Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Mar 122013

BOOKS: Gil Wanger’s Lifetime of Work Against Capital Punishment

The Michigan Committee Against Capital Punishment has pub­lished a col­lec­tion of over 40 years of tes­ti­mo­ny, brochures, and oth­er infor­ma­tion by attor­ney and death-penal­­­ty expert Eugene Wanger. The col­lec­tion begins with the res­o­lu­tion from Michigan​’s 1962 con­sti­tu­tion­al con­ven­tion ban­ning cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in the state. It includes Wanger’s tes­ti­mo­ny at numer­ous hear­ings oppos­ing bills attempt­ing to rein­state the death penalty,…

Read More

News 

Mar 112013

NEW VOICES: Retired Colorado Judge Changes Mind on Death Penalty

Leland Anderson served as a judge in Jefferson County, Colorado, sen­tenc­ing one man to death while spar­ing anoth­er. In a recent op-ed in The Denver Post, Anderson wrote how those cas­es affect­ed him:​“Those cas­es con­tin­ue to haunt me even to this day, many years after hav­ing signed off on the deci­sions with a trem­bling heart.” He said his views on the death penal­ty have changed since he was on the bench:​“I have had much time to reflect…

Read More

News 

Mar 082013

MULTIMEDIA: Animated Film Seeks to Capture Typical Death Row Story

A new ani­mat­ed film, The Last 40 Miles, will fol­low a death row inmate on his final jour­ney from the Polunsky Unit in Livingston, Texas, to the death cham­ber in Huntsville. The film uses three forms of ani­ma­tion to tell the inmate’s sto­ry, from his trag­ic child­hood to the moment he is being escort­ed to the lethal injec­tion cham­ber. The script was writ­ten by free­lance jour­nal­ist Alex Hannaford and is based on interviews he…

Read More

News 

Mar 062013

RECENT LEGISLATION: Maryland Senate Votes to Repeal Death Penalty

On March 6, the Maryland Senate passed SB 276 by a vote of 27 – 20. The bill replaces the death penal­ty with a sen­tence of life with­out parole for future offens­es. The bill appears like­ly to pass the House of Delegates, and Governor Martin O’Malley has pledged to sign it. The bill would not affect the inmates cur­rent­ly on death row. If passed by the House and signed into law, Maryland would become the sixth state in six years, and the 18th over­all to abandon…

Read More

News 

Mar 052013

NEW VOICES: Missouri Senator Supports Death Penalty Repeal

Missouri State Senator Gina Walsh recent­ly voiced her sup­port for Senate Bill 247, a bill to repeal the death penal­ty and replace it with life with­out parole. Sen. Walsh cit­ed the lack of deter­rence and unfair­ness as her pri­ma­ry con­cerns about cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment.​“It does­n’t deter crime. It dis­crim­i­nates against racial minori­ties and poor peo­ple who can’t afford attor­neys,” Walsh said. The bill was recent­ly heard in the Judiciary and Civil and Criminal…

Read More

News 

Mar 042013

Death Penalty Costs Diverting Money from Urgent Criminal Justice Needs

On March 3, Up with Chris Hayes on MSNBC dis­cussed how eco­nom­ic con­cerns are shift­ing more atten­tion to the high costs of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. Guest Bryan Stevenson (left), Executive Director of the Equal Justice Initiative, described how the mil­lions of dol­lars spent on the death penal­ty could be used else­where:​“Maryland’s [death penal­ty repeal] bill actu­al­ly will give mon­ey and resources to the fam­i­lies of peo­ple who’ve lost…

Read More

News 

Mar 012013

MULTIMEDIA: Prof. John Bessler Takes Listeners on an Historical Journey Exploring Arbitrariness in the Death Penalty

DPIC is proud to present its lat­est pod­cast, fea­tur­ing award-win­n­ing author John Bessler dis­cussing the his­tor­i­cal roots of the death penal­ty and the cur­rent prob­lem of arbi­trari­ness in its appli­ca­tion. Bessler is a law pro­fes­sor at the University of Baltimore School of Law and author of Cruel and Unusual: The American Death Penalty and the Founders’ Eighth Amendment. Prof. Bessler shares his exper­tise on the surprising…

Read More

News 

Feb 282013

NEW VOICES: Former Warden, Victim Advocate, and Governor Urge Repeal in Oregon

On February 26, the House Judiciary Committee in Oregon held a hear­ing on repeal­ing the death penal­ty. Among those tes­ti­fy­ing was Frank Thompson, a for­mer super­in­ten­dent of the Oregon State Penitentiary, who over­saw the state’s last two exe­cu­tions. Thompson told the com­mit­tee the death penal­ty does not deter crime, fails to make the pub­lic safer, and places prison work­ers in an unten­able posi­tion:​“Asking decent men and…

Read More

News 

Feb 272013

STUDIES: Six-Part Series Explores Mental Illness and the Death Penalty in Texas

The Texas Tribune recent­ly pub­lished a six-part series exam­in­ing the plight of men­tal­ly ill defen­dants in the Texas crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem. The series focused par­tic­u­lar­ly on death penal­ty cas­es, includ­ing that of Andre Thomas, a man with a long his­to­ry of men­tal ill­ness. He pulled his own eye out in 2004, and lat­er explained that he did it because he kept see­ing his wife, whom he killed along with his chil­dren just days…

Read More