Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Jul 232010

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…

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News 

Jul 222010

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…

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News 

Jul 212010

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…

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News 

Jul 212010

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…

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News 

Jul 192010

Federal Inmate Faces Execution Despite Clear Evidence of Intellectual Disability

Bruce Webster faces a fed­er­al exe­cu­tion despite new evi­dence – includ­ing eval­u­a­tions by three doc­tors – indi­cat­ing he is intel­lec­tu­al­ly dis­abled. Although the U.S. Supreme Court banned the exe­cu­tion of the​“men­tal­ly retard­ed” (now referred to as​“intel­lec­tu­al­ly dis­abled”) in 2002, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit in April denied Webster’s request for a hear­ing on his men­tal capac­i­ty claim. The court found that…

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News 

Jul 182010

Chief Texas Judge Reprimanded for Discrediting the Judiciary in Death Penalty Case

Sharon Keller, the pre­sid­ing judge of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, received a pub­lic warn­ing from the State Commission on Judicial Conduct on July 16 for her con­duct in bar­ring access to the courts to a death row inmate who was about to be exe­cut­ed in 2007. The Commission said her actions con­sti­tut­ed​“will­ful or per­sis­tent con­duct that is clear­ly incon­sis­tent with the prop­er per­for­mance of her duties.” When request­ed at home to…

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News 

Jul 162010

PUBLIC OPINION: Majority of Illinois Voters Supports Alternatives to the Death Penalty

A recent poll con­duct­ed by Lake Research Partners found that a major­i­ty of Illinois reg­is­tered vot­ers pre­fer an alter­na­tive sen­tence to the death penal­ty for those who com­mit mur­der. The poll­sters sur­veyed vot­ers in April, and found that 43% believed that the penal­ty for mur­der should be life with no pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole and a require­ment to make resti­tu­tion to the victim’s fam­i­ly. Another 18% felt that the penal­ty for mur­der should be life in…

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News 

Jul 142010

Tennessee Governor Commutes Death Sentence of Gaile Owens

On July 14, Tennessee Governor Phil Bredesen com­mut­ed the death sen­tence of Gaile Owens to life in prison. Owens, who was sen­tenced to death in 1986 for hir­ing a man to kill her hus­band, had accept­ed a deal to plead guilty to the crime in exchange for a sen­tence of life in prison. However, the man who did the killing refused to plead guilty, and pros­e­cu­tors then rescind­ed the deal for Owens. Both co-defen­­­dants were sen­tenced to death. In…

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News 

Jul 132010

After Two Faulty Trials With Inadequate Representation, Oklahoma Death Row Inmate Released 27 Years Later

An inmate who spent 27 years on Oklahoma​’s death row was released ear­li­er in July after he accept­ed a plea agree­ment with pros­e­cu­tors. James Fisher was con­vict­ed of mur­der and sen­tenced to death in 1983. A fed­er­al appeals court over­turned his death sen­tence because of inad­e­quate attor­ney rep­re­sen­ta­tion, thus send­ing the case back to tri­al. In 2005, Fisher was again con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death. The sec­ond death sentence was…

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News 

Jul 122010

Why Someone Might Confess to a Crime He Did Not Commit

More often than many real­ize, inno­cent peo­ple false­ly con­fess to crimes they did not com­mit, accord­ing to a recent review in the Chicago Tribune. For exam­ple, Kevin Fox, was accused of sex­u­al­ly assault­ing and mur­der­ing his 3‑year-old daugh­ter in Illinois. He con­fessed to the crime after spend­ing 14 hours in inter­ro­ga­tion, dur­ing which police ignored his requests for a lawyer and told him that they would arrange for inmates to rape him in jail. Fox was later…

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