Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Jan 28, 2013
NEW VOICES: Ohio Supreme Court Justice Calls Death Penalty Unconstitutional
Ohio Supreme Court Justice William O’Neill recently voted to strike down the death penalty, when he dissented in an order setting an execution date for Jeffrey Wogenstahl. Justice O’Neill wrote, “I would hold that capital punishment violates the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States and Article I, Section 9 of the Ohio Constitution. The death penalty is inherently both cruel and unusual and therefore is unconstitutional. Capital punishment dates back to…
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Jan 25, 2013
NEW RESOURCES: View DPIC’s Latest Infographics as a Slide Show
The Death Penalty Information Center has introduced a new series of graphs and quotes from prominent individuals, emphasizing various death penalty issues. These infographics have been displayed on Facebook and other outlets in the past few months. We are now offering them serially in a slide show on DPIC’s website. The graphics can be individually downloaded for use in various mediums. The slide show is available at this link. The infographics are…
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Jan 24, 2013
LAW REVIEWS: The Enduring Significance of Studies Showing Racial Bias in the Death Penalty
Professor Samuel R. Gross (pictured) of the University of Michigan Law School has published an article in the Iowa Law Review examining the historical importance of a series of studies showing racial bias in the death penalty. The issue of race was brought to a head by the Supreme Court’s consideration of McCleskey v. Kemp in 1987. McCleskey focused on a statistical examination of Georgia death sentences conducted by David Baldus.
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Jan 23, 2013
RACE: Dallas District Attorney Supports Racial Justice Act for Texas
Dallas County (Texas) District Attorney Craig Watkins said he plans to advocate for a state law to allow death row inmates to appeal their conviction or sentence using studies showing that racial bias affected the process. Such laws have been passed in North Carolina and Kentucky and are referred to as a “Racial Justice Act.” Watkins said, “Throughout history, race has unfortunately played a part, an ugly part, in our criminal justice system. This is an…
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Jan 22, 2013
BOOKS: “Capital Punishment’s Collateral Damage”
A new book by Professor Robert Bohm of the University of Central Florida examines the personal impact of capital punishment on those involved in the criminal justice system, beyond the victim and perpetrator of the crime. Bohm listened to those involved in all steps of the judicial process, including investigators, jurors, and the execution team. He has probed the effects of the death penalty on the families of both the murder victim and the offender. The book,…
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Jan 21, 2013
NEW VOICES: Conservative Leader Says Its Time to Rethink the Death Penalty
Richard Viguerie has been called the “funding father of the conservative movement,” and has helped start such initiatives as the Conservative Digest and the Moral Majority. He was recently interviewed in Sojourners Magazine, where he spoke about his faith-based opposition to capital punishment. He said the issue of innocence was a key problem: “I’ve become aware that throughout history, many innocent people have been convicted of crimes and executed. There…
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Jan 18, 2013
BOOKS: “Where Justice and Mercy Meet: Catholic Opposition to the Death Penalty”
A new book, “Where Justice and Mercy Meet: Catholic Opposition to the Death Penalty,” offers a comprehensive discussion of Catholic teaching on capital punishment. It explores a wide range of issues related to the death penalty, including racism, mental illness, and economic disparities. The book is edited by Trudy Conway and David Matzko McCarthy, both professors at Mount St. Mary’s University, and Vicki Schieber – the mother of a murder victim. It includes a…
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Jan 17, 2013
NEW VOICES: Arkansas Governor Reverses Position on Death Penalty
Arkansas Governor Mike Beebe recently said he would sign legislation outlawing the death penalty if legislators were to send him such a bill. Beebe ran for governor as a supporter of capital punishment, but said the experience of signing a death warrant for the first time caused his thinking on the issue to change. “It is an agonizing process, whether you’re for the death penalty or against the death penalty,” the governor said. “Everybody can claim they’re for it until…
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Jan 16, 2013
First Inmate to be Executed in 2013 Asked for Death Penalty; Exhibited Severe Mental Illness
Robert Gleason is scheduled to be the first person executed in the U.S. in 2013 on the night of January 16 in Virginia. At his trial, he told the court he wanted the death penalty and has waived all his appeals since his conviction. He has chosen to be executed by electrocution. Gleason’s lawyers maintain he is severely mentally ill and his mental capacity has deteriorated during his time on death row. He suffers from extreme paranoia, delusional thinking,…
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Jan 15, 2013
LEGISLATION: Maryland Governor Makes Death Penalty Repeal a Priority
On January 15 at a press conference with leaders of the NAACP, Maryland’s Governor Martin O’Malley announced he will be making the repeal of capital punishment a priority in the upcoming legislative session and will submit a repeal bill to the legislature later this week. Among the concerns about the death penalty expressed by the governor were its high costs and the lack of any benefit to society: “Is it worth wasting taxpayer dollars on a policy that does not work?” Senate…
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