (Roper v. Simmons) and when it recent­ly lim­it­ed life with­out parole sen­tences for juve­niles. According to Laurence Steinberg…

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News 

Jan 122015

COSTS: Washington’s Death Penalty Is Costing Taxpayers Millions

A Seattle University study exam­in­ing the costs of the death penal­ty in Washington found that each death penal­ty case cost an aver­age of $1 mil­lion more than a sim­i­lar case where the death penal­ty was not sought ($3.07 mil­lion, ver­sus $2.01 mil­lion). Defense costs were about three times as high in death penal­ty cas­es and pros­e­cu­tion costs were as much as four times high­er than for non-death penal­ty cas­es. Criminal Justice Professor Peter Collins, the lead author of the study,…

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News 

Jan 092015

EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES: Yale University Offers Free Online Course on Capital Punishment

Capital Punishment: Race, Poverty, & Disadvantage is a free on-line course offered by Yale Law School. The course is taught by Stephen B. Bright, President of the Southern Center for Human Rights in Georgia. According to Yale’s description, This course explores the impo­si­tion of the death penal­ty in the United States with par­tic­u­lar atten­tion to the influ­ence of race and pover­ty, and the dis­ad­van­tages of men­tal ill­ness or intellectual disability…

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News 

Jan 082015

RESOURCES: New Series Examines Pennsylvania Death Penalty

The Patriot-News in Pennsylvania is run­ning a series of arti­cles exam­in­ing the state’s death penal­ty in antic­i­pa­tion of a com­pre­hen­sive report on the death penal­ty com­mis­sioned by the state leg­is­la­ture. Pennsylvania has not car­ried out an exe­cu­tion since 1999, and all three of its exe­cu­tions in the mod­ern era were inmates who waived their appeals. Incoming Governor Tom Wolf has said he may hold off on allow­ing exe­cu­tions until the state addresses…

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News 

Jan 072015

UPCOMING EXECUTION: Vietnam Veteran with PTSD Seeks Clemency

UPDATE: Brannan was denied clemen­cy by Georgia on Jan.12. Andrew Brannan, a dec­o­rat­ed vet­er­an of the Vietnam War, is sched­uled to be exe­cut­ed in Georgia on January 13. His exe­cu­tion would be the first of 2015. Brannan’s attor­neys are ask­ing the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles to grant clemen­cy because Brannan suf­fers from post-trau­­mat­ic stress dis­or­der and bipo­lar dis­or­der. A police video from the crime scene illus­trat­ed Brannan’s errat­ic behav­ior. Joe…

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News 

Jan 052015

NEW VOICES: Former Prosecutors Call for Repeal of Kentucky’s Death Penalty

In a recent op-ed in the Louisville Courier-Journal, three for­mer Kentucky pros­e­cu­tors advo­cat­ed for repeal of the death penal­ty. Citing the find­ings of a study by the American Bar Association on Kentucky’s law, Joseph P. Gutmann (pic­tured), Stephen Ryan, and J. Stewart Schneider said, “[T]he death penal­ty is bro­ken beyond repair in Kentucky.” Among the report’s find­ings were a reversal rate…

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News 

Jan 022015

Maryland Governor Will Commute Sentences of Remaining Death Row Inmates

On December 31, 2014, Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley announced he will com­mute the sen­tences of the four men remain­ing on the state’s death row to life with­out parole. O’Malley signed Maryland’s death penal­ty repeal bill into law in 2013, but the repeal was not retroac­tive. In a state­ment, O’Malley said, Recent appeals and the lat­est opin­ion on this mat­ter by Maryland’s Attorney General have called into ques­tion the legal­i­ty of car­ry­ing out ear­li­er death sentences —…

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