Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Aug 02, 2010
BOOKS: “False Justice: Eight Myths that Convict the Innocent”
A new book written by Jim and Nancy Petro offers a comprehensive analysis of how miscarriages of justice result in wrongful convictions. Jim Petro, a former Republican Attorney General of Ohio, has observed the justice system from all sides and was appalled by the frequent mistakes in the criminal justice system. As attorney general, he advocated along with the Innocence Project to help free a man wrongfully convicted of murder and rape. In “False…
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Jul 30, 2010
High Court in Kenya Rules Hundreds of Death Sentences Unconstitutional
On July 30, the Court of Appeal in Kenya unanimously held that mandatory death sentences are unconstitutional, violating the right to life and inflicting inhuman punishment since the law does not provide individuals the opportunity to present mitigating evidence. As a result, hundreds of prisoners will be given new sentencing hearings at which they will be able to present reasons why they should be spared a death sentence. New procedures will have to be adopted for conducting…
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Jul 29, 2010
Woman with Mental Disabilities Facing Execution in Virginia
An execution date of September 23 was recently set for Teresa Lewis, the only woman on Virginia’s death row. Although a number of other people were involved in the same crime, including the actual shooters of the two victims, Lewis was the only person sentenced to death. She pled guilty at trial. Since being sent to death row in 2002, Lewis has taken responsibility and apologized for her actions. She has had an exemplary record while in prison and does not…
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Jul 28, 2010
Texas Commission Says Case of Executed Man Based on Flawed Science
In a preliminary report, the Texas Forensic Science Commission recently found that fire investigators used flawed science in the case that led to the death sentence and execution of Cameron Todd Willingham. Willingham was executed in 2004, having been convicted of setting the fire that killed his three children. Willingham had always maintained his innocence and said the fire could have been an accident. The Commission acknowledged that new…
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Jul 27, 2010
STUDIES: Research Shows That Race of the Victim Matters in North Carolina Death Penalty
A recent study in North Carolina found that the odds of a defendant receiving a death sentence were three times higher if the person was convicted of killing a white person than if he had killed a black person. The study, conducted by Professors Michael Radelet and Glenn Pierce, examined 15,281 homicides in the state between 1980 and 2007, which resulted in 368 death sentences. Even after accounting for additional factors, such as multiple…
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Jul 26, 2010
PUBLIC OPINION: California Poll Shows Increase in Support for Life Without Parole
A recent poll conducted in California showed that support for life without parole for first-degree murder has increased among registered voters since 2000. When asked which sentence they preferred for a first-degree murderer, 42% of registered voters said they preferred life without parole and 41% said they preferred the death penalty. In 2000, when voters were asked the same question, 37% chose life without parole while 44% chose the death penalty. Some…
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Jul 23, 2010
NEW VOICES: Retired Prosecutor Says Death Penalty Does Not Serve Families of Homicide Victims
Dan Glode, a former district attorney in Lincoln County, Oregon, recently criticized the death penalty for “the enormous expense in dollars and emotional capital [it takes] for the families of homicide victims.” Writing in the Newport News-Times, he experienced crime both as a prosecutor and as a relative of a murder victim: “The emotional cost on the families of the victim is also enormous. I have some knowledge of this, as a close relative of mine…
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Jul 22, 2010
NEW VOICES: Former Police Investigator Says Law Enforcement Doesn’t Need the Death Penalty
Terrence Dwyer, formerly with the New York Police Bureau of Criminal Investigation, recently chronicled the evolution of his thinking about the death penalty and whether it serves the needs of law enforcement. Dwyer cited several examples of recent exonerations and noted, “Clearly, by keeping the death penalty in place, we run the unacceptable risk of executing the innocent. Those of us in law enforcement do our best to take the guilty off the streets, and…
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Jul 21, 2010
Five Myths About the Death Penalty
David Garland, a professor of law and sociology at New York University, recently addressed some common myths regarding the death penalty in America. In an op-ed in the Washington Post, Garland provided information challenging the common wisdom about capital…
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Jul 21, 2010
FOREIGN NATIONALS: Texas Execution Delayed Following State Department Request
A hearing to set an execution date for Texas death row inmate Humberto Leal was postponed after the presiding judge received a letter from a high-ranking U.S. State Department official. Leal, a Mexican citizen who was sentenced to death in 1995, had already been transferred to Bexar County Jail for the hearing to set the execution date. Harold Hongju Koh, a top legal adviser to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, wrote the judge requesting an…
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