Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Sep 27, 2013
Ohio Panel Recommends Banning Death Penalty for Severely Mentally Ill
On September 26, the Joint Task Force to Review the Administration of Ohio’s Death Penalty voted 15 – 2 to recommend a ban on death sentences for people with severe mental illness. The panel of legal experts was created by the Ohio Supreme Court and the Ohio State Bar Association and includes judges, attorneys, and legislators. Their proposal will be submitted with other recommendations to the governor and the General Assembly in 2014. Terry Russell, executive…
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Sep 26, 2013
BOOKS: “Grave Injustice: Unearthing Wrongful Executions”
Grave Injustice, a new book by Richard Stack, presents a critical examination of the death penalty through profiles of individuals who were executed but may have been innocent. Their stories are used to illustrate flaws in the death penalty, including faulty eyewitness identification, government misconduct, and ineffective representation. In examining these problems, Stack writes that the possible end of the death penalty “will not be based on its immorality…but on…
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Sep 25, 2013
Kansas May Consider Death Penalty Repeal in 2014
Legislators in Kansas have said they may debate the repeal of the death penalty in 2014. Senate Vice President Jeff King said a recent session on other criminal justice issues indicated a need for a broader discussion of sentences for murder. Senator David Haley, who supports repeal of the death penalty, said, “I believe now is the time for a discussion among those in the Legislature who consider religion a main part of their public service to decide whether it’s necessary…
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Sep 24, 2013
LETHAL INJECTION: The Ongoing Controversy Over How People Are Executed
One of the nation’s leading academic experts on the death penalty has written a new article describing how the controversy surrounding lethal injections has greatly intensified since the Supreme Court’s ruling on the subject in 2008 (Baze v. Rees). Deborah Denno, a law professor at Fordham University, analyzed over 300 court decisions in the last five years citing Baze. She found there have been more changes in lethal injection protocols in that time than in…
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Sep 23, 2013
POSSIBLE INNOCENCE: Ohio Court Dismisses Charges And Bars Retrial of Former Death Row Inmate
On September 19 the Ohio Court of Appeals affirmed a lower court’s dismissal of all charges against Thomas Keenan, a former death row inmate sentenced to death for a 1988 murder. The appeals court also barred the state from retrying Keenan. His co-defendant, Joseph D’Ambrosio, was fully exonerated in 2012 based on similar state misconduct to that found in Keenan’s trial. Keenan’s conviction was overturned by a U.S. District Court in 2012…
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Sep 20, 2013
BOOKS: “Perspectives on Capital Punishment In America”
Perspectives on Capital Punishment in America is a collection of short scholarly pieces on the death penalty system. The essays stem from the late Justice Thurgood Marshall’s belief that “death is different” and thus must be treated specially within the judicial system. The book examines issues such as wrongful convictions in capital cases, death qualification of jurors, the cost of the death penalty, felony murder rules, and the death penalty’s place in the Uniform…
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Sep 19, 2013
PUBLIC OPINION: Boston Residents Favor Life Without Parole for Suspect in Marathon Bombing
A recent poll sponsored by the Boston Globe found that a significant majority of Boston residents favor life without parole over the death penalty for Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, the Boston Marathon bombing suspect. Fifty-seven percent (57%) of respondents supported a sentence of life without parole if Tsarnaev is convicted, compared with only 33% who favored the death penalty. Sixty-one (61) percent of Democrats and 49% of Republicans (a plurality) supported a sentence of…
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Sep 18, 2013
STUDIES: ABA Criticizes Texas Death Penalty in Latest Report
On September 18, the American Bar Association’s Death Penalty Due Process Review Project released its latest report, focusing on the fairness and accuracy of Texas’s death penalty system. The report found: “In many areas, Texas appears out of step with better practices implemented in other capital jurisdictions, fails to rely upon scientifically reliable methods and processes in the administration of the death penalty, and provides the public with inadequate…
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Sep 17, 2013
Four Decades of Helping to Free the Innocent
Rob Warden, who is stepping down as the executive director of the Center on Wrongful Convictions, recently spoke about the work of finding and freeing innocent defendants. Warden helped exonerate almost 60 people, including many who had been sentenced to death. He noted that some of the success of the Center was the result of timing: “Part of it was the fortuitous advent of DNA forensic technology, which suddenly showed that many people had been wrongfully…
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Sep 16, 2013
Californians Moving Away From Death Penalty Support
In a recent op-ed, the co-author of a key study on the viability of California’s death penalty analyzed the recent dramatic shift in public opinion on capital punishment in the state. According to Paula Mitchell, adjunct professor at Loyola of Los Angeles Law School, decades of polling showed about two-thirds of Californians supported the death penalty, but the 2012 referendum to repeal the law lost by just 4 percentage points (52%-48%).
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