Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
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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Mar 15, 2012
BOOKS: “Most Deserving of Death?”
A new book by law professor Kenneth Williams of South Texas College of Law, titled Most Deserving of Death? An Analysis of the Supreme Court’s Death Penalty Jurisprudence, examines whether the death penalty system really punishes the worst offenders, as intended by the Supreme Court’s approval of state laws. The book looks at issues such as jury selection, ineffective assistance of counsel, innocence, and race, and how these issues reflect on who is sentenced to…
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Mar 14, 2012
INNOCENCE: Prevalent Causes of False Confessions
A recent article in the New York Times discussed the most common reasons why suspects under interrogation confess to crimes they did not commit. The article, adapted from “Rights at Risk: The Limits of Liberty in Modern America,” a forthcoming book written by David Shipler, observed an overrepresentation of children, the mentally ill, those with intellectual disabilities, and those who are drunk or high among suspects who…
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Mar 13, 2012
OP-ED: “Abolishing Death Penalty Was Right Choice for State”
Charles Hoffman, an assistant defender in the Office of the Illinois State Appellate Defender, recently wrote an op-ed in the Chicago Sun-Times, marking a year since the death penalty was repealed in Illinois. Hoffman, who has argued more than 30 death penalty cases before the Illinois Supreme Court, says that repealing the death penalty was the right choice for the state: “The rightness of that decision is more…
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Mar 13, 2012
EDITORIALS: “Maryland’s Broken Death Penalty”
A recent editorial in The Washington Post highlighted ongoing problems with Maryland’s death penalty despite legislation passed in 2009 meant to reform the system. According to the editorial, “the legislature’s reform fixed nothing; if anything, it codified a system even more arbitrary than the one it replaced. Now the nature of the evidence, rather than the barbarity of the crime, is the critical factor. So a murder conviction based on DNA evidence…
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Mar 12, 2012
U.S. Supreme Court Denies California Death Row Inmate’s Request for New Attorneys
On March 5, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously ruled that California inmate Kenneth Clair cannot have his conviction overturned because he disagreed with the defense strategy used by his attorneys. Clair was represented by court-appointed attorneys because he could not afford to hire his own. The dispute arose after Clair complained his attorneys were ignoring evidence found by the prosecution that might prove his innocence. In 2005, he filed…
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Mar 09, 2012
A Special Request from DPIC
Today, in lieu of a news update, we are making a special request of our readers. In order to continue our efforts to provide the most comprehensive, up-to-date information on the death penalty, we need your help. Please consider making a contribution to this important work. Whether you are an educator, an attorney, a journalist, or a concerned citizen, you may have found value in the information we provide. By donating today, you help DPIC’s work…
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Mar 09, 2012
STUDIES: American Bar Association Recommends Reforms to Missouri’s Death Penalty
The American Bar Association has released a report on Missouri’s capital punishment system after a two-year study of the state’s death penalty. The study was conducted by legal experts, including former and current judges, lawyers, and law professors. Douglas Copeland, a member of the assessment team and former president of the Missouri Bar, said “We identified substantial problems with the death penalty in Missouri. Our group unanimously agreed there are key…
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