Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Oct 18, 2013
Ohio Religious Leaders Express Views on Capital Punishment
Religious leaders from a variety of faiths spoke about their religious objections to the death penalty at a recent meeting in Columbus, Ohio. The meeting included leaders from several Christian denominations as well as Jewish leaders. Jack Chomsky, cantor at Congregation Tifereth Israel, said he hopes more of his colleagues will join him in speaking out about Jewish tradition, which opposes the enforcement of the death penalty. Jerald Freewalt, of the…
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Oct 17, 2013
OP-ED: “Changes are long overdue for Texas’ clemency process”
Michael Morton (pictured), who was released after 25 years in prison for a crime he did not commit, and Barry Scheck, co-director of the Innocence Project, called for reforms in Texas’s clemency process. In a recent op-ed in the Houston Chronicle, Morton and Scheck highlighted the case of Cameron Willingham, who was executed in 2004 despite serious doubts about his guilt. According to the authors, it is now understood that investigators who…
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Oct 16, 2013
VICTIMS: Families of Murder Victims Express Preference for Life Without Parole Sentence
Some of the families of those murdered in a multiple shooting in Seal Beach, California, in 2011 recently asked the District Attorney to not seek the death penalty against the defendant, Scott Dekraai. The families said the delays in pursuing such a case extended their agony and forced them to relive the incident. Instead they recommended a sentence of life imprisonment without parole. Paul Wilson, whose wife was killed in the shootings, said,“We’d…
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Oct 15, 2013
SUPREME COURT: Self Incrimination at Issue in Kansas Case
On October 16 the U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments in Kansas v. Cheever. One of the key defense witnesses in Scott Cheever’s death penalty trial testified that Cheever’s use of drugs impaired his judgement on the day of the crime. Prosecutors, in turn, called the physician who performed Cheever’s court-mandated mental exam, and he testified that Cheever was aware of what he was doing when he committed the crime, based on…
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Oct 14, 2013
NEW VOICES: Former Death Row Warden Opposed Death Penalty
Donald Cabana, the former warden of the Mississippi State Penitentiary who died recently, spent many years actively opposing the death penalty. Having supervised several executions, Cabana was particularly disturbed about one in which the inmate may have been innocent. He said, “[H]owever we do it, in the name of justice, in the name of law and order, in the name of retribution, you … do not have the right to ask me, or any prison…
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Oct 11, 2013
Florida Identifies Over 100 Inmates Nearing Execution
Following the provisions of Florida’s recently passed “Timely Justice Act,” the clerk of the state’s Supreme Court has identified 132 inmates on death row who are“warrant ready,” based on their appeals. However, fewer than 20 of those inmates have begun the executive clemency process that must be completed before an execution can take place. Once the governor signals that the clemency process is over for an inmate, a death warrant must…
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Oct 10, 2013
INTERNATIONAL: Organizations Around the World Focus on Death Penalty Concerns
On October 10, the European Union commemorated World Day Against the Death Penalty, coinciding with events around the world challenging the use of capital punishment. Catherine Ashton, the EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, and Thorbjørn Jagland, Secretary General of the Council of Europe released a statement, noting,“Voices in favor of the death penalty within some parts of society, including in our…
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Oct 09, 2013
EDITORIALS: Wyoming Paper Recommends Life Sentences for Sake of Victims
Wyoming’s Casper Star-Tribune recently pointed out why many families of murder victims favor life-without-parole sentences over the death penalty . “[I]t may be a surprise that many families of murder victims prefer the life without parole sentence, simply because it puts the killer away forever without the decades-long court appeals that can accompany a death sentence,” the paper wrote. The editorial noted that there is only one person…
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Oct 08, 2013
NEW VOICES: Former Attorneys General Agree Virginia’s Death Penalty Needs Change
Former Virginia attorneys general Mark L. Earley Sr. (pictured) and Anthony F. Troy recently called for changes to the state’s death penalty based on a September report from the American Bar Association. Writing in the Washington Post, the past law enforcement leaders called for changes to the restrictive laws governing the sharing of evidence prior to trials, amendments to jury instructions so that jurors in death…
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Oct 07, 2013
SUPREME COURT: High Court Declines to Review Georgia’s Unusual Burden for Proving Mental Retardation
On the opening day of the U.S. Supreme Court’s new term, the Justices announced they would not review the case of Warren Hill, a death row inmate in Georgia with multiple findings of intellectual disability. Hill petitioned the Court after three mental health experts, who initially said he was not mentally disabled, changed their assessment. The execution of inmates with mental retardation was ruled unconstitutional…
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