Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Jan 25, 2011
NEW VOICES: Retired Federal Judge Urges Illinois Governor to Sign Repeal Bill
Retired Federal Judge H. Lee Sarokin recently wrote in the Huffington Post urging Illinois Governor Pat Quinn to sign a bill that would repeal the death penalty. He wrote, “I am certain we could all list persons who committed outrageous and despicable crimes that we would want executed. Many of us want revenge, retribution and the ultimate punishment in those cases, but, nonetheless, I am opposed to the death penalty.” Judge Sarokin highlighted…
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Jan 24, 2011
STUDIES: USA Today Investigation Reveals Prosecutorial Misconduct in Federal Cases
An in-depth investigation conducted by USA Today found 201 criminal cases in which federal judges determined that U.S. Department of Justice prosecutors violated laws or ethics rules, including the recent prosecution of Senator Ted Stevens of Alaska. The investigation looked at cases since 1997, when Congress enacted a law aimed at ending prosecutorial misconduct. Some of the violations reviewed by USA Today resulted in judges throwing out…
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Jan 21, 2011
REPRESENTATION: Alabama Inmate – Failed by His Attorney – Is Executed Despite Jury’s Vote for Life
Leroy White (pictured) was executed in Alabama on January 13 despite the fact that his trial jury, the prosecution, and members of the victim’s family had sought a different sentence. Shortly before his execution, he received a stay from the U.S. Supreme Court to consider his final motion. However, nearly three hours later the stay was lifted and he was executed for the 1988 murder of his estranged wife, Ruby White. During the time that the…
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Jan 20, 2011
ARBITRARINESS: Contract Killer Spared the Death Penalty Despite Seven Murders
Although the death penalty is often described as being reserved for the “worst of the worst” offenders, in practice defendants responsible for many murders are often spared while those who committed arguably lesser offenses are executed. Oscar Veal was a contract killer for a large drug ring and murder-for-hire operation. He was convicted of seven counts of murder and eight counts of racketeering conspiracy. However, in exchange for testimony about a drug organization in…
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Jan 19, 2011
NEW VOICES: Senator Durbin of Illinois Changes Stance on Death Penalty
U. S. Senator Dick Durbin of Illinois recently announced at a breakfast honoring Martin Luther King, Jr., that he has changed his life-long opinion on the death penalty and now favors its abolition. Sen. Durbin, who is the second-ranking member of the U.S. Senate as the assistant majority leader, said that his reflections over many years brought about an evolution in his thinking about capital punishment, particularly with respect to its unfairness and the…
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Jan 18, 2011
NEW VOICES: Illinois Police Chief Calls for End to State’s Death Penalty
Police Chief Charles A. Gruber of St. Charles, Illinois, a 40-year veteran of law enforcement, recently stated that “the death penalty does nothing to keep us safe,” and should be abolished. Chief Gruber served as president of both the Illinois Association of Chiefs of Police and of the International Association of Chiefs of Police. He worked with national organizations for over a decade to devise reforms to make the death…
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Jan 17, 2011
Outgoing Pennsylvania Governor Urges State Legislators to Review Death Penalty
On January 14, in one of his final acts as governor, Pennsylvania Governor Edward G. Rendell wrote a letter to the state General Assembly urging legislators to consider replacing the death penalty with a sentence of life without parole if it cannot be made more effective than it has been. Gov. Rendell wrote that the death penalty in Pennsylvania is not a reality: “As a former District Attorney and as a death penalty supporter, I believe the death penalty can be a deterrent –…
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Jan 14, 2011
U.S. Supreme Court Halts Execution After Texas Inmate’s Last Meal
On January 11, Desert Storm veteran Cleve Foster of Texas received a stay of execution just moments before his lethal injection. Foster had already finished his last meal when the United States Supreme Court halted the execution. Foster was sentenced to death for a 2002 shooting, but has always maintained that his friend was responsible for the murder. The friend also received the death penalty for the crime but died of cancer before he was…
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Jan 13, 2011
NEW VOICES: “Police Officials Argue Death Penalty Doesn’t Make Us Safer”
Four law enforcement officials from various countries who came together in Washington, D.C., in 2010 for a groundbreaking international dialogue on the death penalty recently published an op-ed in the San Jose Mercury News regarding their discussion. From their experience, they discounted the argument that the death penalty deters potential…
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Jan 12, 2011
CLEMENCY: Governors in Missouri and Tennessee Grant Clemency to Inmates Facing Imminent Execution
On consecutive days, Governor Jay Nixon of Missouri and Governor Phil Bredesen of Tennessee granted clemencies to death row inmates facing imminent execution in their respective states. In Missouri, Gov. Nixon commuted the death sentence of Richard Clay, who was scheduled for execution on January 12. In Tennessee, Gov. Bredesen granted clemency to Edward Jerome Harbison, thus averting his…
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