Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
May 22, 2013
Nation’s Longest Serving Death Row Inmate Dies 40 Years After Conviction
Gary Alvord, a Florida inmate who spent more time on death row than any other inmate in the country, died on May 19 of natural causes. Alvord was 66 years old and had been sentenced to death for murder almost 40 years ago, on April 9, 1974. He suffered from schizophrenia and had no close family. Bill Sheppard, who represented Alvord for almost four decades, said,“Gary is a product of a sick system. He was a living example of why we…
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May 21, 2013
NEW VOICES: Former Prosecutor Calls for Clemency in Upcoming Colorado Execution
The former Chief Deputy District Attorney from the county that prosecuted Nathan Dunlap has called on Colorado’s governor to commute his death sentence to life without parole. Richard Bloch (pictured), who prosecuted dozens of homicide cases during his 20 years with the Arapahoe County DA’s office, said he believes the state’s capital punishment system is too broken to implement:“Having worked on many homicides,…
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May 20, 2013
Texas Enacts “Michael Morton Act” Intended to Reduce Wrongful Convictions
On May 16, Texas Governor Rick Perry signed a bill known as the“Michael Morton Act” that will require prosecutors to open their files to defendants and keep records of the evidence they disclose. The Act is named for Michael Morton (pictured), who was convicted and sentenced to life in prison in 1987. He was exonerated in 2011 after DNA evidence revealed that someone else had murdered his wife. Morton’s lawyers discovered that the original prosecutor…
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May 17, 2013
NEW VOICES: Oregon Leaders Speak Out About the Death Penalty
At a recent event at Willamette University in Oregon, various state leaders in the fields of law and criminal justice spoke critically about the state’s death penalty. Former Supreme Court Chief Justice Paul De Muniz (pictured) said the death penalty was“bad public policy,” almost never resulting in an execution. He spoke of having defended a murderer sentenced to death in 1988. Twenty-five years later, the Justice noted, he is now…
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May 16, 2013
LETHAL INJECTION: British Manufacturer Stops Drug Supply to Arkansas for Executions
The British manufacturer Hikma Pharmaceuticals recently announced new rules to restrict the supply of its products for unintended uses, such as carrying out executions in the United States. Earlier this year, Reprieve, a legal advocacy organization based in London, found that a U.S. subsidiary of Hikma sold 100 grams of phenobarbital to the Arkansas Department of Corrections. Arkansas decided to use the new, untested…
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May 15, 2013
Former Death Row Inmates Are Ambassadors of Change
A recent article in The Nation by David Love, the Director of Witness to Innocence, underscored the important role of people like Kirk Bloodsworth and Shujaa Graham (pictured), who were once on death row and now have been freed. These and many of the 140 other people who have been exonerated from death row have traveled the country, speaking to legislators, students, church groups, and the general public about the…
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May 14, 2013
POSSIBLE INNOCENCE: DNA Results Indicate Death Row Inmate May Be Innocent
Lawyers for Clemente Javier Aguirre recently presented the results of DNA testing to a Florida court, casting serious doubt on his guilt. Aguirre was sentenced to death for the murder of two women in 2006. Although the DNA evidence was available at the time of his trial, Aguirre’s trial lawyer never requested testing of the crime-scene evidence. Aguirre’s current lawyers said that DNA results from dozens of items did not reveal Aguirre’s blood at the crime…
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May 13, 2013
NEW VOICES: Nebraska Senator Changes Course After Hearing from Victims’ Families
As Nebraska’s legislature began debate on a bill to repeal the death penalty, one senator explained how his views on the issue had evolved. In an op-ed in the Lincoln Journal Star, Sen. Colby Coash said that his participation with a group celebrating an execution led him to oppose the death penalty:“I made a decision during my shame that I would no longer be a part of someone’s death.” A second influence was his conversations with…
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May 10, 2013
BOOKS: “Women Who Kill Men” – An Historical and Social Analysis
Women Who Kill Men: California Courts, Gender, and the Press examines the role that gender played in the trials of women accused of murder in California between 1870 – 1958. The authors trace the changing views of the public towards women and how these views may have affected the outcomes of the cases. Some defendants faced the death penalty and were executed; some were spared. Often the public was deeply fascinated with all aspects…
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May 09, 2013
EDITORIALS: Colorado Case Raises Doubts About Entire Death Penalty System
Colorado recently set an execution date in August for Nathan Dunlap, who has been convicted of multiple murders. This would be first execution in the state in 16 years. In an editorial, the Aurora Sentinel recommended that the governor spare his life, not because of doubts about his guilt, but because of doubts about other aspects of the process that led to his death sentence:“There is simply too much doubt about the effectiveness of the…
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