Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Feb 212012

NEW VOICES: Former Florida Supreme Court Justice Calls for Unanimous Juries in Death Cases

A recent op-ed in the Miami Herald by Raoul Cantero (pic­tured), for­mer Justice of the Florida Supreme Court, called for state leg­is­la­tors to require una­nim­i­ty in the penal­ty phase of death penal­ty tri­als. Five years ago, a study con­duct­ed by the American Bar Association found that Florida was an out­lier in allow­ing cap­i­tal juries to find aggra­vat­ing cir­cum­stances and rec­om­mend death sen­tences by a sim­ple major­i­ty. The op-ed, co-writ­ten by Mark Schlakman, a member of…

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News 

Feb 202012

STUDIES: Military Death Sentence More Likely for Defendants of Color

A recent study pub­lished in the Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology about the U.S. Military death penal­ty sys­tem found that racial dis­par­i­ties among those sen­tenced to death are worse in the mil­i­tary than in oth­er crim­i­nal courts. The study, con­duct­ed by Catherine Grosso of Michigan State’s College of Law, the late David Baldus of the University of Iowa College of Law, and oth­ers, reviewed all poten­tial­ly death-eli­gi­ble mil­i­tary prosecutions from…

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News 

Feb 172012

RACE: First Hearing Under Racial Justice Act Concludes in North Carolina

The first hear­ing to decide whether there has been sig­nif­i­cant evi­dence of racial dis­crim­i­na­tion in the appli­ca­tion of North Carolinas death penal­ty was con­clud­ed on February 15. Cumberland County Judge Gregory A. Weeks, who presided over the two-and-a-half week hear­ing, will offer a deci­sion based on the state’s Racial Justice Act in the next few weeks. Much of the his­toric pro­ceed­ing focused on whether race played an improp­er role in jury selection on…

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News 

Feb 162012

Sentence Near Under Maryland’s New Death Penalty Law

In 2009, Maryland changed its cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment law, sharply lim­it­ing when the death penal­ty could be sought. Prosecutors can only pur­sue the death penal­ty in cas­es of first degree mur­der when there is DNA or oth­er bio­log­i­cal evi­dence link­ing the defen­dant to a mur­der, a video-taped con­fes­sion by the defen­dant, or a video link­ing the defen­dant to the mur­der. As the first case test­ing this statute nears com­ple­tion, DPICs Executive Director, Richard Dieter (pic­tured), was…

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News 

Feb 152012

TIME ON DEATH ROW: Florida to Execute Inmate After Three Decades on Death Row

On February 15, Florida is sched­uled to exe­cute Robert Waterhouse, a 65-year-old inmate who was sen­tenced to death for a 1980 mur­der in St. Petersburg. Waterhouse has been on Florida’s death row for over three decades, longer than any inmate pre­vi­ous­ly exe­cut­ed by the state. His orig­i­nal death sen­tence was over­turned in 1988 after his appel­late attor­ney argued that Waterhouse’s tri­al lawyer erred by not pre­sent­ing the court with important mitigating…

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News 

Feb 132012

NEW VOICES: Sponsor of California’s 1978 Death Penalty Initiative Now Supports Repeal

Ron Briggs, spon­sor of the ini­tia­tive which expand­ed Californias death penal­ty law in 1978, recent­ly announced his sup­port for repeal of the law. Writing in the Los Angeles Times, Ron Briggs explained that the 1978 Briggs Initiative was meant to give pros­e­cu­tors bet­ter tools for met­ing out just pun­ish­ments, and that a broad­ened statute would serve as a warn­ing to all California evil­do­ers that the state would deliv­er swift and final jus­tice” and creat[e] a national…

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News 

Feb 102012

BOOKS: A Murder Case Gone Wrong”

Raymond Bonner’s new book, Anatomy of Injustice: A Murder Case Gone Wrong, is about to be pub­lished and was not­ed ear­li­er by DPIC. An excerpt from the book appeared recent­ly in The Atlantic. Andrew Cohen, also writ­ing in The Atlantic, called it the book of the cen­tu­ry about the death penal­ty.” Cohen commented that Bonner’s book comes at a cru­cial time in the mod­ern his­to­ry of the death penal­ty. It comes at a time when views are…

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News 

Feb 092012

RACE: Historic Hearing Begun in North Carolina Under New Anti-Bias Law

The first hear­ing under North Carolina’s Racial Justice Act con­vened at the begin­ning of February for death row inmate Marcus Robinson. The Racial Justice Act was passed in 2009, allow­ing death row inmates to use empir­i­cal and sta­tis­ti­cal data to demon­strate racial bias in their con­vic­tion or sen­tenc­ing. Following changes in North Carolina’s leg­is­la­ture in the 2010 elec­tions, there were efforts to repeal the Act. Governor Perdue vetoed a repeal bill and the…

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News 

Feb 082012

NEW RESOURCES: Latest DEATH ROW USA Report Now Available

The lat­est edi­tion of the NAACP Legal Defense Funds Death Row USA shows a decrease of 31 inmates between January 1 and July 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 3,220 inmates in 2011. The per­cent­age of Latino inmates fac­ing exe­cu­tion, how­ev­er, has steadi­ly increased over the years. In 1991, Latinos made up 6% of the nation’s death row. In 2011, Latinos…

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News 

Feb 072012

BOOKS: Cruel and Unusual: The American Death Penalty and the Founders’ Eighth Amendment”

(Winner: Silver Medal in the U.S. History cat­e­go­ry in the Independent Publisher Book Awards). A new book by Professor John D. Bessler, titled Cruel and Unusual: The American Death Penalty and the Founders’ Eighth Amendment, chal­lenges the con­ven­tion­al wis­dom that the coun­try’s founders were avid death penal­ty sup­port­ers, and explores their var­i­ous views on cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. Prof. Bessler dis­cuss­es how the indis­crim­i­nate use of executions…

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