Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Sep 142010

Kentucky Judge Rules Against Lethal Injection Protocol and Halts Execution

On September 10, Franklin County Circuit Judge Phillip Shepherd ruled that Kentuckys new exe­cu­tion pro­to­col is incon­sis­tent with state law and does not pro­vide safe­guards to pre­vent an inmate who is intel­lec­tu­al­ly dis­abled or crim­i­nal­ly insane from being exe­cut­ed. As a result, Judge Shepherd stayed the September 16 exe­cu­tion of Gregory Wilson, stat­ing, Because the state’s pro­to­col does­n’t include a mech­a­nism to deter­mine if some­one is men­tal­ly retarded and…

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News 

Sep 142010

NEW VOICES: John Grisham Asks– Why is Teresa Lewis on Death Row?

Acclaimed author John Grisham recent­ly pub­lished an op-ed in the Washington Post ques­tion­ing why Teresa Lewis is fac­ing the death penal­ty when both her co-defen­­dants, two men who actu­al­ly com­mit­ted the killings, were giv­en life-with­­out-parole sen­tences. According to Grisham, the judge who sen­tenced Lewis to death mis­tak­en­ly believed that she was the mas­ter­mind” behind the killings. However, it has now been revealed that her IQ of 72

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News 

Sep 102010

RESOURCES: Free Online Educational Curricula for High School and College Students

As many schools are now begin­ning their new terms, the Death Penalty Information Center is proud to remind you of our two edu­ca­tion­al cur­ric­u­la on the death penal­ty. Our award-win­n­ing high school pro­gram, Educational Curriculum on the Death Penalty, includes 10-day les­son plans, inter­ac­tive maps and exer­cis­es, and a pre­sen­ta­tion of pros and cons on the death penal­ty for dis­cus­sion and debate. Our col­lege-lev­­el cur­ricu­lum, Capital Punishment in…

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News 

Sep 092010

SUPREME COURT: Arguments Set in Three Death Penalty Cases in the Coming Term

The U.S. Supreme Court has set oral-argu­­ment dates in three death penal­­ty-relat­ed cas­es for the upcom­ing 2010 – 2011 term. The Court begins its new term on Monday, October 4. On October 6, the Court will hear Connick v. Thompson. This case chal­lenges an award of $14 mil­lion to John Thompson, who had been sen­tenced to death in New Orleans but was lat­er acquit­ted of all charges. Lower courts had found that the dis­trict attor­ney’s office failed to train…

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News 

Sep 082010

REPRESENTATION: Kentucky Inmate Faces Execution Despite Sham Trial

Gregory Wilson is sched­uled for exe­cu­tion in Kentucky on September 16, despite hav­ing been rep­re­sent­ed by woe­ful­ly unqual­i­fied and unpre­pared attor­neys in his death penal­ty tri­al. It took over a year for the tri­al judge to find an attor­ney to take Wilson’s case. Wilson was indi­gent, and the max­i­mum state fee for a cap­i­­tal-mur­der rep­re­sen­ta­tion was $2,500. The judge even put a note on his cour­t­house door, saying: PLEASE HELP. DESPERATE. THIS CASE CANNOT BE

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News 

Sep 072010

NEW VOICES: Washington Attorney General Says Death Penalty May Not Be Worth the Costs and Delays

Washington Attorney General Rob McKenna recent­ly said he is not sure the death penal­ty is the way to han­dle the worst crimes in his state. I could live with­out it frankly. I think it’s very expen­sive, and the delays are inor­di­nate, delay­ing clo­sure for the vic­tims’ fam­i­lies,” he said. McKenna said he uses the death penal­ty spar­ing­ly in Washington, reserv­ing it for the most seri­ous aggra­­vat­ed-mur­der con­vic­tions. He said he would con­tin­ue to uphold the law, if the people still…

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News 

Sep 062010

Death Row Chaplain is Certain: This Woman Doesn’t Deserve to Die”

Teresa Lewis is sched­uled to be exe­cut­ed on September 23 in Virginia, the first woman to be exe­cut­ed in that state in a cen­tu­ry. But Lynn Litchfield, the for­mer prison chap­lain who came to know Lewis over six years, has said she does­n’t deserve to die.” Litchfield recent­ly wrote in Newsweek Magazine that Lewis has an IQ of 72” and that one of the the two men who car­ried out the killings admitt[ed] that it was he, not she, who masterminded the…

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News 

Sep 032010

CLEMENCY: Gov. Strickland Commutes Kevin Keith’s Sentence to Life Without Parole

On September 2, Ohio Governor Ted Strickland (pic­tured) grant­ed clemen­cy to Kevin Keith, com­mut­ing his death sen­tence to life with­out parole. Keith, who was con­vict­ed of killing three peo­ple, has always main­tained his inno­cence, and some evi­dence point­ed to anoth­er sus­pect. Gov. Strickland’s com­mu­ta­tion state­ment addressed his con­cerns regard­ing Keith’s case: Mr. Keith’s con­vic­tion relied upon the link­ing of cer­tain eye­wit­ness testimony with…

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News 

Sep 022010

EDITORIALS: The last man to die”

A recent edi­to­r­i­al in the Greensboro, NC, News & Record indi­cat­ed that cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment may be on its last legs” in North Carolina. In prac­tice,” the editorial stated, the death penal­ty near­ly is erad­i­cat­ed. It is com­pli­cat­ed, cost­ly and no longer trust­ed.” According to the paper, use of the death penal­ty has been in steady decline. In 1999, 25 defen­dants were sen­tenced to death and anoth­er 16 were added the fol­low­ing year. In 2009, there were only two new…

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News 

Sep 012010

NEW VOICES: North Carolina District Attorneys Support Moratorium on Executions

Seth Edwards, pres­i­dent of the North Carolina Conference of District Attorneys, said that he sup­port­ed a mora­to­ri­um on the exe­cu­tion of any death row inmates whose cas­es include evi­dence from the State Bureau of Investigation. “[W]e need to make sure the issues are resolved in the SBI crime lab,” Edwards said. I just feel like the pub­lic right now is skep­ti­cal.” Last month, a gov­ern­ment audit showed that the lab had tam­pered with evi­dence and issued false…

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