Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Oct 17, 2011
COSTS: Ohio Judge Warns of High Costs in Upcoming Death Penalty Trial
An upcoming death penalty trial in Ohio will cost three to four times more than the cost of a life-without-parole trial, according to the trial judge, Michael Sage (pictured). The death penalty trial for Hector Alvarenga Retana, scheduled to begin on October 31, is expected to cost Butler County an estimated $250,000, according to the judge, not counting the cost of appeals. He said, “[The cost] is so great we can’t afford to pay for that…
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Oct 14, 2011
PUBLIC OPINION: Gallup Poll Reports Lowest Support for Death Penalty in Nearly 40 Years
Recent polls conducted by Gallup and CNN indicate Americans’ support for the death penalty is continuing to decline. According to Gallup’s 2011 poll, the percentage of Americans approving the death penalty as a punishment for murder dropped to its lowest level in 39 years. Only 61% supported capital punishment in theory, down from 64% last year and from 80% support in 1994. This is the lowest level of support since 1972, when the…
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Oct 13, 2011
BOOKS: “Anatomy of Injustice: A Murder Case Gone Wrong”
A new book by Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Raymond Bonner, Anatomy of Injustice: A Murder Case Gone Wrong, investigates the shortcomings of the justice system in the case of Edward Lee Elmore, a black man sentenced to death in South Carolina in 1982. Elmore, who was semi-literate with intellectual disabilities, was sent to death row for the murder and sexual assault of a white woman, even though there was…
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Oct 12, 2011
INNOCENCE: Three Men Walk Free in One Day After Unrelated Murder Convictions Overturned
On October 4, three men were released from prisons in Chicago (Illinois), Austin (Texas), and Los Angeles (California), after serving a combined six decades in prison for unrelated murders when courts overturned their convictions. In Texas, Michael Morton, who was convicted of killing his wife in 1986 based on circumstancial evidence, was cleared by new DNA tests. Jacques Rivera from Illinois was convicted of a gang-related…
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Oct 12, 2011
INTERNATIONAL RESOURCES: Death Penalty Lessons from Asia
The Asia-Pacific Journal, Japan Focus, recently featured an article entitled, “Death Penalty Lessons from Asia,” written by David T. Johnson and Franklin E. Zimring. The article is based in part on the authors’ book, The Next Frontier: National Development, Political Change, and the Death Penalty in Asia. Johnson is Professor of Sociology at the University of Hawaii. Zimring is the William G. Simon…
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Oct 11, 2011
BOOKS: “Cruel and Unusual: The American Death Penalty and the Founders’ Eighth Amendment”
A forthcoming book by John D. Bessler,“Cruel and Unusual: The American Death Penalty and the Founders’ Eighth Amendment,” discusses the history of the Eighth Amendment and the country’s founders’ views on capital punishment. While the conventional wisdom is that the founders were avid death penalty supporters, Bessler’s examination shows they had conflicting and ambivalent views on the subject. Bessler analyzes the U.S. Supreme Court’s…
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Oct 10, 2011
NEW RESOURCES: DPIC’s Latest Podcast Addresses Death Row Conditions and Related Issues
The latest edition of the Death Penalty Information Center’s series of podcasts, DPIC on the Issues, is now available for listening or downloading. This podcast – the 16th in the series – discusses the little-understood world of death row, exploring the conditions on the row and the length of time prisoners spend there. The podcast discusses some of the legal issues that have arisen regarding the extended deprivation and isolation common to death…
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Oct 07, 2011
NEW RESOURCES: DPIC Offers Analysis of Executions by County
The Death Penalty Information Center is pleased to offer a new page illustrating the geography of the death penalty–Executions by County. This page shows the top 15 counties in the U.S. measured by the number of executions since 1976 that emanated from these counties. As revealed on the map, a small number of counties are responsible for a disproportionate number of executions. (Click on the map at left to enlarge.) The information contrasts with the…
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Oct 06, 2011
NEW VOICES: Former Georgia Prison Warden Discusses Impact of Executions on Officers
Dr. Allen Ault (pictured), a retired Georgia prison warden, recently appeared on MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow Show, discussing the effects of carrying out executions on prison workers. Dr. Ault was one of six retired prison wardens who had urged Georgia corrections officials and Governor Nathan Deal to do what they could to halt the execution of Troy Davis. Davis was executed on September 21, 2011. Dr. Ault discussed the difficult…
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Oct 05, 2011
OP-ED: Mario Cuomo Calls Capital Punishment Corrosive to Society
In a recent op-ed in the New York Daily News, former New York Governor Mario Cuomo called the death penalty a“serious moral problem” that is“corrosive” to a democratic citizenry. He said many of the problems of the death penalty – ineffectiveness as a deterrent, unfairness, and the risk of executing the innocent – are inevitable:“These imperfections — as well as the horrible and irreversible injustice they can…
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