Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Apr 27, 2010
Evidentiary Hearing Set for June 30 (Update: June 23) in the Case of Troy Davis
On April 27, Federal District Court Judge William Moore set a date of June 30, 2010 (Update: June 23), at 10 AM in Savannah, Georgia, for the evidentiary hearing regarding Troy Davis’ (pictured) claim of actual innocence. Davis filed an original habeas corpus petition with the U.S. Supreme Court in 2009 asserting that new evidence from witnesses who had recanted their trial testimony established his innocence. He had…
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Apr 27, 2010
NEW RESOURCES: The State of Criminal Justice 2010
The American Bar Association recently published The State of Criminal Justice 2010, an annual report that examines major issues, trends and significant changes in America’s criminal justice system. This publication serves as a valuable resource for academics, students, and policy-makes in the area of criminal justice, and contains 19 chapters focusing on specific areas of the criminal justice field. The chapter devoted to capital…
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Apr 26, 2010
BOOKS: In the Place of Justice – A Story of Punishment and Deliverance
Wilbert Rideau, a former death row inmate in Louisiana who has since been released from prison, recently published his memoir, In the Place of Justice: A Story of Punishment and Deliverance. Rideau was sentenced to death at the age of 19 for killing a woman in panic during a botched robbery attempt. While on death row, he underwent a transformation and, after his sentence was commuted to life, he…
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Apr 23, 2010
California Senate Committee Passes Bill to Adopt One-Drug Lethal Injection
A bill that would change California’s lethal injection procedure unanimously passed the Senate Public Safety Committee on April 20. Senate Bill 1018, authored by Sen. Tom Harman, would require the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to develop and implement a one-drug lethal injection process involving an appropriate anesthetic. California has had a de facto moratorium on executions since February 2006 when a federal judge held that…
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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…
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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…
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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…
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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…
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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…
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