Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Apr 01, 2011
STUDIES: North Carolina’s Death Penalty is Error-Prone and Rarely Applied
A new study from North Carolina shows that the state’s death penalty is error-prone and rarely implemented. A study of the death penalty from 1977 to 2009 found that two out of three death sentences were overturned on appeal, an error rate of 67%. The study also found that only 20% of death sentences resulted in an execution. The review of the state’s death penalty was made by Matthew Robinson, a professor of Government & Justice Studies at Appalachian State University.
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Mar 31, 2011
NEW VOICES: Former Prison Director Urges Clemency for Condemned Ohio Inmate
The former Director of Ohio Prisons, Terry Collins, recently urged Gov. John Kasich to spare the life of Clarence Carter, who is scheduled to be executed on April 12 for the murder of another inmate. Carter killed the inmate during a jailhouse fight in 1988. Collins, who had 30 years of experience working with prisoners, discussed whether this crime merited the death penalty, “It is much more likely that this was an inmate fight that got tragically out of…
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Mar 30, 2011
NEW VOICES: Prominent Texans Support Death Penalty Moratorium Legislation
The Texas Criminal Jurisprudence Committee of the House of Representatives heard testimony on March 29 regarding HB 1641, a bill that would put a hold on executions while the death penalty was being studied. Charles Terrell, former Chairman of the state’s Department of Criminal Justice, supported the moratorium in a statement to the committee, expressing concerns about: “fairness to those convicted on the limited testimony of witnesses, racial fairness in…
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Mar 29, 2011
INTERNATIONAL: Amnesty International Report Finds Global Trend Away from Death Penalty
A new report issued by Amnesty International, Death Sentences and Executions 2010, shows a global trend away from the use of the death penalty. According to the report, only four countries in the G20 (representing the world’s major economies) carried out executions in 2010 (China, Japan, Saudi Arabia and the U.S.), 36 of the 53 African Union member states are abolitionist in law or in practice, and only 21 of the 192 UN member states carried out…
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Mar 28, 2011
NEW VOICES: Former Los Angeles D.A. States “California’s Death Penalty Doesn’t Serve Justice”
Gil Garcetti, the former district attorney of Los Angeles who pursued numerous death sentences, recently said California’s death penalty is dysfunctional and the resources spent on it should be diverted to more pressing needs. In an op-ed in the Los Angeles Times, Garcetti said the death penalty causes ongoing torment to family members and friends of murder victims: “The living victims of a particular crime might think that a death…
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Mar 25, 2011
Connecticut Weighs Legislation to Repeal Death Penalty
Earlier in March, hearings were held in Connecticut before the House Judiciary Committee on a bill to replace the death penalty for future crimes with a sentence of life without parole. Many religious leaders, scholars, former death row inmates, and families of murder victims families testified in favor of the bill. Catholic Bishop Peter Rosazza, retired auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Hartford, said, “The death penalty diminishes us all. We cannot teach respect for…
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Mar 24, 2011
BOOKS: The Death Penalty from an International Perspective
A recent book by Sanaz Alasti, “Cruel and Unusual Punishment: Comparative Perspective in International Conventions, the United States and Iran,” explores the question of what constitutes cruel and unusual punishment on an international level. The book reviews current practices in both Iran and the United States, focusing on the death penalty and the harshness of such practices as corporal punishment, long terms of imprisonment, and inflexibile laws mandating…
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Mar 23, 2011
COSTS: One Death Penalty Case Could Drain County’s Budget in Washington
As Yakima County, Washington, faces the possibility of its first death penalty trial since 1989, the danger that the high cost of a capital case could drain the county’s budget is a deep concern. Harold Delia, Yakima County court administrative consultant questioned the wisdom of seeking the death penalty against a defendant recently charged with murder, “You really have to wonder whether this really makes sense when you look at the cost-benefit analysis,” he…
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Mar 22, 2011
Supreme Court to Hear Case of Man Facing Execution Because of Mailroom Mixup
On March 21, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear an appeal from death-row inmate Cory Maples (pictured), who is facing execution because of a missed filing deadline in his state appeal. Copies of an Alabama court ruling in his case were sent to the New York law firm handling his appeals pro bono but were returned unopened to the court because the attorneys representing Maples had left the firm. Maples himself was not informed of the Alabama…
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Mar 21, 2011
Trial Prosecutor Now Opposes Death Sentence as Arizona Execution Approaches
Daniel Cook is scheduled for execution on April 5 in Arizona, despite the fact that the lead prosecutor at his 1988 capital trial has said that he would not have sought the death penalty if he had known more about Cook’s traumatic background and mental illness. At trial, Cook waived his right to counsel and represented himself after learning his appointed lawyer was suffering from bipolar disorder and was drinking heavily. The judge denied Cook’s petition for…
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