Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Jul 22, 2009
NEW RESOURCES: “Reevaluating Lineups: Why Witnesses Make Mistakes and How to Reduce the Chance of a Misidentification”
The Innocence Project has released a new report pointing to the problems with eyewitness identifications in criminal cases and offering recommendations for making the system more reliable. The report,“Reevaluating Lineups: Why Witnesses Make Mistakes and How to Reduce the Chance of a Misidentification,” states that over 175 people (including some who were sentenced to death) have been wrongfully convicted based, in part, on…
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Jul 21, 2009
Ohio Parole Board Recommends Clemency for Death Row Inmate
The Ohio Parole Board made a rare recommendation of clemency on July 17, voting 5 – 2 that Jason Getsy’s death sentence should be reduced to life without parole. Getsy is scheduled to be executed on August 18 for the murder of Ann Serafino in 1995. A co-defendant who initiated and organized the crime received a lesser sentence of 35 years to life.“In imposing a death sentence, it is imperative that we have consistency and…
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Jul 20, 2009
NEW VOICES: Former State Department Official Urges President to Implement Ruling of World Court
John Bellinger, who served as legal adviser to the State Department from 2005 to 2009, has called on President Obama to assist in the review of the death penalty cases of foreign nationals who were denied rights under the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations. The U.S. has ratified the Vienna Convention and the Protocol that provides for resolution of disputes in the International Court of Justice in the Hague (ICJ). Mexico brought a suit to…
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Jul 16, 2009
Five Exonerations So Far in 2009 Demonstrate Risks of Death Penalty
The risk that innocent people could be executed remains high, as illustrated by the two most recent exonerations from death row. Ronald Kitchen was freed from prison Illinois after the state dismissed all charges against him on July 7. He had spent 13 years on death row and a total of 21 years in prison. Governor George Ryan had commuted his sentence to life in 2003, along with all other death row inmates. Kitchen’s original conviction was…
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Jul 15, 2009
Racial Justice Act Passed In North Carolina House and Senate
On July 15, the House of Representatives of North Carolina voted 61 – 53 to pass the Racial Justice Act. A similar bill already passed the state senate, though that bill contained an amendment to bypass some objections to the state’s execution process. The new law, if finally approved, would allow judges to consider whether racial bias played a role in the decision to seek or impose the death penalty.“This is a fairness bill,” said Rep. Larry Womble, the…
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Jul 14, 2009
Death Sentences Decline in Key Louisiana Jurisdiction
Jefferson Parish near New Orleans has sent 28 people to death row since the death penalty was reinstated in 1975, many of them under the current District Attorney, Paul Connick Jr., who took office in 1997. But no one has been sentenced to death in that parish in the past 5 years and prosecutors haven’t even tried a capital case in the past 4 years, despite a number of high-profile murders. This decrease in death sentencing is not unique to Louisiana.“The trend in these…
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Jul 13, 2009
NEW VOICES: Experts Find Little Benefit to Justify California’s Expensive Death Penalty
Two experts in criminology challenged the rationale for California’s high spending on the death penalty in a recent op-ed in the Contra Costa Times. Michael Radelet, chair of the Sociology Department at the University of Colorado-Boulder, and Werner Einstadter, professor emeritus of criminology and sociology at Eastern Michigan University, contrasted California’s multi-million dollar spending on capital punishment with the lack of any…
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Jul 12, 2009
STUDIES: Death Penalty for Female Offenders
The latest issue of the report, “Death Penalty for Female Offenders,” has been released by Professor Victor Streib of the Ohio Northern University School of Law. The report includes national trends regarding women and the death penalty and case details about individual female death row inmates from 1973 through June 30, 2009. The report notes that while women account for one in ten murder arrests (10%), only one in forty-nine death sentences imposed at trial are for…
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Jul 11, 2009
LAW REVIEWS: Physician Participation in Lethal Injection Executions
Professor Ty Alper of the Boalt School of Law at Berkeley has written an article for the forthcoming edition of the North Carolina Law Review entitled“The Truth About Physician Participation in Lethal Injection Executions.” Prof. Alper, a noted death penalty expert, reviews the available research and recent litigation on the most widely used method of execution in the U.S., focusing especially on the potential role of doctors in executions. As states…
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Jul 10, 2009
STUDIES: “Double Tragedies”: Mental Illness and the Death Penalty
A new report,“Double Tragedies,” addresses the question of whether people with severe mental illness should face the death penalty. The report was authored by the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) and Murder Victims’ Families for Human Rights (MVFHR) and called for treatment and prevention instead of execution for such offenders. The report, based on extensive interviews with 21 family members in 10 different states, calls the…
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