Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Mar 04, 2011
NEW VOICES: Former Bush Official Urges Basic Review of Death Sentences Given Foreign Nationals to Protect Americans Abroad
A former State Department official in the Bush administration is urging Congress to help the U.S. comply with a ruling from the International Court of Justice (ICJ) regarding the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations as a way of protecting U.S. citizens traveling abroad. John Bellinger, who argued before the ICJ, said in an op-ed in the Washington Post that “a key provision [of the Vienna Convention] requires parties to the treaty to promptly…
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Mar 03, 2011
LETHAL INJECTION: New Execution Drug Raises Its Own Concerns
Some states are turning to the widely available-drug pentobarbital for use in their lethal injections, instead of sodium thiopental, which is in short supply in the U.S. But some medical professionals have noted that, although the new drug shares many similarities with sodium thiopental, pentobarbital has rarely been used in humans. Dr. David Varlotta, who sits on the board of the American Society of Anesthesiologists, said that he has not used pentobarbital since 1986. Dr.
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Mar 02, 2011
EDITORIALS: Chicago Tribune Urges Governor to Sign Death Penalty Repeal Bill
A recent editorial in the Chicago Tribune urged Gov. Pat Quinn to sign the bill to end the death penalty in Illinois. The paper noted that former Gov. Bill Richardson signed a similar bill in New Mexico, despite previously saying he supported the death penalty when he came into office. Richardson said that his mind was changed after studying the issue and seeing “too many mistakes” and evidence that the punishment was applied…
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Mar 01, 2011
STUDIES: The Effect of Victim Impact Evidence in Capital Trials
A study recently published in the journal Criminology meaured the effects of victim impact evidence (VIE) on the likelihood of the jury returning a death sentence. The study was conducted by Professors Raymond Paternoster and Jerome Deise of the University of Maryland. It involved 135 participants who watched a video recording of an actual capital trial. Seventy-three participants watched the full video, while the remaining…
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Feb 28, 2011
STUDIES: Gender Bias in Death Sentencing
A recent study by Professor Steven Shatz of the University of San Francisco Law School and Naomi Shatz of the New York Civil Liberties Union suggests that gender bias continues to exist in the application of the death penalty, and that this bias has roots in the historic notion of chivalry. In a review of 1,300 murder cases in California between 2003 and 2005, the authors found gender disparities with respect to both defendants and victims in the underlying…
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Feb 25, 2011
Georgia Accused of Illegal Actions in Securing Execution Drugs
Attorneys representing Andrew DeYoung, a death row inmate in Georgia, have accused the Georgia Department of Corrections (GDC) of violating federal law by unlawfully importing an execution drug from a small pharmaceutical distributor in London, England – Dream Pharma Ltd. (pictured). The allegations are outlined in a letter delivered to U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder on Feb. 24 and describe an attempt by the corrections agency to circumvent the law to secure sodium…
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Feb 24, 2011
REPRESENTATION: Tennessee Inmate Faces Execution Because of Lawyer’s Failures
A forthcoming article in the ABA Journal reveals the tragic admissions of failure by a well-known defense lawyer that led to a death sentence and potential execution of Abu-Ali Abdur’Rahman (pictured) in…
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Feb 23, 2011
MULTIMEDIA: New Film Explores Risk of Wrongful Convictions in Capital Cases
Slick, a new short dramatic film directed and produced by Michael Frediani, follows the story of a fictional Texas death row inmate on the night of his execution. Garrett Lee Taylor, the film’s protagonist, faces execution for murder, despite strong claims of innocence. The film is comprised of a series of flashbacks revealing events on the night of the crime. The flashbacks show how evidence seemed to place Taylor at the scene of the crime and led investigators to wrongfully…
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Feb 22, 2011
MENTAL ILLNESS: Death Sentences Vacated for Two with Severe Mental Illness
One death row inmate from Oregon and another from North Carolina recently had their death sentences removed because of concerns about their mental competency. In Oregon, Robert James Acremant’s sentence was reduced to life without the possibility of parole. Since 2003, prison psychiatrists have diagnosed him as mentally ill, and Acremant said he hears voices and has a transmitter in his head that allows others to control him. He still has a…
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Feb 21, 2011
Thirteen States Seek Help from Justice Department for Lethal Injection Drug
In January, attorneys general from 13 states wrote a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder asking for assistance from the U.S. Department of Justice related to the recent shortage of sodium thiopental for lethal injections in the U.S. The state officials, including those in Alabama, Florida, and Tennessee, asked for help in “identifying an appropriate source for sodium thiopental or making supplies held by the Federal…
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