Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Aug 042011

First Federal Death Sentence in Non-Death Penalty State Overturned

On August 3 the U.S. Court of the Appeals for the Sixth Circuit over­turned the fed­er­al death sen­tence of Marvin Gabrion, who was con­vict­ed of a 1997 mur­der in a National Forest in Michigan. Gabrion was the first defen­dant in the coun­try to receive the fed­er­al death penal­ty for a crime com­mit­ted in a non-death penal­ty state since the fed­er­al death penal­ty was rein­stat­ed in 1988. All three mem­bers of the judi­cial pan­el upheld Gabriion’s murder…

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News 

Aug 022011

STUDIES: Amnesty International’s Report on the U.S. Death Penalty After 35 Years

A report released by Amnesty International in July looks at recent devel­op­ments in the lethal injec­tion con­tro­ver­sy in the U.S. and pro­vides an overview of the death penal­ty since it was rein­stat­ed in 1976 in Gregg v. Georgia. Amnesty’s report, entitled An Embarrassment of Hitches: Reflections on the Death Penalty, 35 Years After Gregg v. Georgia, As States Scramble for Lethal Injection Drugs,” begins with a dis­cus­sion of a law­suit filed by…

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News 

Aug 012011

Texas Blocks Investigation into Execution of Possibly Innocent Man

On July 29, Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott ruled that the state’s Forensic Science Commission (FSC) does not have author­i­ty to review evi­dence regard­ing the pos­si­ble inno­cence of Cameron Todd Willingham (pic­tured), who was exe­cut­ed in 2004. Willingham was con­vict­ed of set­ting the fire that killed his three chil­dren, but inves­tig­tions by promi­nent foren­sic sci­en­tists have dis­cred­it­ed the evi­dence of arson pre­sent­ed at tri­al. Abbott said evi­dence that was…

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News 

Jul 292011

Texas Court Stays Execution to Review Claim of Innocence

On July 28, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals stayed the sched­uled August 18 exe­cu­tion of Larry Swearingen (pic­tured) in order to con­sid­er new evi­dence that might prove his inno­cence. Swearingen was con­vict­ed of the 1998 mur­der of Melissa Trotter, whose body was found in the Sam Houston National Forest. Trotter was last seen alive with Swearingen. Forensic sci­en­tists who exam­ined the evi­dence from Trotter’s body have said that she could not have been in the…

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News 

Jul 282011

NEW RESOURCES: DPIC Presents Updated Execution Database

The Death Penalty Information Center is pleased to offer a new and more com­pre­hen­sive ver­sion of our Execution Database. The new data­base includes infor­ma­tion on the coun­ty where the crime was com­mit­ted and on the gen­der of vic­tim, in addi­tion to the infor­ma­tion avail­able in our pre­vi­ous data­base. The data­base includes such cat­e­gories as Race of Defendant and Victim, Foreign Nationals, Method of Execution, and Age at…

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News 

Jul 272011

NEW VOICES: Alabama Juries, Not Judges, Should Decide Death Sentences”

O.H. Eaton Jr. (pic­tured), who served as a judge for many years in Florida, recent­ly wrote an op-ed in the Birmingham News call­ing for an end to Alabamas law that allows judges to over­ride juries’ sen­tenc­ing rec­om­men­da­tions in death penal­ty cas­es. Eaton, who presided over numer­ous cap­i­tal cas­es dur­ing his 24 years on the bench, said that his expe­ri­ence con­vinced him that the prac­tive of judi­cial over­ride is unfair. Citing a report…

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News 

Jul 262011

Florida Supreme Court Stays Execution to Allow Lethal Injection Hearing

On July 25, the Florida Supreme Court (4 – 3) stayed the August 2 exe­cu­tion of Manuel Valle to allow a low­er court to con­sid­er a chal­lenge to a new lethal injec­tion drug. Last month, Florida sub­sti­tut­ed pen­to­bar­bi­tal for sodi­um thiopen­tal as the first drug in its three-drug pro­to­col for exe­cu­tions. Florida and many oth­er states were forced to seek alter­na­tives to sodi­um thiopen­tal when the drug’s sole U.S. man­u­fac­tur­er decid­ed to stop its pro­duc­tion. Valle’s…

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News 

Jul 252011

North Carolina Court to Hear First Challenge under State’s Racial Justice Act

Marcus Robinson will be the first North Carolina death row inmate to have a sen­tenc­ing chal­lenge heard in court based on the state’s 2009 Racial Justice Act. According to the act, a death row inmate who can estab­lish through sta­tis­ti­cal stud­ies that his sen­tence was racial­ly dis­crim­i­na­to­ry can seek to have it com­mut­ed to life in prison. Robinson’s lawyers plan to argue that he received a death sen­tence part­ly because he is black and his vic­tim was white They plan to cite several…

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News 

Jul 222011

DPIC RESOURCE: The Military Death Penalty

The cap­i­tal arraign­ment on July 20 of Army Major Nidal Hasan for the mur­der of 13 peo­ple at Fort Hood, Texas, in November 2009 has brought atten­tion to the death penal­ty in the United States Military. There are cur­rent­ly six inmates on the mil­i­tary death row, which is locat­ed in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. In the last two years, four men have been removed from the mil­i­tary death row after their sen­tences were reduced to life. The Uniform Code of Military Justice allows the…

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News 

Jul 212011

Georgia Judge Orders Videotaping of Upcoming Execution

Georgia Superior Court Judge Bensonetta Tipton Lane has ordered that the Department of Corrections (DOC) video­tape the upcom­ing exe­cu­tion of Andrew Grant DeYoung (pic­tured). The exe­cu­tion was first sched­uled for July 20, but after the Georgia Supreme Court upheld Judge Lane’s order, the DOC decid­ed to move DeYoung’s exe­cu­tion to July 21. Videotaping of exe­cu­tions is very rare, with the last known instance in 1992 in California, also as a result of a court…

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