Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Mar 18, 2011
NEW VOICES: Some Prosecutors and Judges Welcome End of Death Penalty
Following the repeal of the death penalty in Illinois, some state prosecutors and judges have pointed to potential benefits to the criminal justice system. Kane County State’s Attorney Joe McMahon recently said that abolishing the death penalty meant that murder trials in the county could come to a conclusion more quicly. McMahon said, “To the extent that we can bring these cases to resolution sooner, and help the families of the victims get…
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Mar 17, 2011
LETHAL INJECTION: Texas Switches to New Drug as Next Execution Approaches
The Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) announced on March 16 that it will switch to pentobarbital as part of its three-drug lethal injection protocol for the upcoming execution of Cleve Foster on April 5. The short notice has drawn concerns from Foster’s defense attorneys and lethal injection experts. Maurie Levin, a professor at the University of Texas who represents Foster, said, “Prison officials are not medical professionals. They cannot be…
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Mar 16, 2011
LETHAL INJECTION: Federal Agency Seizes Georgia Execution Drug
The federal Drug Enforcement Administration has seized Georgia’s foreign supply of sodium thiopental, saying it will hold the drug while it investigates whether the Department of Corrections imported the drug legally. In February, attorneys representing Georgia death row inmate Andrew DeYoung sent a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder alleging that Georgia had violated the federal Controlled Substances Act “by failing to register as an importer of the…
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Mar 15, 2011
NEW VOICES: “The Conservative Argument to Abolish the Death Penalty”
In a recent op-ed in the Chicago Tribune following Illinois’s abolition of the death penalty, author and attorney Scott Turow (pictured) outlined three major conservative reasons for opposing capital punishment: it is a failed government program, it is a waste of money, and it doesn’t fit with the idea of limited government. Turow served on former Governor George Ryan’s Commission on Capital Punishment, which found numerous problems with the state’s…
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Mar 14, 2011
Judge Dismisses Capital Murder Charges After Finding State Report “Intentionally Misleading”
On March 10, a North Carolina superior court judge released his opinion throwing out murder charges against Derrick Michael Allen, who was accused in the 1998 death and sexual assault of a 2‑year-old girl. Judge Orlando Hudson dismissed the case after finding that a State Bureau of Investigation (SBI) report was prepared in an “inaccurate, incomplete and intentionally misleading manner.” Judge Hudson also found that an SBI agent (now suspended) and a former…
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Mar 11, 2011
LETHAL INJECTION: Ohio Carries Out First Pentobarbital-Only Execution
On March 10, the execution of Johnnie Baston (pictured) in Ohio marked the first time any state carried out a death sentence with a single dose of the barbituate pentobarbital. The use of pentobarbital, more commonly employed in euthanizing animals, raised concerns among some death penalty experts. Fordham University law professor Deborah Denno warned, “Ohio is gambling blindly in its rush to execute. There is no reason why Ohio cannot take the time to devise…
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Mar 10, 2011
EDITORIALS: Illinois Death Penalty Repeal Called a “Victory for Justice”
An editorial in the Chicago Sun-Times applauded Illinois Governor Pat Quinn for signing the bill abolishing the death penalty. The editors wrote, “We’ve learned that the system makes too many mistakes to entrust it with the ultimate power of capital punishment. We’ve learned that legal safeguards can be pushed aside when emotions are high after a heinous crime. We’ve learned that political ambition sometimes blinds those in power to the weaknesses of…
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Mar 09, 2011
Illinois Governor Signs Bill Ending Death Penalty, Marking the Fewest States with Capital Punishment Since 1978
On March 9, Illinois Governor Pat Quinn signed into law a repeal of the death penalty, replacing it with a sentence of life without parole. The governor also commuted the death sentences of the 15 people on the state’s death row to life without parole. The ban on capital punishment comes after an eleven-year moratorium on executions declared by former Republican Gov. George Ryan and makes Illinois the 16th state to end the death penalty. It also marks the…
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Mar 08, 2011
STUDIES: Posthumous Pardons in the United States
A recent study by Dr. Stephen Greenspan, Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Colorado, revealed that throughout American history at least 106 individuals have been granted posthumous pardons, including 12 individuals who were executed. Although not all of the pardons were granted because of doubts about the defendant’s guilt, Dr. Greenspan found that in many instances the defendant was proven, or was very likely, not guilty and had…
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Mar 07, 2011
U.S. Supreme Court Allows Texas Death Row Inmate to Continue Pursuit of DNA Testing
On March 7, the U.S. Supreme Court held (6 – 3) that Hank Skinner, a Texas death row inmate who came within an hour of execution in 2010, can challenge the state’s refusal to test crucial DNA evidence from his case in federal court. Skinner has always maintained his innocence of the 1993 murders of his girlfriend and her two sons and requested that Texas perform DNA testing on key pieces of evidence that might point to another suspect. At issue…
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