Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Jun 22, 2012
Arkansas Supreme Court Holds Lethal Injection Law Unconstitutional
On June 22, the Arkansas Supreme Court struck down the state’s lethal injection law as unconstitutional because it delegated too much authority to the Department of Corrections. In a 5 – 2 decision, the court sided with 10 death row inmates who argued that, under Arkansas’s constitution, only the Legislature can set execution policy, and that legislators violated the state’s separation of powers doctrine when it voted to give that authority to the prison system in the Method of…
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Jun 21, 2012
COSTS: Lack of Adequate Funding Causing Shortage of Death Penalty Attorneys in Louisiana
In Louisiana, a lack of adequate funding for indigent defense in death penalty cases is causing a critical shortage of qualified counsel and long delays in cases. John Di Giulio, a member of the Louisiana Public Defender Board, said that public defenders and regional offices that represent death penalty clients are “overworked and underfunded.” Mike Mitchell, chief public defender of the East Baton Rouge Public Defender’s office, attributed the shortage of lawyers to the…
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Jun 20, 2012
DEATH ROW: Former Texas Death Row Inmate Testifies at Congressional Hearings on Solitary Confinement
On June 19, the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights and Human Rights held hearings on solitary confinement in U.S. prisons, including the conditions of many state death rows. The hearings marked the first time lawmakers on Capitol Hill have considered this issue. Anthony Graves (pictured r., along with Sen. Richard Durbin), a former Texas death row inmate, described the conditions of his incarceration in…
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Jun 19, 2012
MENTAL ILLNESS: Ohio Execution Halted After Inmate Found Mentally Incompetent
On June 18, the Ohio Supreme Court stayed the execution of Abdul Awkal (pictured) indefinitely following a county court’s ruling that he was mentally incompetent to face execution. Awkal was originally scheduled for execution on June 6, but shortly before the execution Governor John Kasich granted a two-week reprieve to allow time for a mental competency hearing. Judge Stuart Friedman presided over that hearing and subsequently ruled that Awkal was too…
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Jun 18, 2012
NEW RESOURCES: Latest Death Row USA Report Now Available
The latest edition of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund’s Death Row USA shows a decrease of 19 inmates between January 1 and April 1, 2012. Over the last decade, the total population of state and federal death rows has decreased significantly, from 3,682 inmates in 2000 to 3,170 inmates as of April 2012. California continues to have the largest death row population (724), followed by Florida (407), Texas (308), Pennsylvania (204), and Alabama (200). Neither California nor…
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Jun 15, 2012
RACE: After Judge Finds Statewide Racial Bias in Jury Selection, North Carolina Legislators Move to Repeal Racial Justice Act
On June 13, the North Carolina House of Representatives approved a bill to essentially overturn the state’s Racial Justice Act (RJA), a groundbreaking law that allowed a finding of racial bias in sentencing or jury selection based on sophisticated statistical…
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Jun 14, 2012
EDITORIALS: Intellectual Disabilities and Death Sentences
The editors of the Birmingham News in Alabama recenlty called upon a trial court to overrule a jury’s 10 – 2 recommendation for death in the case of Esaw Jackson because of his mental disabilities. While noting that in many states Jackson would not even be eligible for the death penalty following a non-unanimous vote, the News added that an IQ test, conducted by a state expert on Jackson, showed an IQ of 56, well below the level that generally…
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Jun 13, 2012
NEW VOICES: Former Prosecutor and Sentencing Judge Say Ohio Death Sentence Inappropriate
The prosecutor who helped secure the death sentence of John Eley (pictured) and one of the presiding judges who sentenced him to death recently asked the Ohio Parole Board to recommend clemency instead. Former Mahoning County prosecutor Gary Van Brocklin told the state parole board that Eley should be spared from execution because the type of crime he committed is no longer usually prosecuted as a death penalty case and is…
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Jun 12, 2012
DETERRENCE: Why the Studies Have Failed to Produce Reliable Results
Two researchers at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, Professors Justin Wolfers (pictured) and Betsey Stevenson, recently explained why decades of studies have failed to show a reliable deterrent effect from the death penalty. The authors cited a 2012 report from the National Academy of Sciences, concluding that the deterrence studies of the past 30 years “should not influence policy judgments about capital punishment.” Wolfers…
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Jun 11, 2012
Court Requires Greater Public Access for Viewing Executions
On June 8, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled that witnesses should have full viewing-access to executions carried out in Idaho, siding with the Associated Press and other media outlets. Seventeen news organizations had argued that the state’s protocol was unconstitutionally restrictive because it prevented witnesses, including reporters acting as representatives of the public, from viewing executions until after catheters had been inserted into…
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