Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Feb 12, 2013
NEW VOICES: Father of Slain Corrections Officer Reverses Course on Death Penalty
In a recent op-ed, the father of slain Colorado corrections officer Eric Autobee (pictured) explained why he no longer supported the death penalty and is working for its repeal. Writing in the Pueblo Chieftain, Bob Autobee, himself a veteran corrections officer, said the pursuit of the death penalty in his son’s case caused an“unspeakable emotional toll” on his family. He wrote,“Given what…
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Feb 11, 2013
Federal Court Halts Louisiana Execution As State Rushes Out New Execution Process
On February 7, federal District Court Judge James Brady stayed the execution of Christopher Sepulvado in Louisiana because the state failed to provide details about its new execution protocol.“Sepulvado has been trying to determine what the protocol is for years,” Judge Brady wrote,“and the State will not provide this information. The intransigence of the State Defendants in failing to produce the…
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Feb 08, 2013
FOREIGN NATIONALS: Information About Foreign Citizens on U.S. Death Rows
New information on foreign nationals facing the death penalty in the U.S. is now available through Mark Warren of Human Rights Research. This DPIC page includes information on 143 foreign citizens from 37 countries on state and federal death rows. California has the most (59 inmates), followed by Texas (24), and Florida (23). Many of these inmates were not informed of their right to contact…
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Feb 07, 2013
EDITORIALS: Montana Paper Calls for Repeal
A recent editorial in the Great Falls Tribune in Montana outlined some of the key problems with the death penalty as the state legislature considers its repeal. The editors expressed concerns about the risks of mistake with executions:“There is no way to take back an execution. That reason alone provides good cause to eliminate the death penalty in Montana.” The paper also noted that victims’ families wait for decades…
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Feb 06, 2013
First Death Row Inmate Exonerated Through DNA Returns, Calling for Death Penalty Repeal
A recent article in the New York Times highlighted the story of Kirk Bloodsworth, who was the first death row inmate in the country to be exonerated by DNA testing. Bloodsworth, a former Marine, was sentenced to death in 1984 for the rape and murder of a 9‑year-old girl outside of Baltimore, Maryland. After DNA evidence led to his exoneration and release in 1993, Bloodsworth began working against capital…
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Feb 05, 2013
BOOKS: The Impact of the Death Penalty on Attorneys for the Condemned
A forthcoming book, Fighting for Their Lives: Inside the Experience of Capital Defense Attorneys by Susannah Sheffer, explores the impact of the death penalty on defense attorneys with clients on death row. Through interviews with capital defenders, the author examines how attorneys try to cope with the stress of representing clients facing execution. Sister Helen Prejean, author of Dead Man Walking, said,“This is an important book. The…
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Feb 04, 2013
Conservatives and Republicans Support Death Penalty Repeal Bill in Montana
A bipartisan group of legislators in Montana will introduce a bill to replace the state’s death penalty with a sentence of life without parole. The sponsors include two Republicans and two Democrats. A coalition of conservative lawmakers, religious groups, and human rights groups support the repeal of capital punishment. Republican Sen. Matthew Rosendale (pictured), a member of Conservatives Concerned About the Death…
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Feb 01, 2013
STUDIES: Racial Bias in Houston’s Use of Death Penalty
In a new study in Harris County (Houston), Texas, criminologist Scott Phillips found significant racial and gender disparities in the application of the death penalty under former District Attorney Charles Rosenthal. Prof. Phillips of the University of Denver examined homicides from 2001 to 2008 and found that death sentences were imposed on behalf of white victims at 2.5 times the rate one would expect if the system were race neutral.
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Jan 31, 2013
Texas Court Stays Execution for Fourth Time to Study DNA Evidence
On January 30, a Texas judge stayed the execution of Larry Swearingen, scheduled for February 27. Swearingen’s lawyers argued more time was required to complete DNA testing agreed to by the prosecution, which they believe will prove his innocence. This is the fourth such delay he has received. Five forensic experts have concluded that the decomposition of the victim’s body shows she was killed while Swearingen was in jail on unrelated…
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Jan 30, 2013
ARBITRARINESS: Pennsylvania’s Costly and Broken Death Penalty System
The theory of the death penalty is that prosecutors select offenders who have committed aggravated murder and obtain death sentences for the most heinous offenders through a scrupulous trial with full due process. The reality in Pennsylvania is radically different. Hundreds of inmates have been sentenced to death, but of the cases that have completed the appeals process, 100% have been overturned, mostly because of errors in the conviction or…
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