Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Apr 08, 2010
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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Apr 07, 2010
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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Apr 06, 2010
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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Apr 05, 2010
EDITORIALS: “Dollars and Death”
A recent editorial in the Philadelphia Inquirer cited the high costs of Pennsylvania’s 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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Apr 02, 2010
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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Apr 01, 2010
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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Mar 31, 2010
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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Mar 30, 2010
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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Mar 29, 2010
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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Mar 26, 2010
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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