Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
May 28, 2009
Florida’s Execution Selection Process Appears Secretive and Arbitrary
Florida Governor Charlie Crist recently chose two death row inmates for execution from among many eligible prisoners on the state’s death row, but no reasons were given for his choice. He joins a long line of Florida governors who made the decision of who lives and who dies without explanation of their selection method. “I don’t know how they decide,” said John Marek’s lawyer, Marty McClain, a veteran death-row attorney who has defended hundreds of inmates.
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May 27, 2009
California Could Save $1 Billion in 5 Years By Eliminating Death Penalty
California is facing an unprecedented budget deficit and voters recently rejected a series of tax reforms. To meet the crisis, Gov. Schwarzenegger has proposed selling state owned property, including San Quentin State Prison, to remedy the $21.3 billion deficit. Natasha Minsker of the Northern California ACLU, writing in the Daily Kos, has proposed that California eliminate or suspend the death penalty as a way of saving a large amount of money. According to her article, the state would save…
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May 26, 2009
NEW VOICES: 3 Connecticut Senators Change Opinion on Death Penalty
The recent 19 – 17 vote in the Connecticut Senate to abolish the death penalty was made possible by three senators who moved from supporting the death penalty to opposing it. Sen. Gary LeBeau had long favored the death penalty, partly because of “political calculations.” His stance shifted in the last couple of years witnessing a series of high-profile exonerations of innocent people. At 61, LeBeau, a retired schoolteacher, came to view life as a gift, one “we…
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May 24, 2009
COSTS: Complications of Death Penalty Cases Cost California Millions
The death penalty in California is enormously expensive compared to the sentence of life without parole. One death penalty case has already taken 28 years and may cost $5 million dollars. Chief Assistant Attorney General Dane Gillette, head of the criminal division, said Michael Ray Burgener’s case has been delayed because of legally required reviews. “When you have a new judge, you have to have that judge take a look at the record and base their decision on the review of the record.”…
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May 22, 2009
Connecticut Legislature Votes to Abolish the Death Penalty
Connecticut’s Senate gave final legislative approval to a bill that would abolish the death penalty in an early morning vote on May 22. After a nearly 11-hour debate, the Senate voted 19 – 17 to end capital punishment, eight days after the House of Representatives approved the bill 90 – 56. The bill will now go to Gov. M. Jodi Rell’s desk. When asked the day before its passage if she would veto the bill, Rell said, “I haven’t seen it, but you know how I feel about the death…
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May 21, 2009
27 Former Judges and Prosecutors File Amicus Brief with U.S. Supreme Court on Behalf of Troy Davis
On May 20, twenty-seven former judges and prosecutors from across the political spectrum filed an amicus brief with the U.S. Supreme Court in support of Georgia death row inmate Troy Davis. Signers of the amicus brief include Larry Thompson (Deputy Attorney General of the United States, 2001 – 2003), former Congressman Bob Barr (R‑GA; U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia, 1986 – 1990); William S.
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May 20, 2009
U.S. Supreme Court Agrees to Hear Two Death Penalty Cases
On May 18, the U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari in two death penalty cases. Both cases are likely to be argued in the fall. The Court accepted the defendant’s petition in Wood v. Allen (No. 08 – 9156), a case from Alabama. Holly Wood claimed ineffective assistance of counsel, mental retardation, and discrimination in the jury selection process during his trial. After the trial, state and defense experts found that Wood, with an IQ below 70, had…
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May 19, 2009
EXONERATIONS: Jury Acquits Former Death Row Inmate of All Charges
Daniel Wade Moore was acquitted of all charges by a jury in Alabama on May 14. Moore was originally found guilty of the murder and sexual assault of Karen Tipton in 2002. The judge overruled the jury’s recommendation of a life sentence and instead sentenced him to death in January 2003, calling the murder one of the worst ever in the county. A new trial was ordered in 2003 because of evidence withheld by the prosecution. A second trial in 2008 ended in a mistrial with the jury deadlocked at…
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May 15, 2009
NEW VOICES: Former Dallas Prosecutor Changes His Mind on Death Penalty
James Fry, a former Dallas County Assistant District Attorney, changed his mind about the death penalty after learning that he successfully prosecuted an innocent man for rape. The defendant, Charles Chatman, was cleared 27 years later by DNA. In an op-ed in the Dallas Morning News, Fry asks, “For years, Texas has led the nation in the number of executions. Why don’t we now strive to lead the nation in a new direction: reforming a justice system in urgent need of reform?” Fry…
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May 14, 2009
NEW VOICES: Missouri Republicans Raise Death Penalty Concerns
Missouri’s Republican House Majority Leader Steven Tilley says Governor Jay Nixon should commute the death sentence of Dennis Skillicorn, who is scheduled to be executed on May 21. Citing revelations that another suspect committed the murder while Skillicorn was unaware of the murder plan, Tilley said, “Certainly, that would be enough reasonable doubt for me that I would be very concerned if this state executed that individual.” Tilley’s suggestion to the…
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