Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Apr 22, 2011
NEBRASKA EDITORIAL: Instead of a new means of capital punishment, the Legislature should get rid of it
Days after the Nebraska Supreme Court ruled that the electric chair was unconstitutional, a Lincoln Journal Star editorial urged the state to reconsider the death penalty: “Instead of rushing to pass a new means of capital punishment, the Legislature should take this opportunity to finally get rid of the death penalty.” Nebraska was the only state to retain the electric chair as its sole means of execution. The paper noted that it was the right time to take a broader look at the death…
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Apr 22, 2011
In New Mexico, Judge and Prosecutor Agree: No Funds Means No Death Penalty
In a potentially far reaching ruling, a trial judge in New Mexico has barred the state from seeking the death penalty because the legislature has failed to provide adequate funding for defense representation. The state’s Attorney General, Gary King, agreed that the capital prosecution cannot go forward. After finding that funding for the defense was insufficient and raised constitutional problems, King wrote, “The state now confesses the motion to dismiss filed herein and cannot in…
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Apr 22, 2011
New Mexico Trial Judge Finds State Death Penalty Unconstitutional
Ruling in a pre-trial matter in New Mexico, Judge Timothy Garcia of Santa Fe County’s First Judicial District Court held the state’s death penalty law to be unconstitutional based on a study by the Capital Jury Project. The Project’s research in 14 states had found that jurors often do not follow the law in making their sentencing decision. In particular, the judge found that the jurors’ propensity toward making their sentencing decision during the guilt-innocence phase of the…
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Apr 21, 2011
STUDIES: Texas Forensic Science Panel Calls for Changes but Says Nothing About Possible Wrongful Execution
On April 15, the Texas Forensic Science Commission recommended more education and training for fire investigators following its review of the controversial case of Cameron Todd Willingham (pictured), who was executed in 2004 for setting the fire that killed his three daughters. The Commission made 16 recommendations for investigators, lawyers and lawmakers. It did not, however, decide whether arson investigators in Willingham’s case were negligent or guilty…
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Apr 21, 2011
NEW RESOURCE: “Legacy of Violence”
“Legacy of Violence: Lynch Mobs and Executions in Minnesota,” a book by John D. Bessler (University of Minnesota Press, 2003), examines the history of illegal and state-sanctioned executions in Minnesota, one of twelve states that currently does not have the death penalty. The book is timely in that the current governor, Tim Pawlenty, has proposed reinstating the death penalty, which was abolished in 1911. The book includes detailed personal accounts from those who were involved in the…
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Apr 21, 2011
NEW VOICES: Former Supporter Will Oppose Any Measure to Restore Minnesota Death Penalty
Minnesota Senator Tom Neuville, the leading Republican committee member on the state’s Senate Judiciary Committee, says he will oppose Governor Tim Pawlenty’s efforts to reinstate death penalty. Neuville’s basic opposition is moral: “If we solve violence by becoming violent ourselves, we become diminished.” Neuville, a former death penalty supporter whose reexamination of his pro-life beliefs led him to change his mind on the issue, feels that many of his colleagues share his…
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Apr 21, 2011
Virginia Man Denied Consular Rights, Will Not Face Death Penalty
A Virginia judge ruled that prosecutors may not seek the death penalty against a Vietnamese man accused of murdering two people because police violated the man’s rights under the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations by not informing him that he could contact his country’s consulate. “[T]he duty to give notice is absolute.… [T]he idea that the state can completely ignore its treaty obligations without consequence essentially obliterates the purpose for which the rights under the Vienna…
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Apr 20, 2011
IN MEMORIAM: Marie Deans, A Life of Commitment to Justice and Founder of Murder Victims’ Families for Reconciliation
On April 15, 2011, Marie McFadden Deans died in Charlottesville, Virginia. For three decades, Deans sought justice for death row inmates who had no other recourse and who had been poorly represented. Professor Todd Peppers of Roanoke College wrote in an op-ed about her life that she brought “basic conditions of decency to the men who inhabited Virginia’s death row,… refin[ed] the use of mitigation evidence in death penalty trials, [and] struggl[ed] to exonerate factually…
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Apr 19, 2011
States Engage in “Swap Club” to Obtain Lethal Injection Drugs
In what was described in the New York Times as a “legally quesionable swap club,” states searching for a scarce execution drug have gone to great lengths to obtain sodium thiopental for carrying out their death sentences. In Arkansas, a deputy director of the Department of Corrections revealed that states often shared their supply of sodium thiopental with each other. Wendy Kelly, who has personally traveled to obtain drugs from other states, said,…
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Apr 18, 2011
NEW RESOURCES: New Database for International Death Penalty
Northwestern University School of Law, in conjunction with the World Coalition Against the Death Penalty, has compiled a new resource on the use of the death penalty in every country around the world. This searchable database, www.deathpenaltyworldwide.org, contains information on each country’s death penalty status, methods of execution, number of executions, and crimes punishable by the death penalty. The database also includes demographic…
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