Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Aug 172009

U.S. Supreme Court Orders Historic Hearing on Innocence Claim in Troy Davis Case

On August 17 the United States Supreme Court ordered a new evi­den­tiary hear­ing for Georgia death row inmate Troy Davis, whose case has drawn world­wide atten­tion because of new evi­dence of his pos­si­ble inno­cence. For the first time in near­ly 50 years, the Court has favor­ably respond­ed to a peti­tion direct­ed to them, rather than as an appeal from oth­er courts. With only two Justices writ­ing in dis­sent, the Court ordered the lower federal…

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News 

Aug 142009

Books: True Stories of False Confessions”

In True Stories of False Confessions, edi­tors Rob Warden and Steven Drizin present arti­cles about some of the key accounts of false con­fes­sions in the U.S. jus­tice sys­tem writ­ten by more than forty authors, includ­ing Alex Kotlowitz and John Grisham. The cas­es are grouped into cat­e­gories such as brain­wash­ing, infer­ence, fab­ri­ca­tion, and men­tal fragili­ty. This refutes the per­cep­tion that false con­fes­sions rep­re­sent indi­vid­ual tragedies rather…

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News 

Aug 142009

Restrictions on Death Penalty Appeals Raising Judges’ Concerns

A num­ber of fed­er­al judges have recent­ly writ­ten strong dis­sents in cap­i­tal cas­es because they were con­cerned that restric­tions on appeals could lead to trag­ic mis­takes. Judge William Fletcher of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, for exam­ple, began his dis­sent in the case of Kevin Cooper with the words,​“The State of California may be about to exe­cute an inno­cent man.” According to a study by the New York Times, such…

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News 

Aug 122009

NEW RESOURCES: A Report on Mandatory Death Sentences

The Death Penalty Project of London recent­ly pub­lished A Penalty Without Legitimacy: The Mandatory Death Penalty In Trinidad And Tobago (2009), a col­lec­tion of papers pre­sent­ed at a con­fer­ence in Trinidad & Tobago in March 2009. The papers include a study of opin­ions of judges, pros­e­cu­tors, and coun­sel on the use of the manda­to­ry death penal­ty in Trinidad and Tobago and ways to bring its prac­tice in line with oth­er coun­tries that have retained the death penal­ty. The…

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News 

Aug 112009

Gov. Perdue Signs North Carolina’s Racial Justice Act – NAACP Commends Passage

Governor Beverly Purdue of North Carolina signed the state’s Racial Justice Act into law on August 11, con­clud­ing a long peri­od of leg­isla­tive action sur­round­ing this death penal­ty statute. Gov. Purdue said in a news release,​“I have always been a sup­port­er of death penal­ty, but I have always believed it must be car­ried out fair­ly. The Racial Justice Act ensures that when North Carolina hands down our state’s harsh­est pun­ish­ment to our most…

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News 

Aug 102009

BOOKS: The Crying Tree”

The Crying Tree is a new nov­el by Naseem Rakha that rais­es the real-life ques­tion: Could you for­give the man who mur­dered your son? Rakha is an award-win­n­ing broad­cast jour­nal­ist whose work has been heard on NPRs​“All Things Considered” and​“Morning Edition.” The sto­ry of her nov­el is told through the lives of a moth­er whose son was mur­dered and the super­in­ten­dent of a state pen­i­ten­tiary where the defen­dan­t’s exe­cu­tion is to take place.

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News 

Aug 072009

Conditional Pardons Granted for Three of Norfolk Four

On August 6, Virginia Governor Tim Kaine held a press con­fer­ence announc­ing con­di­tion­al par­dons to three of the four sailors known as the Norfolk Four. Danial Williams, Joseph Dick, Eric Williams and Derek Tic were were con­vict­ed of the 1997 rape and mur­der of Michelle Moore-Bosko. The par­doned defen­dants, Danial Williams, Dick and Tic were orig­i­nal­ly giv­en life sen­tences, while Eric Williams was sen­tenced to eight and a half years in prison…

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News 

Aug 062009

Racial Justice Act passes in North Carolina

On August 5, the North Carolina sen­ate passed a bill allow­ing pre-tri­al defen­dants and death-row inmates to chal­lenge the death penal­ty process through the use of sta­tis­ti­cal stud­ies. The Racial Justice Act allows a defen­dant fac­ing a cap­i­tal tri­al or an inmate sen­tenced to death to use evi­dence show­ing a pat­tern of racial dis­par­i­ty as a way of chal­leng­ing racial injus­tice in the death penal­ty. Prosecutors would then have the…

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News 

Aug 052009

Murders Drop in New Jersey Following Moratorium and Abolition of Death Penalty

The num­ber of mur­ders in New Jersey declined 24% in the first six months of 2009 com­pared to the same peri­od last year. Murders declined in 2008, the year after the state abol­ished the death penal­ty, mark­ing the first time since 1999 that New Jersey has seen a drop in mur­ders for two con­sec­u­tive years. Murders dropped 11% in 2007, the year fol­low­ing a state-imposed mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions, which was insti­tut­ed in 2006. Governor Jon…

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