Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Aug 11, 2010
NEW VOICES: Ohio “Timeout from Death”-Part II
Although the number of executions in Ohio in the past two years is second only to those in Texas, there is considerable support in Ohio for a review of the entire system. Two former prison directors, Reginald Wilkinson and Terry Collins, agree that death row cases should be reviewed to decide whether they are the“worst of the worst.” Wilkinson (pictured), who was director from 1991 to 2006 and witnessed many executions,…
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Aug 10, 2010
Ohio Governor and Attorney General Urge DNA Testing in Death Row Case
Ohio Governor Ted Strickland and Attorney General Richard Cordray recently urged prosecutors in seven criminal cases to allow DNA testing that could either prove innocence or confirm the defendant’s guilt. The seven cases include one man currently on death row, Tyrone Noling, two inmates serving long sentences, three men who are no longer in prison but want to clear their names, and a man who died in prison in 2006. Gov.
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Aug 09, 2010
Ohio Leaders Express Concern about State’s Death Penalty as Troublesome Execution Approaches
Prominent leaders in Ohio are calling for a comprehensive review of the state’s death penalty system, particularly as an execution nears for a man whose guilt is being seriously questioned. Kevin Keith (pictured) has been on Ohio’s death row for over 15 years and has an execution date of September 15. But new evidence has arisen about the unreliability of those who originally testified against…
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Aug 06, 2010
EDITORIALS: Implications of Texas Execution Based on Flawed Science
A recent editorial in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram raised questions about Texas’ entire death penalty system, given the preliminary finding by the Texas Forensic Science Commission that arson experts relied on outdated and flawed science during their investigation of a death penalty case. Cameron Willingham was executed in 2004 for setting a fire that killed his three daughters in 1991 based on this faulty…
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Aug 05, 2010
Alabama Inmate May Face Execution Because of Mailroom Mix-Up
Cory Maples, an inmate on Alabama’s death row, may pay for a simple clerical error with his life. When copies of an Alabama court ruling in his case were sent to the New York law firm handling his appeals, both copies were returned unopened because the firm’s attorneys representing Maples had left the firm. By the time the error was discovered, Maples’s time to appeal had expired. So far, the firm has failed to persuade a federal appeals court…
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Aug 04, 2010
First North Carolina Death Row Inmates File Appeal Under Racial Justice Act
Five men on North Carolina’s death row filed motions to have their death sentences reduced to life without parole based on data that indicate racial disparities in the state’s justice system. These cases are the first to request application of North Carolina’s Racial Justice Act, which allows the use of statewide or regional statistical studies to challenge a death sentence because of racial bias. In all five cases, the victims in the…
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Aug 03, 2010
BOOKS: “Ending the Death Penalty: The European Experience in Global Perspective”
A new book by Andrew Hammel offers insights into the different perspectives on the death penalty in America and Europe. “Ending the Death Penalty: The European Experience in Global Perspective” examines three countries that do not have the death penalty (Germany, France and the United Kingdom), and analyzes how capital punishment was ended in those countries. Hammel ultimately believes that the governmental structure, culture, and political…
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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…
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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…
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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…
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