Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Mar 28, 2014
STUDIES: Amnesty Reports Executions Occurred in Only 11% of Countries Worldwide in 2013
Amnesty International recently released its annual report on capital punishment around the world, noting, “Developments in the worldwide use of the death penalty in 2013 confirmed that its application is confined to a small minority of countries.” As illustrated in the chart at left, over the past decade there has been an increase in the number of countries abolishing the death penalty and a decrease in countries carrying out executions. Because executions in China remain a…
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Mar 27, 2014
NEW VOICES: Former New Hampshire Justices Support Death Penalty Repeal
Two former justices of the New Hampshire Supreme Court recently voiced their support for repealing the death penalty. In an op-ed, Joseph Nadeau (l.) and John Broderick (r.) emphasized the death penalty’s lack of deterrent effect, saying, “New Hampshire has not executed anyone for three quarters of a century. Yet, it registered the second lowest murder rate in the nation every year of this century.” Murder rates were higher in heavy-use death penalty states, they noted. The…
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Mar 26, 2014
Oklahoma Judge Finds Execution Secrecy Unconstitutional
On March 26, Oklahoma County District Judge Patricia Parrish held that the state’s lethal injection secrecy law violates the constitutional right to due process of inmates slated for execution. “I think that the secrecy statute is a violation of due process because access to the courts has been denied,” she said, saying the case was not “even a close call.” Death row inmates Clayton Lockett and Charles Warner challenged the law, which bans…
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Mar 25, 2014
Supreme Court to Review Death Penalty Case Involving Ineffective Representation
On March 24, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear arguments in Jennings v. Stephens (No. 13 – 7211), a Texas death penalty case involving ineffectiveness of counsel. In his request for federal relief from his death sentence, Robert Jennings cited three instances in which his trial lawyers failed to adequately represent him. A U.S. District Court granted him relief on two of those claims (including failure to present evidence of his mental problems),…
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Mar 24, 2014
BOOKS: Quest for Justice — Defending the Damned
In his book, “Quest for Justice: Defending the Damned,” Richard Jaffe explores the problems of the American death penalty system through his experience as a capital defense attorney in Alabama. During the past twenty years, Jaffe has helped secure the release of three death row inmates: Randall Padgett and Gary Drinkard, who were fully exonerated, and James Cochran, who was cleared of murder charges, but pleaded guilty to a related robbery…
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Mar 21, 2014
EDITORIALS: Mississippi Paper Calls Pending Execution “Gravely Inhumane”
A recent editorial in the Jackson Free Press in Mississippi called for a halt to the scheduled execution of Michelle Byrom, saying she is “clearly not guilty of the crime for which the state plans to execute her next week.” The editorial noted that Byrom’s son had confessed to the crime four times.” He said the story he originally told sheriffs implicating his mother was made up because he was “scared, confused and high” when he was interrogated. The…
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Mar 20, 2014
Doubts of Culpability Surround Upcoming Execution in Mississippi
Michelle Byrom is scheduled to be executed in Mississippi on March 27 for conspiring to murder her husband, Edward Byrom, Sr. Her son, Edward Byrom, Jr., known as Junior, confessed to the crime on multiple occasions, and wrote that he lied when he told police his mother and a friend were involved. “I was so scared, confused, and high, I just started spitting the first thought out, which turned in to this big conspiracy thing, for money, which was all BS,…
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Mar 19, 2014
COSTS: Idaho Study Finds Death Penalty Cases Are Rare, Lengthy, & Costly
A new, but limited, study of the costs of the death penalty in Idaho found that capital cases are more costly and take much more time to resolve than non-capital cases. One measure of death-penalty costs was reflected in the time spent by attorneys handling appeals. The State Appellate Public Defenders office spent about 44 times more time on a typical death penalty appeal than on a life sentence appeal (almost 8,000 hours per capital defendant compared to about 180 hours per…
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Mar 18, 2014
Oklahoma Unable to Obtain Lethal Injection Drugs for Upcoming Executions
(UPDATE: The executions of Clayton Lockett and Charles Warner were stayed until April 22 and 29 respectively.) Oklahoma does not have the necessary drugs to carry out the upcoming executions of Clayton Lockett and Charles Warner, scheduled for March 20 and 26. According to a brief filed on behalf of the Department of Corrections, the department has made a “Herculean effort” to obtain pentobarbital and vecuronium bromide for the lethal injections, but still lacks a supply of…
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Mar 17, 2014
NEW VOICES: Pennsylvania Supreme Court Justice Criticizes Inadequate Representation in Capital Cases
In a lecture at the Widener University School of Law, Pennsylvania Supreme Court Justice Thomas G. Saylor criticized the poor state of death penalty representation in Pennsylvania. He offered numerous cases in which death sentences were overturned because attorneys had failed to present mitigating evidence to the jury. Quoting from a special concurrence he wrote on a capital case involving ineffective assistance of counsel, he said, “Of greatest concern,…
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