Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Jul 20, 2011
NEW RESOURCES: Prison Magazine, The Angolite, Examines the Death Penalty in 2010
A recent edition of The Angolite, the nation’s largest prison news magazine, contains an article detailing national death penalty trends and developments. The piece highlights the emergence of several prominent conservatives who have voiced concerns with the current death penalty system, including Montana State Senator Roy Brown and conservative activist Richard Viguerie. The article is authored by John Corley and provides an…
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Jul 19, 2011
VICTIMS: Victim of Hate Crime After 9/11 Seeks Clemency for His Condemned Attacker
In 2001, Mark Stroman (pictured) shot several people in Texas whom he believed were Arabs in response to the terrorist attacks of September 11. Stroman killed at least two men and wounded Rais Bhuiyan, who is from Bangladesh and was working at a Dallas gas station. Stroman received the death penalty for the murders and is scheduled to be executed on July 20. Bhuiyan, who lost the use of one eye as a result of the shooting,…
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Jul 18, 2011
NEW VOICES: Author of California’s Expanded Death Penalty Law Now Supports Repeal
Donald Heller (pictured) served as both a California and federal prosecutor and was the author of the state ballot measure that greatly expanded the list of murders eligible for capital punishment. After the trial of one defendant, Heller volunteered to “throw the switch,” a comment that earned him the name “Mad Dog.” But his views on capital punishment have changed sharply over the years. A recent interview in the Los Angeles Times…
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Jul 15, 2011
STUDIES: New Report Sees Demise of California’s Death Penalty
A new report on the state’s death penalty system published by the ACLU of Northern California catalogs numerous intractable problems and waning public support which may lead to the end of capital punishment in the state. According to the report, “California’s Death Penalty is Dead: Anatomy of a Failure,” the death penalty in California is being slowly abandoned as prosecutors, legislators and taxpayers are increasingly turning to life in prison…
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Jul 14, 2011
Controversial Texas Case Settles with Plea Bargain
A Texas capital case that precipitated a rare judicial review of the constitutionality of the state’s death penalty recently ended on July 6 with an unexpected plea deal. At the end of six weeks of jury selection, the prosecution accepted defendant John Edward Green Jr.‘s agreement to plead guilty to a lesser murder charge in exchange for 40 years in prison. The case was delayed in coming to trial when Judge Kevin Fine (pictured) agreed to conduct a hearing…
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Jul 13, 2011
POSSIBLE INNOCENCE: Federal Judge Overturns Capital Murder Conviction in Virginia, Citing Prosecutorial Misconduct
On July 12, U.S. District Court Judge Raymond A. Jackson overturned the murder conviction and death sentence of Justin Wolfe (pictured), who allegedly orchestrated the slaying of his marijuana supplier, Daniel Petrole Jr., in Virginia over a decade ago. Judge Jackson ruled that prosecutors in Wolfe’s case withheld or ignored crucial evidence that could have helped Wolfe’s defense. The Court held that Prince William County Commonwealth’s Attorney Paul Ebert…
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Jul 12, 2011
NEW RESOURCES: Judges in Alabama Imposing Death Sentences by Overriding Juries
A new report from the Equal Justice Initiative in Alabama exposes the practice of state judges imposing death sentences by overriding a jury’s recommendation for life. EJI’s study found that judges in the state have overridden jury recommendations 107 times since 1976. In 92% of the overrides, judges overruled life verdicts to impose a death sentence. More than 20% of the defendants on Alabama’s death row were sentenced through judge overrides. These…
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Jul 11, 2011
Federal Judge Halts Ohio Execution Because of “Haphazard” Lethal Injection Process
On July 8 U.S. District Court Judge Gregory Frost stayed the upcoming July 19 execution of Ohio inmate Kenneth Smith because of the state’s inconsistent application of its lethal injection process. Judge Frost called the state’s practice “haphazard,” and said, “Ohio pays lip service to standards it then often ignores without valid reasons, sometimes with no physical ramifications and sometimes with what have been described as messy if not botched executions.”…
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Jul 08, 2011
NEW RESOURCES: DPIC Podcast Covers Legal Process
Have you ever wondered about how a death penalty trial is conducted or why the appeals take many years? The latest edition of the Death Penalty Information Center’s series of podcasts, DPIC on the Issues, may be helpful in answering those questions. This podcast addresses questions about the legal process in capital cases, including jury selection, sentencing, and appeals. In addition to covering the basic steps in a death penalty case, the podcast discusses issues such as…
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Jul 06, 2011
Pharmaceutical Company Restricts Access to Drug Used in U.S. Executions
A pharmaceutical company that manufactures pentobarbital (distributed under the brand name Nembutal) has announced that it will significantly restrict its distribution system to prevent the drug’s use in lethal injections in the United States. Lundbeck Inc. announced in a statement that it “adamantly opposes the distressing misuse of our product in capital punishment.” Lundbeck will review orders before providing clearance for shipping pentobarbital and will deny orders from…
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