Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Apr 22, 2010
Death Row Inmates’ Long Wait for Execution May Be Second Punishment
The AFP recently examined the time an inmate spends on death row between sentencing and execution and questioned if inmates are being punished twice with long-term imprisonment and execution. They found an average inmate spends 13 years on death row, with some spending 30 years or more. Craig Haney, professor of psychology at the University of California, Santa Cruz and expert on prisoners held in isolation, said, “People on death row live under the threat of death, which is…
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Apr 21, 2010
District Attorney and Murder Victim’s Father Call Death Penalty an “Empty Promise”
In California, families of murder victims Amber Dubois and Chelsea King agreed to a life sentence without parole for the girls’ killer, John Albert Gardner. Brent King, Chelsea’s father, said that agreeing with County District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis’ decision not to seek the death penalty for his daugther’s killer was “torturous,” but so would have been a death penalty trial and the years of appeals that follow. Dumanis said there was enough evidence to…
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Apr 20, 2010
Oklahoma City Bombing Victim’s Father Says Executions are Not Part of the Healing Process
News
Apr 19, 2010
EDITORIAL: Death Penalty “Neither Just Nor Moral”
A recent editorial in the Salt Lake Tribune calls for Utahns and their elected leaders to consider abandoning the death penalty citing that “state-sponsored killing of a human being, no matter how heinous the crime, is permitted by a system that has been proven beyond doubt to be inherently capricious, unfair and shockingly fallible.” The editorial also pointed to the declining use of the death penalty nationwide, with an all-time high of 328 death sentences in 1994 compared…
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Apr 16, 2010
STUDIES: Victims’ Social Status Plays Influential Role in Death Cases
Scott Phillips, a sociology and criminology professor at the University of Denver, published a study last month in the Law & Society Review focusing on the imposition of death sentences in relation to the victim’s social status. Phillips studied capital cases in Harris County (Houston), Texas, between 1992 and 1999 and found that the social status of the victim in the underlying murder had a significant influence on whether the death penalty would be sought and…
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Apr 15, 2010
STUDIES: Ohio Releases Annual Capital Crimes Report
The Ohio Attorney General’s Office recently released its annual Capital Crimes Report, analyzing the state’s death penalty cases and death row population. In 2009, there was only one death sentence handed down in Ohio, mirroring a nationwide trend of declining death sentences. This was the fewest death sentences in a year since Ohio reinstated the death penalty. The report indicated that over half of the current death row population of 160 inmates are…
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Apr 14, 2010
NEW RESOURCES: Death Row USA, Fall 2009
The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund recently released its Fall 2009 edition of Death Row USA, a report detailing death row populations across the United States. According to the report, California, Florida and Texas continue to lead the nation in the number of death row inmates, with California (694) having a death row population almost twice as large as either Florida (395) or Texas (339). In addition, while Florida’s and Texas’ death row…
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Apr 13, 2010
As California Spends Hundreds of Millions on the Death Penalty, Los Angeles Can’t Afford Homicide Investigations
In California, a state that is spending $137 million per year on the death penalty, many homicide investigations have been put on hold due to a budget crisis in Los Angeles. The Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) is forcing officers to suspend work on their cases and take days or weeks off because of new overtime limits. One of the LAPD’s most productive investigators sat idle for 6 weeks, unable to follow old leads or to pick up on new ones because he had accumulated…
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Apr 11, 2010
Former Death Row Inmate Acquitted in One Court, Now Convicted in Another
Master Sgt. Timothy Hennis was convicted in 1986 of murdering three people in North Carolina. He was tried in state court. However, his conviction was overturned because of weak evidence and improper statements by the prosecution. He was re-tried, and the jury voted unanimously for his acquittal in 1989. The evidence from the crime scene was preserved and, when DNA testing became available, a re-evaluation of the evidence pointed to the possibility that…
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Apr 09, 2010
CSI Director Convicted of Planting Evidence in Murder Investigation
David Kofoed, CSI Director of Douglas County, Nebraska was convicted last month of planting evidence during a murder investigation, casting doubts on the legitimacy of other cases on which he worked. Kofoed’s work came into question after a 2006 investigation into the murder of Wayne and Sharmon Stock. The victims’ nephew was one of the leading suspects in the murder, despite the lack of physical evidence tying him and an accomplice to the killing. The…
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