Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Apr 082010

Innocence Groups Petition Supreme Court to Hear Case

Innocence groups from around the coun­try, along with a group of eye­wit­ness tes­ti­mo­ny experts, recent­ly filed ami­cus briefs ask­ing the U.S. Supreme Court to hear the case of Kevin Keith, an Ohio man who is on death row for fatal­ly shoot­ing three peo­ple in 1994. The inno­cence groups stat­ed that Keith’s con­vic­tion was based on faulty eye­wit­ness tes­ti­mo­ny that was improp­er­ly influ­enced by the police. In addi­tion, Keith’s coun­sel uncovered another…

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News 

Apr 072010

NEW VOICES: Chief of Police Says Death Penalty Does Not Serve Victims

James Abbott, Chief of Police of West Orange, New Jersey, recent­ly spoke at an inter­na­tion­al forum regard­ing his expe­ri­ence as a mem­ber of the New Jersey Death Penalty Study Commission. Chief Abbott, who was Governor Codey’s Republican appointee to the Commission, said he did not antic­i­pate chang­ing his mind regard­ing cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, but was great­ly influ­enced by the sto­ries of mur­der vic­tims’ fam­lies who tes­ti­fied dur­ing the commission’s…

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News 

Apr 062010

STUDIES: Death Sentences in California Show Arbitrariness of the System

A new report released by the ACLU of Northern California reveals that only three coun­ties – Los Angeles, Orange, and Riverside – account­ed for 83% of the state’s death sen­tences in 2009. Los Angeles County, with 13 death sen­tences, was the lead­ing death penal­ty coun­ty in the entire coun­try last year. According to the report, California, with the largest death row in the coun­try, spends $137 mil­lion annu­al­ly on the death penal­ty, while the state is cut­ting back on many vital…

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News 

Apr 052010

EDITORIALS: Dollars and Death”

A recent edi­to­r­i­al in the Philadelphia Inquirer cit­ed the high costs of Pennsylvanias death penal­ty as a key rea­son for sup­port­ing an abo­li­tion bill that was pro­posed last month by a state sen­a­tor. According to the edi­to­r­i­al, the state could sig­nif­i­cant­ly cut spend­ing by elim­i­nat­ing the death penal­ty and the lengthy court pro­ceed­ings that accom­pa­ny it. Taxpayers would also save by not hav­ing to main­tain the state’s high-secu­ri­­ty death row, which…

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News 

Apr 022010

NEW VOICES: Former Texas Governor Says Death Penalty Trial Breached Every Standard of Fairness”

Mark White, for­mer gov­er­nor of Texas and a death penal­ty sup­port­er, recent­ly wrote an op-ed in the National Law Journal call­ing for a new tri­al for Charles Hood, a Texas death row inmate whose tri­al was com­pro­mised by the fact that the pros­e­cu­tor and the tri­al judge had been in an inti­mate rela­tion­ship pri­or to the tri­al. As for­mer Gov. White explained, The judge and the pros­e­cu­tor at Hood’s tri­al had a long-term secret affair prior…

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News 

Apr 012010

Oklahoma Execution Stayed; Jurors Did Not Have Life Without Parole Option

Governor Brad Henry of Oklahoma recent­ly grant­ed a stay to Richard Smith, who was sched­uled for exe­cu­tion on April 8. The gov­er­nor want­ed to allow more time to review the rec­om­men­da­tion of the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board that Smith’s death sen­tence be com­mut­ed, and to meet with pros­e­cu­tion and defense attor­neys to hear their per­spec­tives. Smith was con­vict­ed of a 1986 mur­der dur­ing a time when evi­dence of fundamental…

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News 

Mar 312010

INTERNATIONAL STUDIES: Only 18 Countries Carried Out Executions in 2009

Amnesty International recent­ly released its annu­al glob­al report on the death penal­ty, cov­er­ing exe­cu­tions and death sen­tences world­wide in 2009. The report states that more than 700 peo­ple were exe­cut­ed in 18 coun­tries in 2009, and at least 2,000 peo­ple were sen­tenced to death. One hun­dred and sev­en­­ty-nine (179) coun­tries had no exe­cu­tions last year. Countries with the high­est num­ber of exe­cu­tions were Iran (with at least 388 exe­cu­tions),

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News 

Mar 302010

Mental Health Experts Say North Carolina Case Shows Need to Exempt Mentally Ill from Death Penalty

In North Carolina, Kristin Parks of Disability Rights N.C. and John Tote of the Mental Health Association‑N.C. point­ed to the case of Abdullah El-Amin Shareef as illus­trat­ing the need for a law exempt­ing the men­tall ill from the death penal­ty. A jury recent­ly sen­tenced Shareef to life in prison with­out parole in a case where pros­e­cu­tors had sought the death penal­ty. In April 2004, Shareef com­mit­ted a sense­less crime that killed one man and…

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News 

Mar 292010

NEW VOICES: Death penalty hurts – not helps – families of murder victims”

Kathleen Garcia, a vic­tims’ advo­cate and expert on trau­mat­ic grief, recent­ly shared her opin­ions on the death penal­ty in New Hampshire, a state that is study­ing the issue through its Commission on Capital Punishment. Garcia, a mem­ber of New Jersey’s Death Penalty Study Commission, wrote, Make no mis­take – I am a con­ser­v­a­tive, a vic­tims’ advo­cate and a death penal­ty sup­port­er. But my real life expe­ri­ence has taught me that as long as the death penal­ty is on…

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News 

Mar 262010

Georgia High Court Allows Death Penalty Case to Proceed Despite Lack of Funding

The Georgia Supreme Court ruled on March 25 that the cap­i­tal pros­e­cu­tion of Jamie Ryan Weis could pro­ceed despite the defen­dan­t’s claims that a lack of state fund­ing for cap­i­tal defense has deprived him of effec­tive rep­re­sen­ta­tion and a speedy tri­al. Weis, who was arrest­ed 4 years ago, was first appoint­ed two defense lawyers with death penal­ty expe­ri­ence but the agency that funds defense lawyers in cap­i­tal cas­es could not pay them. They were replaced by…

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