Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
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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May 13, 2009
Racial Justice Act Moves Closer to Passage in North Carolina
News
May 12, 2009
EXONERATIONS: Charges Dropped Against Former Tennessee Death Row Inmate
The state of Tennessee has dropped all charges against Paul House, a death row inmate first convicted in 1986. House was accused of the rape and murder of Carolyn Muncey based largely on circumstantial evidence. DNA evidence used against him at trial was later found to belong to Muncey’s husband. In House v. Bell, the U.S. Supreme Court considered the new DNA tesing and questions about blood stains on House’s clothes. In 2006, the…
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May 11, 2009
With Death Penalty System Bogged Down, Connecticut Considers Abolition
On March 8, Connecticut held a legislative hearing about what should be done with the state’s death penalty. The Judiciary Committee has already approved a bill to abolish capital punishment. Connecticut has carried out only one execution since 1973, and that was with an inmate who waived his appeals and volunteered for execution. The Chief State’s Attorney, Kevin T. Kane submitted a proposal to reform the system, but it would curtail the appeals process used to protect…
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May 08, 2009
NEW RESOURCES: Death Row U.S.A. Winter 2009 Released
The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund has released the latest Death Row U.S.A. report, covering death penalty statistics through January 1, 2009. The total number of death row inmates decreased from 3,309 a year earlier to 3,297. The states with the largest number of death row inmates were California with 678, Florida with 402, and Texas with 358. The states (with 10 or more inmates) with the highest percent of minorities on death row were Texas at…
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May 07, 2009
Colorado Continues Death Penalty With Legislators Evenly Split on Repeal
A bill to repeal the death penalty and use the funds saved to investigate unsolved murder cases in Colorado was defeated in the state senate by a vote of 18 – 17 on May 6. The House had earlier approved the bill by a vote of 33 – 32. On May 4, the senate had approved an amendment, dropping the repeal of the death penalty and funding the cost of investigating cold cases through a $2.50 fine to convicted felons. However, the conference committee restored the repeal provision and…
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May 06, 2009
NEW RESOURCES: Amnesty International Report Focuses on Executions in Texas
Amnesty International has released a new report entitled, “Too much cruelty, too little clemency: Texas nears 200th execution under current governor.” It examines many of the nearly 200 executions that have occurred during Governor Rick Perry’s term in office, as well as a few cases where executions are imminent. The organization states that the Governor is not solely responsible for the fate of those on death row, but notes that Perry has “rarely exercised…
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May 05, 2009
Texas Judge Recommends New Trial in Death Penalty Case where Judge and Prosecutor Had Secret Affair
A judge in Texas has recommended that the claim of an unfair trial brought by death row inmate Charles Hood should go forward because the trial judge and prosecutor had a secret romantic relationship that they hid from the defendant before, during, and after his trial. CBS News Legal Analyst Andrew Cohen reported on the story, writing, “Hood’s judge and prosecutor lied, over and over again, to hide their affair. Any blame for the delay in bringing justice to…
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May 05, 2009
Arbitrariness in Nebraska
By the numbers in…
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May 04, 2009
North Carolina Supreme Court Overrules State Medical Board’s Ban on Doctor Participation in Executions
The North Carolina Supreme Court ruled 4 – 3 that physicians cannot be punished by the State Medical Board for taking part in executions. The Medical Board had adopted a policy in January 2007 that their physician’s code of ethics would be violated by a doctor taking part in an execution, subjecting practitioners to having his or her medical license revoked. This policy conflicted with the state law that requires a physician’s presence at all executions, effectively putting…
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