Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Nov 162010

ARBITRARINESS: Jury Deadlocks on Death Penalty for Murder of Police Officer

A cap­i­tal jury in Philadelphia illus­trat­ed the divi­sive­ness and arbi­trari­ness of the death penal­ty when it could not decide on a sen­tence for Rasheed Scrugs, who admit­ted to killing Police Officer John Pawlowski. The atmos­phere in the jury room became​“hor­ri­ble” accord­ing to one of the jurors. Jurors almost imme­di­ate­ly report­ed no chance for a ver­dict, as delib­er­a­tions began with sev­en for life in prison and five for death by lethal injec­tion. Some…

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News 

Nov 152010

CLEMENCY: Ohio Governor Grants Fifth Clemency

Ohio Governor Ted Strickland grant­ed clemen­cy to Sidney Cornwell, reduc­ing this sen­tence to life with­out parole. Cornwell faced exe­cu­tion on November 16 for a 1996 gang-relat­ed shoot­ing in Youngstown. Attorneys for Cornwell argued that he grew up in an abu­sive envi­ron­ment and that he suf­fered from a genet­ic con­di­tion that con­tributed to his vio­lent ten­den­cies. The attor­neys also said that Cornwell’s death sentence was…

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News 

Nov 122010

Another Texas Execution Thrown in Doubt by New DNA Tests

Recent DNA tests raise seri­ous doubts about the con­vic­tion of a man exe­cut­ed in Texas in 2000. The tests revealed that a strand of hair found at the scene of a liquor-store shoot­ing did not belong to Claude Jones, as was orig­i­nal­ly implied by the pros­e­cu­tion. Instead, the hair belonged to the vic­tim. Jones was exe­cut­ed for the mur­der of the store’s own­er. The strand of hair was the only piece of phys­i­cal evi­dence that placed Jones at the…

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News 

Nov 112010

U.S. Military Death Penalty: Facts and Figures

The death penal­ty under the Uniform Code of Military Justice was rein­stat­ed in 1984. The mil­i­tary death row is locat­ed at the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. There are cur­rent­ly sev­en death row inmates await­ing exe­cu­tion, five of whom are African-Americans and two of whom are white. Unlike state exe­cu­tions, mem­bers of the mil­i­tary can­not be exe­cut­ed unless the President per­son­al­ly con­firms the death sen­tence. The President also has the power…

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News 

Nov 092010

Oklahoma Proposes New Lethal Injection Drug

Oklahoma recent­ly filed a peti­tion with a fed­er­al court ask­ing that pen­to­bar­bi­tal, an anes­thet­ic agent used in euthana­sia of ani­mals, be allowed as a sub­sti­tute for sodi­um thiopen­tal in lethal injec­tion pro­ce­dures. Earlier this year, Hospira Inc., the nation’s sole man­u­fac­tur­er of the lat­ter drug, announced that it has ceased pro­duc­tion because of a short­age in one of the ingre­di­ents. The short­age has forced Oklahoma and other…

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News 

Nov 082010

NEW RESOURCES: Death Penalty for Female Offenders”

A new report by Victor Streib, Professor of Law at Ohio Northern University, high­lights trends in the death penal­ty regard­ing female offend­ers. The report shows that the death penal­ty in the United States is rarely imposed on women. Of the approx­i­mate­ly 8,200 death sen­tences that have been imposed across the U.S. since 1973, less than 2% have been imposed on female defen­dants (167 out of 8,292, at the time of the report’s publication).

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News 

Nov 052010

Arkansas Supreme Court Orders Review of 1993 Capital Case

On November 4, the Arkansas Supreme Court ordered evi­den­tiary hear­ings to con­sid­er whether new­ly ana­lyzed DNA evi­dence should result in a new tri­al for Damien Echols, Jessie Misskelley and Jason Baldwin, who were con­vict­ed of the 1993 mur­ders of three West Memphis Cub Scouts. Echols was sen­tenced to death and the oth­er defen­dants received life. The results of the DNA tests on evi­dence from the crime scene…

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News 

Nov 042010

MULTIMEDIA: PBS Frontline to Air Documentary on Norfolk Four

Frontline’s doc­u­men­tary, The Confessions, inves­ti­gates the con­vic­tion of four Navy sailors for the rape and mur­der of a woman in Norfolk, Virginia in 1997. The doc­u­men­tary high­lights some of the high-pres­­­sure police inter­ro­ga­tion tech­niques, includ­ing the threat of the death penal­ty, sleep depri­va­tion, and intim­i­da­tion, that led each of the​“Norfolk Four” defen­dants to con­fess, despite a lack of evi­dence link­ing them to…

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News 

Nov 032010

NEW FROM DPIC: Video Excerpts from the International Police Forum on the Death Penalty

On October 13, offi­cials from the U.S. and Europe held what may have been the first ever inter­na­tion­al forum of law enforce­ment offi­cers on the mer­its of the death penal­ty in reduc­ing vio­lent crime. The offi­cers dis­cussed whether cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment actu­al­ly helps to keep cit­i­zens safe, assists heal­ing for vic­tims, and uses crime-fight­­­ing resources effi­cient­ly. The pan­elists, who includ­ed cur­rent and for­mer police offi­cers from the U.S. land…

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