Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Nov 302011

Recently Cleared Tennessee Inmate Added to List of Exonerations

Gussie Vann of Tennessee has been added to the list of those exon­er­at­ed from death row fol­low­ing the dis­missal of all charges against him in September 2011. Vann becomes the 139th for­mer death row inmate exon­er­at­ed since 1973. Vann was orig­i­nal­ly con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death in 1994 for a sex­u­al assault and mur­der of his own daugh­ter, Necia Vann, in 1992. However, in 2008 fol­low­ing state post-con­vic­­­tion review, Circuit Court Senior…

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News 

Nov 292011

North Carolina Legislature Votes to Repeal Racial Justice Act; Governor May Veto

On November 28 the North Carolina Senate vot­ed to repeal the state’s Racial Justice Act, which allowed death row inmates to use sta­tis­ti­cal evi­dence of racial bias to chal­lenge their sen­tences. The House had ear­li­er approved the repeal mea­sure. The Act was passed in 2009, and the first cas­es brought under the law are just now being con­sid­ered in state court. There were con­sid­er­able shifts in the state’s leg­is­la­ture in the wake of the 2010

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News 

Nov 282011

EDITORIALS: Calls for Florida to Revamp Its Untrustworthy Death Penalty System

The Orlando Sentinel in Florida recent­ly called on the state to change the unusu­al way in which it arrives at death sen­tences, rec­om­mend­ing instead unan­i­mous jury deci­sions for a death sen­tence, the pre­vail­ing prac­tice in the vast major­i­ty of states. In June, a fed­er­al judge declared Florida’s death penal­ty uncon­sti­tu­tion­al because it only requires a sim­ple major­i­ty to decide whether aggra­vat­ing fac­tors exist and to…

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News 

Nov 232011

EDITORIALS: Praise for Oregon Governor’s Action Halting Executions

The Register Guard (Eugene, Oregon) praised Governor John Kitzhaber’s recent announce­ment halt­ing all exe­cu­tions, call­ing his con­clu­sion that the​“death penal­ty is moral­ly wrong and unjust­ly admin­is­tered” to be​“right on both counts.” In their edi­to­r­i­al, the paper not­ed that the gov­er­nor’s actions are in line with oth­er devel­op­ments in the U.S. and inter­na­tion­al­ly:​“Kitzhaber’s announce­ment came as the tide is turn­ing against the death…

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News 

Nov 222011

Oregon Governor Declares Moratorium on All Executions

In a state­ment released on Nov. 22, Governor John Kitzhaber of Oregon announced a halt to all exe­cu­tions in the state.​“I am con­vinced we can find a bet­ter solu­tion that keeps soci­ety safe, sup­ports the vic­tims of crime and their fam­i­lies and reflects Oregon val­ues,” he wrote.​“I refuse to be a part of this com­pro­mised and inequitable sys­tem any longer; and I will not allow fur­ther exe­cu­tions while I am Governor.” His action halts the…

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News 

Nov 212011

BOOKS: Cruel and Unusual: The Supreme Court and Capital Punishment”

A clas­sic book about the death penal­ty has recent­ly been re-pub­­­lished and is now avail­able in paper­back and elec­tron­ic form. Cruel and Unusual: The Supreme Court and Capital Punishment was writ­ten by Michael Meltsner, cur­rent­ly a pro­fes­sor at Northeastern University School of Law, and one of the key archi­tects at the NAACP Legal Defense Fund behind the chal­lenge that led to Furman v. Georgia in 1972. This Supreme Court…

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News 

Nov 182011

RACE: Supporters Re-Affirm Importance of North Carolina’s Racial Justice Act in Face of Prosecutors’ Challenges

Leaders from North Carolina’s civ­il rights groups, such as the NAACP, and from the defense bar have re-affirmed the need for the state’s Racial Justice Act, which was passed in 2009. The Act allows death row inmates to chal­lenge their death sen­tences using data from sta­tis­ti­cal stud­ies of racial bias with­in the state. The North Carolina Conference of District Attorneys is attempt­ing to have the law repealed because…

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News 

Nov 172011

DPIC RESOURCES: New Innocence Database

The Death Penalty Information Center is pleased to announce that our List of Those Exonerated from Death Row (1973-Present) is now avail­able in a search­able, data­base for­mat through our new Innocence Database. This resource allows users to search through the list of those freed from death row after their con­vic­tions were dis­missed by name, year of exon­er­a­tion, state from which they were released, the inmate’s race,…

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News 

Nov 162011

DPIC RESOURCES: New State Pages Now Available

DPIC is pleased to announce the com­ple­tion of our State Information Pages for all 50 states and the District of Columbia. These state pro­files pro­vide his­tor­i­cal and cur­rent infor­ma­tion on the death penal­ty for each state, includ­ing famous cas­es, past leg­isla­tive actions, and links to key orga­ni­za­tions and state offi­cials. For fre­quent­ly updat­ed infor­ma­tion, such as exe­cu­tion totals, the size of death row, or the num­ber of exon­er­a­tions, see our…

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News 

Nov 152011

STUDIES: What’s Messing with Texas Death Sentences?”

A recent study by David McCord, Professor of Law at Drake University Law School, titled What’s Messing with Texas Death Sentences?, found five sig­nif­i­cant caus­es for the recent decline in death sen­tences in Texas. McCord sought to explain a 65% drop in Texas death sen­tences from their peak five-year peri­od of 1992 – 1996 (when there was an annu­al aver­age of 40 death sen­tences) to the recent five-year peri­od of 2005 – 2009

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