Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Apr 30, 2009
Twenty-five Years After Trial, U.S. Supreme Court Orders New Hearing for Tennessee Death Row Inmate
On April 28 by a vote of 7 – 2, the United States Supreme Court overturned a lower court ruling and granted a new hearing to Tennessee death row inmate Gary Cone because the state had withheld evidence from the defense. During his trial in 1984, Cone, a Vietnam veteran, presented an insanity defense, arguing that psychosis induced by his drug use negated his guilt. While the prosecution denied any evidence of Cone’s drug use and referred to his defense as “baloney,” police…
Read MoreNews
Apr 28, 2009
Federal Judge Upholds Ohio’s Execution Process While Finding Persistent Flaws
News
Apr 27, 2009
EDITORIAL: ‘Can Oregon Afford the Death Penalty?’ – as School Funding is Reduced
An editorial The Daily Astorian, contrasts the state’s use of funds for the death penalty to the state’s reduction in funding for education. “The glaring contrast to our unquestioning spending on the death penalty — which Judge Lipscomb called ‘this largely futile attempt’ — is our disinvestment in education,” the paper noted. “Investment in education is about the future, and it is about hope. Investment in prisons and especially in the death penalty is about a final…
Read MoreNews
Apr 24, 2009
DPIC RESOURCES: Per Capita Executions by State
Although Texas leads the country by far with the most executions (436) since the reinstatement of the death penalty in 1976, it is second to Oklahoma in terms of executions as a fraction of the state’s population. The other leading execution states on a per capita basis are Delaware, Virginia, Missouri, and Arkansas. The full ranking of executions per capita by state may be found here. In 2009, there have been 22 executions as of April 27,…
Read MoreNews
Apr 24, 2009
The Angolite Reviews Developments in Capital Punishment
The Angolite, an award-winning magazine produced by the inmates at Angola Prison in Louisiana, recently published an extensive review of the developments in the death penalty in 2008. The article by Lane Nelson addressed nationwide trends, Supreme Court decisions, the issues of cost, the risks of executing innocent people, and the problem of inadequate representation. The article concluded, “[N]ational debates, legislative studies, court rulings and blue-ribbon commission…
Read MoreNews
Apr 23, 2009
STUDIES: Justice Denied: America’s Continuing Neglect of Our Constitutional Right to Counsel
The Constitution Project has released a comprehensive report on the U.S. system of representation for indigent defendants, “Justice Denied: America’s Continuing Neglect of Our Constitutional Right to Counsel.” The report finds deep flaws in the country’s public defense system and makes 22 recommendations for state and federal officials for reforming the system. Among the problems that this study identifies are excessive caseloads for indigent…
Read MoreNews
Apr 22, 2009
Colorado’s House Passes Bill to Repeal the Death Penalty; Money Saved Would Go to Cold Cases
On April 20, Colorado’s House voted 33 – 32 to repeal the death penalty. The bill, which now heads to the Senate, would shift funds used to prosecute cases and maintain the death penalty to the Colorado Bureau of Investigation for closing unsolved murder cases. Proponents of the bill believe the state would save close to $4 million by repealing the death penalty, and dozens of family members with unsolved murder cases testified that those funds could be better used solving cold…
Read MoreNews
Apr 21, 2009
Georgia’s Death Penalty Prosecutions Stalled by Insufficient Funds
Georgia’s system of representation in death penalty cases is in crisis because of insufficient funding and cases are grinding to a halt. Almost 1 in 5 of all pending capital cases in the state are stalled because of a lack of funds to pay for defense work. “We can’t defend the case without any money,” said James Yancey, one death penalty defense lawyer. “The experts we need won’t work for free.” Forsyth Superior Court Judge Jeffrey Bagley called it “a constitutional crisis,”…
Read MoreNews
Apr 20, 2009
Alabama Murder Cases Reopened After Exposure of Botched Autopsy
Bridget Lee spent nine months in jail in Alabama after being charged with the murder of her newborn child. Prosecutors filed capital murder charges based on an autopsy performed by Dr. Corinne Stern. Stern’s autopsy concluded the baby had been suffocated because of bruises on the forehead and mouth. But when Lee’s attorneys questioned the autopsy, the District Attorney had other experts review the case, and six different forensics experts found the baby was…
Read MoreNews
Apr 17, 2009
Troy Davis Appeal Rejected; Oklahoma Board Recommends Clemency for Donald Gilson
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit denied habeas corpus relief to a Georgia death row inmate who claims he is innocent and who has received international support. In a 2 – 1 decision, the court held that Troy Davis could have presented most of his new evidence earlier and that the evidence did not offer clear and convincing proof of his innocence. Hence, the court did not consider his free-standing claim of innocence on its merits, but concluded…
Read More