Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


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 Alabama​’s 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…

Read More

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…

Read More

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…

Read More

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…

Read More

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…

Read More

News 

Jul 202011

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…

Read More

News 

Jul 192011

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…

Read More

News 

Jul 182011

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…

Read More

News 

Jul 152011

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…

Read More

News 

Jul 142011

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)…

Read More