Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Sep 29, 2014
Supreme Court Again Asked to Consider Competence to be Executed in Texas Case
is a death row inmate in Texas, who has been diagnosed with schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder and believes he is at the center of a struggle between God and Satan. The state has continued to insist he is competent to be executed. Panetti represented himself at his trial, appearing in court wearing a cowboy outfit and making bizarre, rambling statements. He attempted to subpoena Jesus Christ, the pope, and 200 others. He was convicted and sentenced…
Read MoreNews
Sep 26, 2014
The Angolite Features Louisiana’s Death Row Exonerees
An article in the latest edition of The Angolite, a magazine published by prisoners at the Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola, tells the stories of the ten men who have been exonerated from death row in that state. The piece prominently features Glenn Ford, the state’s most recent inmate to be freed. Ford spent 30 years on death row before being released in 2014. Among the other cases described is that of John…
Read MoreNews
Sep 25, 2014
REPRESENTATON: Death Row Inmate Received Bizarre Defense
Phillip Cheatham was represented at his death penalty trial by a lawyer who failed to develop a readily available alibi defense and portrayed Cheatham as a possible killer. The lawyer, Ira Dennis Hawver (pictured at his disbarment hearing, left), presented Cheatham as a drug-dealing killer who would not have left a witness alive to identify him and would have taken fewer shots to kill the victims. Hawyer admitted he might not have jumped…
Read MoreNews
Sep 24, 2014
NEW VOICES: Former FBI Director Says People Were Executed Based Partly on Faulty Agency Testimony
William Sessions, former head of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, recently pointed to cases of defendants who were executed based in part on faulty hair and fiber analysis in calling for changes in the use of forensic evidence. In an op-ed in the Washington Times, Sessions told the story of Benjamin Boyle, who was executed in Texas in 1997. His conviction was based on testing conducted by an FBI crime lab that an official review…
Read MoreNews
Sep 23, 2014
NEW VOICES: Former Ohio Attorney General Now Opposes Death Penalty and Calls for Reform
Jim Petro served as Ohio’s Attorney General and presided over 18 executions. However, he abandoned his support for capital punishment after seeing the risks of wrongful executions: “Our justice system is based on the decision-making of human beings, and human beings are fallible. We make mistakes and our judgments are influenced by biases and imperfect motivations. Implementing the death penalty makes our errors permanent and impossible to remedy.” Recently,…
Read MoreNews
Sep 22, 2014
Federal Judge Calls Oklahoma Execution Plan Unrealistic
Twenty-one Oklahoma death row inmates, including three with upcoming execution dates, have filed suit against the state of Oklahoma challenging the state’s lethal injection protocol. At a hearing in the case on September 18, U.S. District Judge Stephen Friot urged the state to stay the executions, which are scheduled for November and December, saying, “It does not seem realistic to me that the steps that need to be taken can hardly be completed between now and then.” The inmates have asked…
Read MoreNews
Sep 19, 2014
NEW RESOURCES: “Death Row, USA” Spring 2014 Now Available
The latest edition of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund’s Death Row, USA showed an ongoing decline in the size of the death row population. The number of prisoners on death row decreased from 3,070 on January 1, 2014, to 3,054 on April 1. The new total represented a 12% drop from 10 years earlier, when the death row population was 3,487. California continued to have the largest death row, with 743 inmates, followed by Florida (404),…
Read MoreNews
Sep 18, 2014
Sen. Leahy Cites North Carolina Exonerations in Calling for Legislaton
In a recent speech in the U.S. Senate calling for the reauthorization of the Justice for All Act, Senator Patrick Leahy (D‑VT) spoke about the recent exonerations of two men in North Carolina, citing the importance of DNA testing in their release from prison after 30 years: “The dozens of exonerations made possible by the Justice for All Act are testament enough to its value,” Leahy said, “Henry Lee McCollum and Leon Brown are just the latest…
Read MoreNews
Sep 17, 2014
BOOKS — CONSTITUTION DAY: “The Birth of American Law”
In The Birth of American Law: An Italian Philosopher and the American Revolution, historian John Bessler reveals the profound influence that the Italian thinker, Cesare Beccaria, had on the constitutional founders of the United States, including George Washington and John Adams. Beccaria’s bestselling book, On Crimes and Punishments, argued against torture and the death penalty, saying only punishments proven absolutely necessary should be…
Read MoreNews
Sep 16, 2014
POSSIBLE INNOCENCE: Mississippi Inmate Challenges Bite-Mark Evidence
A new appeal filed on behalf of Mississippi death row inmate Eddie Howard, Jr. presented DNA evidence that calls into question bite-mark evidence used to convict him in 1992. At Howard’s trial, Dr. Michael West, a Mississippi dentist who had testified as a forensic expert in numerous cases, said Howard’s teeth matched bite marks found on the murder victim. The victim had been buried for three days and exhumed before West examined her. He said he found three…
Read More