Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Aug 09, 2013
Resources for Students and Teachers Returning to School
As the start of the new school year approaches, we wanted to remind educators and students of the excellent free resources DPIC offers. Our college curriculum, Capital Punishment in Context, uses a case-study model to introduce students to the death penalty system and allows them to access more in-depth research on a variety of topics, such as innocence, race, and mental illness. Each case includes relevant links to outside resources, including…
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Aug 08, 2013
False Confessions and Threats of the Death Penalty
A recent article in The Atlantic by Marc Bookman (pictured) shows how threats of the death penalty can contribute to false confessions. The piece recounts a Pennsylvania murder case in which two defendants, Russell Weinberger and Felix Rodriguez, admitted to a murder they did not commit, leading to their imprisonment for over 21 years. Rodriguez described his interrogation:“First they showed me pictures of the dead guy. I started…
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Aug 07, 2013
Special Master in Missouri Finds Prosecutors Hid Evidence of Coerced Confession
On August 7, the Special Master assigned to review the case of Reginald Clemons (pictured) in Missouri announced that prosecutors withheld evidence indicating detectives beat Clemons into confessing to rape and murder that led to his death sentence. Clemons recanted the confession, but a tape of it was played at trial and he was convicted in 1993. No physical evidence linked him to the rape. Judge Michael Manners, who conducted…
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Aug 06, 2013
INTERNATIONAL: New Report on the Death Penalty in Malaysia
A new report by the London-based Death Penalty Project explores the use of mandatory death sentencing in Malaysia. In the U.S., the Supreme Court barred the use of mandatory death sentences in 1976, holding that judges and juries needed to consider the individual differences among defendants, out of respect for human diginity. (Woodson v. North Carolina, and other opinions). DPP’s report found that the number of executions…
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Aug 05, 2013
DEATH ROW: Ohio Inmate Found Hanged Days Before Scheduled Execution
On August 4, Ohio death row inmate Billy Slagle was found hanged in his prison cell, three days before he was scheduled to be executed. Slagle did not know that prosecutors had recently revealed that their office had been prepared to offer a plea deal to avoid a death sentence at the time of his trial 26 years ago. That deal was not conveyed to Slagle by his attorneys. This new information was part of a request for a stay of execution sent to…
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Aug 02, 2013
LETHAL INJECTION: Shortage of Drugs Leaves Texas Unsure About Future Executions
On August 1, the Texas Department of Criminal Justice announced its remaining supply of pentobarbital, used for lethal injections, expires in September, and it is unsure where to obtain more. The drug’s manufacturer, Lundbeck, Inc., has barred distribution to states intending to use the drug…
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Aug 01, 2013
MILITARY DEATH PENALTY: Armed Services Rarely Carry Out Executions
Criminal cases in the U.S. Military are conducted in special courts and under laws that differ from the rest of the country’s justice system. Executions in this system are extremely rare. There have been no executions since 1961.“The military is a community of solidarity, a brotherhood and sisterhood, all to its own,” said Teresa Norris, a former military defense lawyer who still represents a soldier on death row.“There is a real reluctance…
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Jul 31, 2013
FEDERAL DEATH PENALTY: Controversy With Rhode Island Ends in Plea Deal
The federal death penalty is controversial because it can be applied even in the 18 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico that have elected not to have capital punishment in their own law. Out of respect for the people of Rhode Island–a non-death penalty state – the governor, Lincoln Chafee (pictured), resisted turning over a defendant in 2011 to face the federal death penalty. The defendant, Jason Pleau, agreed to plead…
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Jul 30, 2013
NEW VOICES: Retiring Federal Judge Condemns Death Penalty as Biased and Broken
Judge Boyce Martin took the occasion of his final death-penalty decision from the bench of the U.S. Court of Appeals to sharply criticize capital punishment in this country. While upholding the conviction and death sentence of the defendant, Harold Nichols, Judge Martin said,“I continue to condemn the use of the death penalty as an arbitrary, biased, and broken criminal justice tool.” He noted that the many years since Nichols’s conviction in 1990…
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Jul 29, 2013
UPCOMING EXECUTION: Florida’s Narrow Interpretation of Mental Competency Leads to New Date
UPDATE: Ferguson was executed on Aug. 5. Florida has set an August 5 execution date for John Ferguson, a death row inmate who has suffered from severe mental illness for more than four decades. As far back as 1965, Ferguson was found to experience visual hallucinations. He was sent to mental institutions and was diagnosed as paranoid schizophrenic, delusional, and aggressive. In 1975, a mental health doctor described Ferguson as…
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