Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Jan 01, 2011
New Hampshire Study Commission Report on the Death Penalty
On Dec. 1, 2010, the New Hampshire Death Penalty Study Commission released its report to the governor. The majority (12 – 10) report recommended neither the abolition nor the expansion of the death penalty. The report did find that there is an added cost for the death penalty as compared to a life without parole sentence: “There is a significant difference in the cost of prosecution and incarceration of a first degree murder…
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Jan 01, 2011
Death Penalty Repeal Bill Considered in South Dakota
A bill that would repeal the death penalty in South Dakota was scheduled for a hearing in the House State Affairs Committee on February 10. The bill, HB 1245, would mandate life imprisonment without parole for people convicted of Class A felonies. South Dakota has only executed one person in the last 50 years, and currently has 3 people on death row. The bill is sponsored by Rep. Gerald Lange (D‑Madison), and strongly supported by the…
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Jan 01, 2011
NEW VOICES: Montana Assistant Attorney General Calls for Death Penalty Repeal
Montana Assistant Attorney General John Connor has voiced support for a legislative measure that would abolish capital punishment in his state. Stating his belief that the death penalty does not deter crime and is expensive, Connor told the Montana House Judiciary Committee, “It seems to me to be the ultimate incongruity to say we respect life so much that we’re going to dedicate all our money, all our resources, our legal expertise and our entire system to try and…
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Jan 01, 2011
RESOURCES: New FBI Report Shows U.S. Murder Rate Unchanged Over 5 Years
The FBI recently released the latest version of its Uniform Crime Reports: Crime in the United States 2005. The report showed that the murder rate in 2005 (5.6 murders per 100,000 people) was the same as in 2001, with little change in the intervening years. Death sentences, executions and the size of death row all declined during this period. As in previous years, the South had the higherst murder rate, 6.6, among the 4 geographical regions. Over 80% of the executions in the…
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Jan 01, 2011
Maryland Commission Recommends Abolition of Death Penalty
The Maryland Commission on Capital Punishment voted on November 12 to recommend the abolitiion of the death penalty in the state. In a 13 – 7 vote, the Commission cited the possibility that an innocent person could be mistakenly executed, as well as geographical and racial disparities in how it is used. Benjamin Civiletti, the chair of the commission and a former U.S. attorney general, said, “It’s haphazard in how it’s applied, and that’s terribly…
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Jan 01, 2011
New Hampshire Senate, Wyoming House Pass Bills to Ban Juvenile Death Penalty
Less than a month after the U.S. Supreme Court announced that it will reconsider the constitutionality of the death penalty for juvenile offenders, two state legislative bodies have passed measures to ban the practice. The New Hampshire Senate passed its bill to ban the execution of those who were under the age of 18 at the time of their offense on February 19, 2004. The measure now moves to the House, where a committee hearing and vote are expected in the coming weeks. The Wyoming…
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Dec 30, 2010
From DPIC: End of the Year Resources
For our last post in 2010, the Death Penalty Information Center would like thank everyone who has contributed to and supported the Center’s efforts in many ways this year. We thought it would be helpful to highlight some of the resources available on our website that you may have missed. In 2010, we conducted with Lake Research Partners one of the most comprehensive national polls on public opinion about the death penalty. You can find the complete poll…
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Dec 29, 2010
EDITORIALS: “Governor, Save Inmate’s Life”
In an editorial, the Los Angeles Times has called on Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger of California to commute Kevin Cooper’s death sentence before leaving office in early January 2011. The Times noted that considerable doubt has been cast upon the evidence used to convict Cooper of four murders that occurred in San Bernadino County in 1983. In particular, they cite the analysis offered by federal Judge William Fletcher of the…
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Dec 28, 2010
STUDIES: Racial and Geographic Disparities in the Federal Death Penalty
A new study published in the Washington Law Review addresses the racial and geographical disparities in the implementation of the federal death penalty. The study, conducted by G. Ben Cohen, Counsel for the Capital Appeals Project in New Orleans, and Robert J. Smith, Counsel for the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice at Harvard Law School, concludes that the disparities in the federal death penalty may exist because federal cases do not use a…
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Dec 27, 2010
NEW RESOURCES: Hispanics and the Death Penalty
According to the latest figures from the Bureau of Justice Statistics, Hispanics represent a larger proportion of those on death row than in the past. Hispanics constituted almost 20% of the new admissions to death row in 2009 (18 new inmates). Half of the new Hispanic death row inmates were from California, bringing their total to 157 Hispanic inmates, the most in the country. Hispanics now represent 13.5% of the U.S. death row population. In 2000, they made…
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