Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Oct 162009

NEW VOICES: Judge Says Death Penalty too fraught with variables to survive”

Retired Federal Appeals Court Judge H. Lee Sarokin recent­ly offered a harsh cri­tique of the death penal­ty, espe­cial­ly chal­leng­ing the botched exe­cu­tion attempt of Romell Broom in Ohio in September. Citing moral­i­ty, arbi­trari­ness, and the dim prospects of clo­sure for the mur­der vic­tims’ fam­i­lies, Judge Sarokin called the impo­si­tion of the death penal­ty an errat­ic and flawed process that should not be per­mit­ted to continue. The sys­tem is too fraught with vari­ables to survive.

Read More

News 

Oct 152009

Gallup Poll: Support for Death Penalty Remains Near 25-Year Low

The lat­est Gallup Poll on the death penal­ty shows 65% of Americans sup­port the death penal­ty, sig­nif­i­cant­ly low­er than the 80% sup­port record­ed in 1994 and near the low­est sup­port of 64% in the past 25 years record­ed last year. Only 57% believe the death penal­ty is fair­ly applied, and 59% of Americans believe that an inno­cent per­son has been exe­cut­ed in the last five years. Gallup report­ed that sup­port for the death penal­ty is low­er if Americans are offered an explicit…

Read More

News 

Oct 142009

Supreme Court to Review Effect of Gross Negligence” by Death Penalty Attorney

On October 13, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear Holland v. Florida, a case rais­ing the question of whether gross neg­li­gence’ by a state-appoint­ed defense attor­ney in a death penal­ty case pro­vides a basis for extend­ing the time to file a fed­er­al habeas chal­lenge, in a case where the habeas plea was filed late despite repeat­ed instruc­tions from the client.” (sco​tus​blog​.com). In his peti­tion for cer­tio­rari to the Court, the…

Read More

News 

Oct 132009

STUDIES: FBI Uniform Crime Report Finds Murder Rates Declined in 2008

The annu­al crime report released by the Federal Bureau of Investigation showed a decline in the nation­al mur­der rate. The rate dropped 4.7% in 2008 com­pared to 2007. Despite a region­al decline, the South still has the high­est mur­der rate among the four geo­graph­ic regions: 6.6 mur­ders per 100,000 peo­ple, high­er than the nation­al rate of 5.4. The Northeast still main­tains the low­est mur­der rate at 4.2. There were 16,272 mur­ders or non-neg­li­­gent manslaughters in…

Read More

News 

Oct 092009

BOOKS: That Bird Has My Wings: The Autobiography of an Innocent Man on Death Row

That Bird Has My Wings” is a new book by Jarvis Jay Masters, an inmate on San Quentins death row in California. In this mem­oir, Masters tells his sto­ry from an ear­ly life with his heron-addic­t­ed moth­er to an abu­sive fos­ter home. He describes his escape to the illu­so­ry free­dom of the streets and through lone­ly nights spent in bus sta­tions and juve­nile homes, and final­ly to life inside the walls of San Quentin Prison. Using the nub and filler from a…

Read More

News 

Oct 072009

OPINION: Florida’s Death Penalty System Still Fraught with Problems’

A recent op-ed in the Florida Times-Union point­ed to con­tin­u­ing prob­lems in Florida’s death penal­ty sys­tem despite pri­or rec­om­men­da­tions for change in an American Bar Association report three years ago. The arti­cle was writ­ten by Raoul Cantero III, a for­mer Florida Supreme Court jus­tice appoint­ed by Gov. Jeb Bush, and Mark Schlakman, a senior pro­gram direc­tor for Florida State University’s Center for the Advancement of Human Rights. The authors state…

Read More

News 

Oct 062009

Two More Exonerations From Death Row: 137th and 138th Persons Freed in Oklahoma

Two for­mer death row inmates who were charged with mur­der in a 1993 dri­ve-by shoot­ing were released on October 2 after spend­ing near­ly 14 years in prison, includ­ing years on Oklahoma’s death row. District Attorney David Prater dropped charges against Yancy Douglas (left),35, and Paris Powell (right), 36, after decid­ing the state’s key wit­ness was unreliable. Ethically, and on my duty, I could not pro­ceed in this case and had to dismiss it,”…

Read More

News 

Oct 062009

Michael Toney, Recently Exonerated from Death Row in Texas, Dies in Car Crash

Michael Toney, who recent­ly became the 136th per­son exon­er­at­ed and freed from death row since 1973, died in a car crash on October 3 in East Texas. He had been released from jail one month ago on September 2 after the state dropped all charges against him for a 1985 bomb­ing that killed three peo­ple. Toney’s con­vic­tion was over­turned on December 17, 2008 by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals because the pros­e­cu­tion sup­pressed evi­dence relat­ing to the…

Read More

News 

Oct 052009

Ohio Executions Put on Hold; Governor Concurs

Lawrence Reynolds, who was sched­uled to be exe­cut­ed on October 8 in Ohio, received a stay today (Oct. 5) from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. The court’s stay was based on unre­solved issues in Ohio’s lethal injec­tion pro­to­col that were brought to the sur­face by the unsuc­cess­ful exe­cu­tion of Romell Broom on September 15. The majority wrote: These dis­turb­ing issues give rise to at least two ques­tions: first, whether Ohio is…

Read More

News 

Oct 022009

STUDIES: Errors by Texas Medical Examiners Led to Wrongful Convictions

A recent inves­ti­ga­ton by the Fort Worth Star-Telegram uncov­ered a series of mis­takes by med­ical exam­in­ers in Texas. Medical exam­in­ers have goofed up eye col­or and gen­der. They’ve made mis­takes on the loca­tions of scars or tat­toos, described gall­blad­ders and appen­dix­es that had long since been removed – even con­fused one body for anoth­er,” not­ed the sto­ry. Webb County Chief Medical Examiner Corinne Stern was crit­i­cized for an autop­sy she per­formed on an infant while…

Read More