Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Feb 05, 2009
BOOKS: The Next Frontier: National Development, Political Change, and the Death Penalty in Asia
A new book on international developments in capital punishment, The Next Frontier: National Development, Political Change, and the Death Penalty in Asia, is now available from Oxford University Press. Authors David Johnson, an expert on law and society in Asia, and Franklin Zimring, a senior authority on capital punishment, utilize their research to identify the critical factors affecting the future of the death penalty in Asia. They found that when an authoritarian state…
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Feb 04, 2009
MULTIMEDIA: Troy Davis Case Continues to Garner Widespread Attention
Georgia death row inmate Troy Davis was scheduled to be executed numerous times in 2008, but each date was stayed. His case is currently under review by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit. International interest has continued to mount because of concerns about his possible innocence. Most recently, Amnesty International has assisted in preparing a multimedia presentation about his case with the music group “State Radio.” The video…
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Feb 03, 2009
NEW VOICES: Death Penalty Too Expensive for Overburdened Courts
A former state court administrator in Montana recently wrote that the death penalty is too expensive for a “court system that was underfunded, understaffed, and had more work to do than was humanly possible.” Jim Oppedahl, who worked with the Montana courts for ten years, offered his views in the Helena Independent Record: “The reality is that the death penalty pumps millions of dollars of very scarce public resources into a handful of executions and then buries those costs…
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Feb 02, 2009
NEW VOICES: Judge Ronald Reagan Challenges Nebraska’s Death Penalty
Before his retirement from the court, Judge Ronald Reagan had sentenced a defendant to death and kept his views on the death penalty to himself. However, as Nebraska is considering a bill to abolish capital punishment, he spoke in favor of its repeal. “I’m a citizen here. I’d just as soon not have a death penalty,” Judge Reagan testified. “It just seems to me that people are recognizing that the death penalty is not an appropriate…
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Jan 30, 2009
BOOKS: Life and Death Matters: Seeking the Truth About Capital Punishment
Life and Death Matters: Seeking the Truth About Capital Punishment is a new book that documents author Robert Baldwin’s personal journey in confronting racism and the death penalty in the Deep South. Baldwin shares his evolution in a conversational, first-person style with a declared faith perspective. Written for people of all beliefs and backgrounds, he focuses on the myths and misconceptions about prisons and the death penalty discovered through his…
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Jan 29, 2009
Victims’ Families Ask State to End Death Penalty and Solve Cold Cases Instead
A bill is being introduced in Colorado to end the state’s death penalty and to use the resultant savings to investigate the state’s more than 1,300 unsolved crimes. More than 500 residents who have lost friends and family to unsolved murders are pushing for the bill, which is expected to be introduced by House Majority Leader Paul Weissmann. The proponents estimate that 3 in 10 killers in the state walk free, and catching more killers would be a more effective deterrent than…
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Jan 28, 2009
Five Innocent People Exonerated in Nebraska; Defendants Were Threatened with Death Penalty
Five people in Nebraska were recently pardoned for a 1985 murder after new DNA evidence excluded their participation in the crime. The group was also known as the “Beatrice Six.” The sixth man, the only one who had insisted on a jury trial, was exonerated in October 2008 when prosecutors declined to seek a new…
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Jan 27, 2009
Federal Appeals Court Grants Stay One Day Before Texas Execution Based on Evidence of Innocence
Texas death row inmate Larry Swearingen was unanimously granted a stay one day before his scheduled execution by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit on January 26. “We think this is an extraordinary case of actual innocence,” said Swearingen’s attorney James Rytting. “We’re hopeful that the federal courts will give the evidence a fair review.” Judge Jacques Wiener, who concurred in the Circuit Court’s opinion and stay, underlined the potential…
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Jan 26, 2009
LAW REVIEWS: Convicting the Innocent
A new article in the Annual Review of Law and Social Science entitled “Convicting the Innocent” by Prof. Samuel Gross of the Universiry of Michigan Law School explores the rate of false convictions among death-sentenced inmates and examines the demographical and procedural predictors of such errors. Prof. Gross noted that earlier research showed the exoneration rate to be 2.3% for inmates who had been on death row at least 15 years and a similar rate for…
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Jan 23, 2009
EDITORIALS: “Room for Doubt” about Upcoming Texas Excution
The Houston Chronicle is calling on Texas Governor Rick Perry to delay the execution of Larry Swearingen, which is scheduled for January 27. The Chronicle notes that the forensic scientist who testified about the time of death of the victim at Swearingen’s trial now believes the death occurred later, a time at which Swearingen was in police custody on another matter. Five other physicians and forensic experts concurred that the murder…
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