Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Mar 05, 2009
NEW VOICES: Republican Senator Says Kansas Death Penalty “Too Costly”
Senator Carolyn McGinn of Kansas (pictured) recently published an op-ed calling for an end to the death penalty because it is too costly and does not benefit the people. Sen. McGinn, a Republican from Sedgwick, is the sponsor of a bill that would replace the death penalty with a sentence of life without parole. She explained that in light of the state’s budget deficit, Kansas is looking at ways to reduce government spending. “One policy change being…
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Mar 04, 2009
MD Senate Reaches Compromise on Death Penalty
On March 4, the Maryland Senate reached a compromise on a death penalty repeal bill by amending the bill so as to restrict capital prosecutions. The proposed revision to the state’s death penalty statute would preclude murder cases where the only evidence is eyewitness testimony and, in turn, require DNA evidence, videotaped evidence, or a voluntary videotaped confession. Sen. Jamie Raskin, a Montgomery County Democrat and proponent of death penalty repeal, said his support…
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Mar 03, 2009
NEW VOICES: Jimmy Carter Urges New Mexico Governor to Support Death Penalty Repeal
Former President Jimmy Carter wrote New Mexico’s Governor Bill Richardson to encourage him to support a bill repealing the death penalty and replacing it with life in prison without parole. “We encourage your support for this comprehensive and visionary approach,” Carter wrote. In addition to pointing out how the extra money spent on capital punishment could be better used elsewhere, Carter wrote, “As you know, the United States is one of the few countries, along with…
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Mar 02, 2009
Supreme Court Agrees to Review Ohio Death Penalty Case
In Smith v. Spisak, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed for a second time to review questions of jury instructions presented during the penalty phase and ineffective assistance of counsel at the defendant’s trial. Frank Spisak was convicted and sentenced to death for the murder of three people at Cleveland State University in 1982. While the Ohio Supreme Court affirmed the convictions and sentence, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit granted…
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Mar 01, 2009
Texas Execution Scheduled Despite Allegations of Obstruction of Justice
Willie Pondexter is scheduled to be executed in Texas on March 3 despite a civil suit filed by his attorneys alleging interference by the state in the attorneys’ investigation into Pondexter’s model behavior and rehabilitation during 14 years on death row. In Texas, the key factor in determining whether a defendant is sentenced to life or death is whether he represents a future danger to society. Pondexter’s attorneys from the Texas Defender Service had…
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Feb 27, 2009
ARBITRARINESS: U.S. Military Rejects Guilty Plea Offer to Seek Death Penalty and Soldier is Freed
In a recent military death penalty case, the prosecutors rejected a plea agreement that would have resulted in a sentence of life in prison instead of the death penalty. The defendant, Sergeant Alberto Martinez, was then found not guilty on December 4, 2008, of murdering two fellow soldiers and walked free. Two years before the trial, Sgt. Martinez signed an offer to plead guilty to the murder charges and to describe “the essential facts and circumstances of the offenses to which I am…
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Feb 26, 2009
Death Penalty Reform Bills Introduced in Tennessee
A Tennessee legislative study committee has ended its 16-month analysis of the state’s capital punishment process and has made recommendations for achieving a more fair and accurate system: . Require defense attorneys in capital cases to be highly qualified; . Mandate that defense attorneys have uniform access to evidence against their clients; . Require police officers to record all interrogations related to a homicide…
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Feb 25, 2009
EDITORIALS: Death Row Futility
The Los Angeles Times recently editorialized about the futility of keeping the death penalty in California. “Let’s end this brutal, anachronistic practice,” of the death penalty, the paper wrote. “Inefficiency and costliness are obviously only a small part of what’s wrong with the death penalty.” The editorial continued, “[C]apital punishment strikes disproportionately at disadvantaged groups, and capriciously at others,” adding, “We doubt its…
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Feb 20, 2009
BOOKS: No Winners Here Tonight
A new book, No Winners Here Tonight: Race, Politics, and Geography in One of the Country’s Busiest Death Penalty States, by Ohio journalist Andrew Welsh-Huggins, explores the history of Ohio’s death penalty and raises questions of fairness by examining the state’s experience with capital punishment. Citing historical examples, the author argues that the death penalty has been carried out in an arbitrary fashion from its earliest days and has fallen short of the state’s…
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Feb 20, 2009
SUPREME COURT: Is There a Constitutional Right to DNA Testing? Forum at Georgetown Law
On March 2, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in District Attorney’s Office v. Osborne concerning a defendant’s right to post-conviction DNA testing. In this non-capital rape case, Alaska has repeatedly refused William Osborne’s request for DNA testing of evidence from the crime scene despite the fact that it would be at no cost to the State, and the fact the evidence could demonstrate Osborne’s innocence of the 1993 rape and attempted murder for which he was convicted.
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