Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Mar 29, 2012
BOOKS: “The Inferno: A Southern Morality Tale”
A new book, “The Inferno: A Southern Morality Tale,” by Joseph Ingle, chronicles the compelling story of Philip Workman, who was executed in Tennessee in 2007. The author, a minister of the United Church of Christ who has spent decades working with those on death row, served as Mr. Workman’s pastor and tells the story from his own viewpoint, as well as those of others familiar with the case. Sister Helen…
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Mar 28, 2012
Federal Court Overturns FDA’s Approval of Foreign Shipments of Lethal Injection Drugs
On March 27, a federal District Court held that foreign-manufactured sodium thiopental was improperly approved by the Food and Drug Administration for use in executions. Judge Richard Leon (pictured) of the District Court of the District of Columbia ordered any correctional departments in possession of the drug to return it to the FDA. The ruling granted summary judgment in favor of a lawsuit filed by death row inmates in Arizona, California, and…
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Mar 27, 2012
STUDIES: New Report from Amnesty International on Worldwide Use of Death Penalty
On March 27, Amnesty International released its annual survey on the use of capital punishment worldwide, titled Death Sentences and Executions 2011. The report illustrated that the use of the death penalty has continued to decline around the world. At the end of 2011, there were 140 countries considered abolitionist in law or practice, while only 20 countries were known to have put prisoners to death in 2011. The United States was the only country…
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Mar 26, 2012
BOOKS: “In This Timeless Time”
A new book, “In this Timeless Time: Living and Dying on Death Row in America,” authors Bruce Jackson and Diane Christian explore the life of death row inmates in Texas and in other states. Jackson and Christian capture, through words and pictures, the daily experiences of inmates while also highlighting arbitrary judicial processes related to capital punishment. Sister Helen Prejean, author of Dead Man Walking, said, “With absolute…
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Mar 23, 2012
NEW RESOURCES: DEATH ROW USA Fall 2011 Now Available
The latest edition of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund’s Death Row USA shows a decrease of 52 inmates between January 1 and October 1, 2011. Over the last decade, the total population of state and federal death rows has decreased significantly, from 3,682 inmates in 2000 to 3,199 inmates as of October 2011. California continues to have the largest death row population (721), followed by Florida (402), Texas…
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Mar 22, 2012
Supreme Court to Address Consequences of Mental Incompetency During Death Penalty Appeals
The U.S. Supreme Court granted review in two cases from Arizona and Ohio to explore whether death penalty appeals can continue if the defendant is mentally incompetent. Under the Court’s prior rulings in Ford v. Wainwright (1986) and in Atkins v. Virginia (2002), defendants cannot be executed if they are insane or intellectually disabled (mentally retarded). The new cases, Ryan v. Gonzalez and…
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Mar 21, 2012
RELIGIOUS VIEWS: “Diminishing All of Us: The Death Penalty In Louisiana”
A recent study published by the Jesuit Social Research Institute of Loyola University pointed to numerous problems with Louisiana’s death penalty. In particular, the study found: — Per capita, Louisiana has one of the highest wrongful-conviction rates in the country. More people have been exonerated in Louisiana in the last ten years than executed. — Within Louisiana’s most aggressive death penalty districts, white victims are disproportionately…
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Mar 20, 2012
NEW VOICES: Kansas Judge and Religious Leaders Recommend Death Penalty Repeal
Retired District Judge Steven Becker, along with prosecutors, defense lawyers, and religious leaders, recently testified at a legislative hearing in Kansas in favor of a bill to repeal the death penalty. Judge Becker commented, “As long as the death penalty is a part of our imperfect system, there will always be the unacceptable possibility of the execution of an innocent person.” Ron Wurtz, a federal public defender and a former director of the state’s Death…
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Mar 19, 2012
EDITORIALS: ABA Report Finds Serious Problems with Missouri’s Death Penalty
The St. Louis Post-Dispatch called upon leaders in Missouri to make numerous changes to the state’s death penalty in light of a recent American Bar Association report produced by a bipartisan panel of lawyers, judges, prosecutors and law professors. The editorial highlighted many of the ABA’s recommendations, including “improving evidence standards, increasing public defender funding and creating more accountability for prosecutors.”…
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Mar 16, 2012
South Carolina Inmate Released After Nearly 30 Years on Death Row
Edward Lee Elmore was released from prison in South Carolina on March 2 after agreeing to a plea arrangement in which he maintained his innocence but agreed the state could re-convict him of murder in a new trial. He had been on death row for nearly 30 years after being convicted and sentenced to death in 1982 for the sexual assault and murder of an elderly woman in Greenwood, South Carolina. The state’s case was based on evidence gathered from a questionable investigation and on testimony…
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