Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Jan 11, 2011
ILLINOIS LEGISLATURE VOTES TO REPEAL THE DEATH PENALTY
On January 11, the Illinois Senate, by a vote of 32 – 25, joined the House in voting to repeal the state’s death penalty and re-allocate funds in the Capital Litigation Trust Fund to a fund for murder victims’ services and law enforcement. If signed into law, Illinois would become the 16th state to stop capital punishment and would mark the fewest states with the death penalty since 1978. Since 1976, Illinois has carried out 12 executions. In…
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Jan 10, 2011
Colorado Governor Grants Unconditional Pardon Based on Innocence to Inmate Who Was Executed
On January 7, 2011, Colorado Governor Bill Ritter granted a full and unconditional posthumous pardon to Joe Arridy, who had been convicted and executed as an accomplice to a murder that occurred in 1936. The pardon came 72 years after Arridy’s execution and is the first such pardon in Colorado history. A press release from the governor’s office stated, “[A]n overwhelming body of evidence indicates the 23-year-old Arridy was innocent, including false and…
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Jan 07, 2011
States Scrambled to Find Lethal Injection Drugs Overseas
Recent revelations about the source of drugs used in lethal injections in the U.S. reveal the extent to which some states have gone in their pursuit of the deadly chemicals. According to the British Broadcasting Corporation, Arizona obtained its three lethal injection drugs from Dream Pharma, Ltd., a small pharmaceutical company in west London located in the back of a driving school. Clive Stafford Smith, director of Reprieve, a British organization…
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Jan 07, 2011
Illinois House Votes to Repeal Death Penalty
By a vote of 60 – 54 on January 6, the Illinois House approved SB3539, a bill to repeal the death penalty and use the money saved to assist victims’ families and improve law enforcement. The action came eleven years after a moratorium on executions was put in place by then Governor George Ryan. The repeal bill will now move to the Senate for a vote as early as next week. In January 2000, Ryan ordered the moratorium following revelations that more than a dozen innocent people…
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Jan 05, 2011
Jurisdictions with no recent executions
Although the United States is considered a death penalty country, executions are rare or non-existent in most of the nation: the majority of states—31 out of 50—have either abolished the death penalty or have not carried out an execution in at least 10 years. An additional 6 states have not had an execution in at least 5 years, for a total of 37 states with no executions in that time. Three additional jurisdictions (the District of Columbia,…
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Jan 04, 2011
NEW VOICES: Murder Victims’ Families Need Services More Than the Death Penalty
In a recent article in the Peoria Journal Star, Jennifer Bishop Jenkins and Kathleen Bishop Becker, both of whom had family members murdered, called on Illinois’s state legislature to end the death penalty as a better way of helping victims. Becker and Jenkins wrote, “When our family members were murdered, issues like crime prevention, victims’ rights, and the death penalty stopped being merely hypothetical… it’s because we prioritize victims and public safety that…
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Jan 03, 2011
EDITORIALS: Major Papers Around the Country Tracked DPIC’s Year End Report
The information and analysis in DPIC’s recent 2010 Year-End Report were reported in hundreds of media outlets around the country. Among the papers writing editorials on the trends cited in the report were the New York Times, the Washington Post, and Colorado’s Aurora Sentinel. The Times’ editorial, “Still Cruel, Less Usual,” noted, “A report released this…
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Jan 02, 2011
EDITORIALS: New Hampshire’s Concord Monitor Says “Abolish the Death Penalty”
Following the release of the report from the New Hampshire Commission to Study the Death Penalty, New Hampshire’s Concord Monitor called for an end to capital punishment in the state. The Commission concluded a year of public hearings and careful study and chose by a 12 – 10 vote to recommend neither expanding nor abolishing the death penalty. However, the Monitor pointed out that the evidence presented to the commission was primarily in favor of repealing the…
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Jan 01, 2011
Two New Federal Death Sentences in Non-Death Penalty State
On May 29, 2007, a jury in Charleston, West Virginia, recommended death sentences for George Lecco and Valerie Friend for the murder of Carla Collins in order to protect their drug ring. Prosecutors maintained that Lecco arranged to have Collins killed and that Friend did the shooting in 2005. Formal sentencing was scheduled for August 23. The judge is required to follow the jury’s recommendation. These are the first federal death sentences in West Virginia since the federal law was…
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Jan 01, 2011
Idaho Counties Struggle With Costs of the Death Penalty
Despite assistance from the county-supported statewide Capital Crimes Defense Fund, local officials in several Idaho counties are troubled by the economic burden of prosecuting death penalty cases. They are also concerned about a recent federal appellate court ruling that could overturn all existing state death sentences because Idaho’s sentencing procedures were deemed…
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