Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Nov 10, 2014
The Death Penalty in the U.S. Military
The U.S. military has its own laws and court system separate from those of the states and the federal government. Although the military justice system allows the death penalty, no executions have been carried out in over 50 years. The last execution was the hanging on April 13, 1961 of U.S. Army Private John Bennett for rape and attempted murder. The military death penalty law was struck down in 1983 but was reinstated in 1984 with new rules detailing the aggravating circumstances that make a…
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Nov 07, 2014
Maryland Attorney General Asks Court to Vacate Death Sentences
On November 6, Maryland Attorney General Doug Gansler (pictured) filed a brief with an appellate court, formally requesting that the death sentence of Jody Lee Miles be vacated. Gansler argued that Miles’s death sentence is no longer valid. Miles was convicted and sentenced to death in 1998. In 2006, Maryland’s Court of Appeals suspended executions because the state’s lethal injection procedures had not been lawfully implemented. In 2013, the state repealed…
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Nov 06, 2014
Texas Court Orders New Trial Because of Withheld Evidence
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, the state’s highest criminal court, vacated the conviction and death sentence of Alfred Brown, who has been on death row for murder since 2005. Brown has maintained his innocence and has said that a landline phone call he made from his girlfriend’s apartment the morning of the murder would prove it. At his trial, Brown’s attorneys presented no evidence of his alibi, and his girlfriend changed her testimony after she was…
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Nov 05, 2014
STUDIES: The Effects of Judge vs. Jury Sentencing
(Click left image to enlarge). A new study by researchers at Cornell University examined the effects of Delaware’s decision to transfer capital sentencing authority from the jury to the judge at trial. The study used data from capital cases between 1977 and 2007, during which time Delaware made the shift to judge sentencing – one of very few states to employ that procedure. According to the study, “Judges were significantly more likely to give a…
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Nov 04, 2014
NEW RESOURCES: “Death Row, USA” Fall 2014 Now Available
The latest edition of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund’s Death Row, USA showed a continuing decline in the size of the death row population. The new total of 3,035 represented a 13% drop from 10 years earlier, when the death row population was 3,471. The racial demographics of death row have been steady, with white inmates making up 43% of death row, black inmates composing 42%, and Latino inmates 13%. California continued to have the largest death row,…
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Nov 03, 2014
INTERNATIONAL: European Perspective on America’s Death Penalty
In an op-ed in the New York Times, Sylvie Kauffmann, of the French magazine Le Monde, described the interaction between Europe and the U.S. on the death penalty. She noted that Felix Rohatyn said the most controversial subject he faced as the American ambassador to France was the enormous opposition to the U.S. death penalty. She also noted the broad European refusal to have their drugs used in lethal injections. In a recent development, a German investmunt…
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Oct 31, 2014
Texas Sets December Execution for Delusional Inmate
Texas has set an execution date of December 3, 2014 for Scott Panetti, a death row inmate with schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder. Panetti represented himself at trial dressed in a cowboy outfit, and attempted to subpoena Jesus Christ and the pope, among many others. Inmates who are ruled insane are ineligible for execution, but Texas officials argue Panetti can be put to death because he sees some connection between his crime and his execution. In…
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Oct 30, 2014
INNOCENCE: Another Florida Inmate Added to Exoneration List
Carl Dausch, a former death row inmate in Florida, has been added to DPIC’s list of exonerations from death row, bringing the national total to 147 and Florida’s total to 25, the most of any state in the country. On June 12, 2014, the Florida Supreme Court directed the acquittal of Dausch because there was insufficient evidence of his guilt. The Court stated, “We do not take lightly the result that will flow from our decision today. We have…
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Oct 29, 2014
Nebraska Attorney General Says Death Penalty in Limbo
Nebraska Attorney General Jon Bruning said executions in the state are unlikely to resume for at least another year because of the scarcity of lethal injection drugs. “Death row is sort of in limbo today,” he said, adding that efforts to find alternative drugs have been diverted due to other state concerns. Nebraska’s last execution was in 1997, by electrocution. The state’s execution protocol calls for use of sodium thiopental, which is no longer being manufactured for the…
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Oct 28, 2014
NEW VOICES: Doubts About the Death Penalty Among American Founders
In a recent op-ed in the National Law Journal, historian John Bessler described the ambivalence among American founders toward the death penalty. He noted, “Although early U.S. laws authorized executions, the founders greatly admired a now little-known Italian writer, Cesare Beccaria, who fervently opposed capital punishment. They also were fascinated by the penitentiary system’s potential to eliminate cruel punishments.” Thomas Jefferson wrote,…
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