Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Nov 27, 2009
STUDIES: A Review of the Florida Death Penalty
Christopher Slobogin, Professor of Law and Psychiatry at Vanderbilt University, has written an evaluation of Florida’s death penalty to be published in a forthcoming edition of the Elon University Law Review. The evaluation is based on a study by an assessment team sponsored by the American Bar Association. Florida is one of the leading states in sentencing people to death, but it also has the most death row exonerations of any state in the…
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Nov 25, 2009
Kentucky Supreme Court Puts Death Penalty on Hold
On November 25, the Supreme Court of Kentucky ruled that changes to the state’s lethal injection protocol were not properly adopted and must be submitted for public review and approval before executions can take place. According to the opinion, “[T]his Court cannot ignore the publication and public hearing requirements set forth in Kentucky statutes. Thus, the Department must proceed … to adopt as an administrative regulation all portions of the protocol implementing the…
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Nov 24, 2009
NEW VOICES: Kentucky Public Defenders Call for Moratorium on Executions
On November 23, Kentucky Public Advocate Ed Monahan and Louisville Metro Chief Public Defender Dan Goyette called on the governor and the state’s Attorney General to stay all executions until an assessment team formed by the American Bar Association can objectively review the state’s death penalty. Monahan and Goyette wrote letters asking Attorney General Jack Conway not to request any further execution warrants and asking…
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Nov 23, 2009
Subject of Famous Supreme Court Decision Has Made a New Life
James Tyrone Woodson’s death sentence was overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1976 because the jury had not been allowed to consider any mitigating factors in his life or about his peripheral role in the crime. The Court not only rejected Woodson’s death sentence, but held that a mandatory death penalty system was unconstitutional. Woodson had been convicted in 1974 of first-degree murder, which was automatically punishable by the death penalty under North…
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Nov 20, 2009
BOOKS: The Last Lawyer – The Fight to Save Death Row Inmates
The Last Lawyer: The Fight to Save Death Row Inmates is a book by John Temple about the courageous work of a death penalty defense attorney in the south. Ken Rose is an attorney at the Center for Death Penalty Litigation in North Carolina. He has handled many capital cases, but the focus of this book is his defense of Bo Jones, a mentally handicapped farmhand convicted of a murder that occurred in 1987 and…
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Nov 19, 2009
Death Sentences Have Become Rare in Virginia
Virginia has not had a death verdict from a jury since March 2008, the longest stretch of time without a death verdict since the death penalty was reinstated in the 1970s. Nationally, there has also been a decline in death sentences: according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, there were 115 death sentences in 2007, 65% less than the 326 that were handed down in 1995. In Virginia, part of this decline might be attributed to a change in state law made…
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Nov 18, 2009
Death Sentences Declining in Texas
Death sentences have dropped significantly over the last few years in Texas according to a study by the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. The number of death sentences is at a 35-year low as prosecutors have pushed for fewer death sentences and juries have become less willing to impose them. Since 2005, defendants may receive a sentence of life without parole instead of the death penalty. Before this change, the only alternative to the death penalty in Texas…
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Nov 17, 2009
Supreme Court Decides One Capital Case and Agrees to Hear Another
On November 16, the United States Supreme Court accepted for review and handed down a per curiam decision in Wong v. Belmontes (No. 08 – 1263). The Court reinstated Fernando Belmontes’ death sentence and overturned the decision of the Ninth Circuit granting relief because of ineffectiveness of counsel. Belmontes was sentenced to death for murdering a woman during a robbery in 1981 in California. The appeals court ruled in 2008 that…
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Nov 16, 2009
NEW VOICES: Washington State Law Enforcement Officials Express Doubts About Death Penalty
Walla Walla County (Washington) Sheriff Mike Humphreys said the death penalty does not deter homicides, and it may be time for the public to reconsider the law: “At the time, (perpetrators do not) think about [the death penalty]. They don’t believe they’re going to get caught. And if they do get caught, there are a lot of court proceedings making it likely (execution is) not going to happen.… It’s costing us this much money. Let the people make that…
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Nov 15, 2009
DPIC’s Report on Costs and Police Views Subject of Bob Edwards Interview
The Bob Edwards on Sirius XM Radio recently explored the high costs of the death penalty and the views of the country’s police chiefs as discussed in DPIC’s latest report, “Smart on Crime: Reconsidering the Death Penalty in a Time of Economic Crisis.” Edwards is the former host of National Public Radio’s “Morning Edition.” He interviewed DPIC’s Executive Director Richard Dieter on October 20.
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