Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Mar 072011

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…

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News 

Mar 042011

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…

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News 

Mar 032011

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…

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News 

Mar 022011

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…

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News 

Mar 012011

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…

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News 

Feb 282011

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…

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News 

Feb 252011

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…

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News 

Feb 232011

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…

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News 

Feb 222011

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…

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