Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Dec 09, 2014
INNOCENCE: Kwame Ajamu Officially Exonerated, Becomes 150th Death Row Exoneree
At a hearing on December 9, Kwame Ajamu (formerly Ronnie Bridgeman) was formally exonerated of the 1975 murder for which he was convicted and sentenced to death. Ajamu joins his brother, Wiley Bridgeman, and co-defendant, Ricky Jackson, on DPIC’s Exoneration List, becoming the 150th death row exoneree since 1973. Ajamu, Bridgeman, and Jackson were convicted based on the testimony of a 12-year-old boy who recently admitted that he never saw the killing. Ajamu’s death sentence…
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Dec 08, 2014
Supreme Court to Hear Case on Intellectual Disability Hearings
The U.S. Supreme Court granted a writ of certiorari in Brumfield v. Cain, a death penalty case from Louisiana dealing with intellectual disability. Kevan Brumfield was sentenced to death prior to the Court’s decision in Atkins v. Virginia (2002), which banned the execution of defendants with intellectual disabilities. After that ruling, Brumfield filed a claim of intellectual disability in state court. The court denied him a hearing because the trial…
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Dec 05, 2014
Georgia Inmate Whose Lawyer Was Drunk Seeks Clemency
Attorneys for Robert Holsey, an inmate on death row in Georgia, have filed a clemency petition before the Board of Pardons and Paroles. Holsey is scheduled to be executed on December 9, despite the fact that the lawyer who represented him at trial drank a quart of vodka a day and failed to present key evidence during the sentencing phase of Holsey’s trial. The lawyer was later disbarred for embezzling clients’ money and admitted that he was…
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Dec 04, 2014
Ohio Senate Holds Hearing on Lethal Injection Secrecy Bill
On December 4, the Ohio Senate Judiciary Committee held a hearing on HB 663, which would shield the identity of those who produce lethal injection drugs for the state. Previously, critics of the bill had warned that the measure could be unconstitutional because it interferes with the courts and violates the First Amendment right to free speech. Among those testifying at the committee hearing was Kevin Smith of the Society of Professional Journalists, who called the bill, “one…
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Dec 03, 2014
COSTS: Capital Cases in Nevada Much More Expensive Than Non-Death Penalty
A recent study commissioned by the Nevada legislature found that the average death penalty case costs a half million dollars more than a case in which the death penalty is not sought. The Legislative Auditor estimated the cost of a murder trial in which the death penalty was sought cost $1.03 to $1.3 million, whereas cases without the death penalty cost $775,000. The auditor summarized the study’s findings, saying, “Adjudicating death penalty cases takes more time and…
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Dec 02, 2014
VICTIMS: Boston Bombing Trial Could Cause More Trauma
In an op-ed in the Boston Herald, Michael Avery, professor emeritus at Suffolk University Law School, whose sister and niece were murdered 30 years ago, suggested that a plea bargain might be a better ourcome for all concerned in the case of Dzokhar Tsarnaev, the defendant in the Boston Marathon bombing. A trial, he said, would be painful for victims and survivors: “Boston will relive every tortu[r]ous moment of the bombing, over and over, probably for weeks…if…
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Dec 01, 2014
POLL: Americans Oppose Death Penalty for Mentally Ill by 2 – 1
A new poll found that Americans oppose the death penalty for people with mental illness by more than a 2 – 1 margin. According to Public Policy Polling, 58% of respondents opposed capital punishment for people with mental illness, while only 28% supported it. Professor Robert Smith, an assistant professor of law at the University of North Carolina who commissioned the poll, said, “Today’s important polling is part of significant new research which clearly shows an emerging consensus against…
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Dec 01, 2014
Duval County, Florida, Leader in Death Sentences
(Click to enlarge) According to a report by the Christian Science Monitor, Duval County, Florida, has the highest per capita rate for inmates on death row of any U.S. county. Duval has sentenced one person to death for every 14,000 residents. It is among the 2% of counties in the U.S. reponsible for a majority of all inmates on death row as of 2013, as described in DPIC’s report, The 2% Death Penalty. Duval County ranked 8th, with 60 inmates…
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Nov 26, 2014
NEW VOICES: Texas Appellate Judge Denounces Death Penalty and Upcoming Execution
On Nov. 26, Judge Tom Price dissented from the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals’ denial of relief for Scott Panetti: “Having spent the last forty years as a judge for the State of Texas, of which the last eighteen years have been as a judge on this Court, I have given a substantial amount of consideration to the propriety of the death penalty as a form of punishment for those who commit capital murder, and I now believe that it should be abolished. I,…
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Nov 26, 2014
FBI Reports Continued Decline in Police Officers Killed
On November 24, the FBI released a report on law enforcement officers killed in the line of duty in 2013. Twenty-seven (27) officers were killed in “felonious acts,” a 45% drop compared to 2012, when 49 officers were killed, and a 53% decline since 2004. Most (15) of the 27 officers killed were in the South, with Texas having the highest number of any state (6). Six officers were killed in the West, four in the Midwest, and only two in the Northeast.
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