Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Sep 21, 2012
STUDIES: Reasons Behind the Abolition of the Death Penalty in Illinois
A new report by Rob Warden (pictured), Executive Director of the Center on Wrongful Convictions, explores the conditions that led to the end of Illinois’s death penalty in 2011. Warden says abolition came about because of a series of fortuitous circumstances, but also because of the work of countless attorneys, academics, journalists and activists who took advantage of these developments. The cavalcade of exonerations from death row,…
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Sep 20, 2012
INNOCENCE: Wrongful Convictions Demonstrate Risk with California Death Penalty
Several cases in California illustrate the inherent risk with the death penalty that an innocent person could be executed. Lee Farmer was freed from death row in 1999 after winning a new trial based on newly discovered evidence that an accomplice admitted to the crime for which he faced execution. Farmer was acquitted of murder at his retrial. Troy Lee Jones (pictured) was sentenced to death even though there were no…
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Sep 19, 2012
NEW VOICES: Conservatives Seek to Repeal the Death Penalty in Montana
In Montana, a conservative political group is calling for an end to the death penalty after a recent court ruling held the state’s execution protocol unconstitutional. Former Republican state Senator Roy Brown said,“Conservatives dislike waste and inefficiency. That is why we should cast a critical eye when the state is involved with the business of executing people…. When it takes over 20 years and hundreds of thousands of tax…
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Sep 18, 2012
NEW VOICES: A Mother Shares Her Grief and Joins the Call for Mercy
When Vicki Schieber’s (pictured) daughter, Shannon, was murdered in Philadelphia in 1998, she and her family felt enormous grief.“Losing a loved one to murder,” she recently wrote in the Philadelphia Inquirer,“is a tragedy of unimaginable proportions. At first, my husband and I didn’t know how we could go on with our lives.” Nevertheless, because of their beliefs,“we did not want the man who murdered our daughter to be put to death.” Now she is…
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Sep 17, 2012
REPRESENTATION: Georgia Death Sentence Upheld Despite Drunk Trial Attorney
A federal appeals court upheld the death sentence of Georgia inmate Robert Holsey (pictured), despite the fact that Holsey’s lead lawyer drank a quart of vodka every day during the trial and was about to be sued for stealing client funds. The attorney himself testified that he“probably shouldn’t have been allowed to represent anybody.” The court assumed the attorney’s incompetence, but gave great deference to the Georgia Supreme Court’s opinion that…
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Sep 14, 2012
EDITORIALS: Evidence Does Not Support Death Penalty As Deterrent
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Sep 13, 2012
RESOURCES: New Study Examines Effect of Death Penalty on Plea Bargaining
A recent study by Sherod Thaxton (pictured) of the University of Chicago Law School examined the effect of the threat of the death penalty on plea bargaining. Using statistical analysis of charging and sentencing data in Georgia between 1993 and 2000, Thaxton found that the possibility of a death sentence increased the likelihood of a plea bargain:“deterring two out of every ten death noticed defendants from pursuing a trial.” However, the lower number of trials…
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Sep 12, 2012
NEW VOICES: Philadelphia Archbishop Denounces Death Penalty and Urges Clemency for Terrance Williams
In his weekly column, Archbishop Charles Chaput of Philadelphia voiced the Catholic Church’s ongoing opposition to the death penalty in the U.S. and called for clemency for Pennsylvania death row inmate Terrance Williams.“We don’t need to kill people to protect society or punish the guilty. And we should never be eager to take anyone’s life,” the Archbishop said. He addressed the needs of murder victims’ families, saying…
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Sep 11, 2012
TIME ON DEATH ROW: After 34 Years, California’s First Death Case Continues
Douglas Stankewitz, a Native American, was the first person sent to California’s death row after capital punishment was reinstated in 1978. Thirty-four years later, he remains there as his appeals continue. His conviction was overturned in 1982 because he had not received a mental competency hearing, despite findings by court-appointed doctors that he was mentally unstable and brain-damaged as a result of childhood abuse. His second trial is now…
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Sep 10, 2012
EDITORIALS: Sacramento Bee Ends Support for Death Penalty
The Sacramento Bee announced in an editorial that it is reversing its historic 150-year support of the death penalty and endorsing the repeal of California’s capital punishment law. The editorial called the state’s death penalty an“illusion,” which is rarely carried out, despite the large number of death sentences. It cited the high cost of the death penalty as one of the reasons for supporting repeal, noting,…
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