Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Aug 18, 2014
Arizona Accused of Violating Its Own Protocol in Executions
In the recent prolonged execution of Joseph Wood in Arizona, the state apparently veered from its execution protocol when it employed 15 doses of lethal injection drugs, rather than just a single dose followed by a second application, if necessary, as stated in its regulations. There have been numerous other instances in which the state appeared to depart from its protocol. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit criticized the state in 2012, saying…
Read MoreNews
Aug 15, 2014
NEW VOICES: Former Texas Governor, FBI Chief Ask Texas to Commute Death Sentence
Former Texas Governor Mark White and former FBI director William Sessions have petitioned Texas to grant clemency to death row inmate Max Soffar because of the strong chance that a reversal of his conviction will come too late due to his rapidly declining medical condition. Soffar’s case has been reversed before, and his latest appeal is pending before a federal court. Soffar’s supporters are asking that he…
Read MoreNews
Aug 14, 2014
DPIC RESOURCES: Educational Curricula on the Death Penalty
As schools begin their new terms, we would like to remind you of two educational resources on the death penalty free from DPIC. Our award-winning high school curriculum, Educational Curriculum on the Death Penalty, includes 10-day lesson plans, interactive maps and exercises, and a presentation of pros and cons on the death penalty for discussion and debate. It is also available as a free iBook for the Apple iPad. The iBook version incorporates the…
Read MoreNews
Aug 13, 2014
Anesthesiologist Calls Ohio Execution “Inhumane”
The lethal injection of Dennis McGuire in Ohio in January “was not a humane execution,” according to Dr. Kent Dively (pictured), a San Diego anesthesiologist who examined records related to the execution, which took nearly 30 minutes to complete. Dr. Dively made the statement in an affidavit related to a civil rights suit filed by McGuire’s children. McGuire was the first person in the country to be executed using a combination of midazolam…
Read MoreNews
Aug 12, 2014
STUDIES: Innocence and the Death Penalty Around the World
A new report from The Death Penalty Project, “The Inevitability of Error,” examines the risk of wrongful convictions in capital prosecutions through case studies from around the world. The report analyzes recent innocence cases in Japan, the U.S., Taiwan, and Sierra Leone, as well as older cases from the United Kingdom that encouraged abolition efforts there. Among the cases included are those of Iwao Hakamada, who was released after 47 years on death row in…
Read MoreNews
Aug 11, 2014
Federal Judge Bars Ohio Executions for 2014
On August 8 U.S. District Judge Gregory L. Frost ruled that no executions may be carried out in Ohio until at least January 2015. The court’s ruling lengthened a previous moratorium imposed because of problems with the state’s lethal injection protocol. Judge Frost said he extended the stay of executions “in light of the continuing need for discovery and necessary preparations related to the adoption and implementation of the new execution protocol.” Three…
Read MoreNews
Aug 08, 2014
STUDIES: Arbitrariness in Connecticut Death Sentences
A newly published study by Professor John Donohue of Stanford Law School found that arbitrary factors, including race and geography, significantly affected death sentencing decisions in Connecticut. While controlling for a variety of factors related to the severity of the crime, the study’s abstract indicated that “[M]inority defendants who kill white victims are capitally charged at substantially higher rates than minority defendants who kill minorities,…
Read MoreNews
Aug 07, 2014
NEW VOICES: Former State Health Official Warns of More Botched Executions
Dr. Marc Stern, the former assistant secretary of healthcare for the Washington Department of Corrections, recently commented on physician participation in executions in the wake of the botched lethal injections in Oklahoma and Arizona. Dr. Stern resigned rather than cooperate with his state’s execution plan. He explained his views, “Although its foundation is in medical science, lethal injection is not a medical procedure:…
Read MoreNews
Aug 06, 2014
Kentucky Holds First Public Hearing on Future of Death Penalty
A joint committee of 32 senators and representatives held the first public hearing on Kentucky’s death penalty since capital punishment was reinstated there in 1975. The hearing was prompted by a death penalty repeal bill proposed by Republican Rep. David Floyd, who said the death penalty should be ended because of the cost and time it takes for cases to complete the appeals process. He was also concerned about the number of death penalty cases that have been…
Read MoreNews
Aug 05, 2014
Arizona Repeated Execution Protocol 15 Times Before Inmate Died
On August 1, the Arizona Department of Corrections (DOC) released 330 pages of documents related to the execution of Joseph Wood on July 23. Although not a report on why the execution took nearly 2 hours to complete, the documents reveal that Wood was injected with 15 consecutive doses (50 mg each) of midazolam and hydromorphone, far more than indicated in the state’s protocol. Dale Baich, an…
Read More