Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Oct 072008

Questions Before the U.S. Supreme Court in the Troy Davis Case

The United States Supreme Court is cur­rent­ly con­sid­er­ing whether to hear the case of Troy Davis or to allow his exe­cu­tion to go for­ward. The Court stayed his exe­cu­tion on September 23, less than two hours before it was to take place. The for­mal term for agree­ing to hear a case is grant­i­ng a peti­tion for cer­tio­rari.” Davis’ attor­neys sub­mit­ted such a peti­tion, rais­ing a num­ber of ques­tions on which the Court could grant a hear­ing. The first question presented…

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News 

Oct 062008

EXECUTIONS IN 2008

There have been 24 exe­cu­tions so far in 2008. Executions resumed on May 5 after the U.S. Supreme Court approved Kentucky’s lethal injec­tion process in Baze v. Rees. One hun­dred per­cent of the exe­cu­tions have been in the South, includ­ing 9 in Texas, 4 in Virginia, and 3 in Georgia. At least 12 cas­es have been grant­ed stays of exe­cu­tions in the past two months, includ­ing Troy Davis, whose exe­cu­tion in Georgia was halt­ed by the U.S. Supreme Court.

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News 

Oct 032008

International Law Experts Question Supreme Court Decision in Medellin Case

Notable inter­na­tion­al law experts cit­ed in a recent arti­cle in the Washington Lawyer crit­i­cized the Supreme Court’s 2008 deci­sion on whether an inter­na­tion­al treaty was bind­ing on Texas in the case of death row inmate Jose Medellin. Carolyn Lamm, an attor­ney at White & Case spe­cial­iz­ing in inter­na­tion­al dis­pute res­o­lu­tion, stat­ed that “[T]he fail­ure to com­pel our state court organs to com­ply with the deci­sion of the ICJ [International Court of Justice] is regrettable,…

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News 

Oct 022008

NEW VOICES: Former San Quentin Warden Says Death Penalty Detracts crucial resources from programs that could truly make our communities safe”

The for­mer war­den of San Quentin prison in California, Jeanne Woodford, regrets hav­ing tak­en part in exe­cu­tions and has called for replac­ing the death penal­ty with life with­out the pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole. In an op-ed in the Los Angeles Times, Woodford notes that after each execution, some­one on the staff would ask, Is the world safer because of what we did tonight?’ We knew the answer: No.” The full arti­cle can be found…

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News 

Oct 012008

U.S. Supreme Court Denies Rehearing in Kennedy v. Louisiana Opinion

On October 1, the U.S. Supreme Court denied Louisiana’s request for a rehear­ing of the Court’s rul­ing strik­ing down the death penal­ty for non-homi­­ci­­dal offens­es against indi­vid­u­als. Louisiana con­tend­ed that a recent adjust­ment to mil­i­tary law that con­tin­ued to allow the death penal­ty for child rape should have been tak­en into account by the Court, result­ing in a dif­fer­ent opin­ion. The Court slight­ly mod­i­fied both the major­i­ty and dis­sent­ing opin­ions to include ref­er­ence to the military…

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News 

Sep 302008

Professor Anthony Amsterdam To Receive the Frederick Douglass Human Rights Award

Leading attor­ney, law pro­fes­sor, and advo­cate Anthony Amsterdam is being hon­ored by the Southern Center for Human Rights with the Frederick Douglass Human Rights Award in Washington, DC on October 2. Professor Amsterdam con­ducts the Capital Defender Clinic at New York University Law School and is rec­og­nized for his four decades of promi­nent work in cas­es rang­ing from death penal­ty defense to claims of free speech and the press, pri­va­cy, and equal­i­ty of oppor­tu­ni­ty for racial minorities…

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News 

Sep 292008

NEW VOICES: Former U.S. Senator and N.J. Police Chief Testify at Maryland Commission

The final Maryland Commission on Capital Punishment hear­ing was held on September 23 and among those tes­ti­fy­ing were a for­mer U.S. Senator, a New Jersey Police Chief, and a Chief of the Forensics Division of the Maryland Public Defenders Office. All spoke of how they were not philo­soph­i­cal­ly opposed to the death penal­ty, but had seri­ous mis­giv­ings about its application.Maryland’s for­mer U.S. Senator Joseph Tydings (pic­tured) said that Maryland has to be will­ing to spend the mon­ey” if…

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News 

Sep 262008

ARBITRARINESS: Louisiana Serial Killer Sentenced to Life

Prosecutors decid­ed against pur­su­ing a death sen­tence for a ser­i­al killer in Terrebonne Parish in Louisiana. Roland Dominique, who was arrest­ed at a home­less shel­ter, pled guilty to the mur­der of eight young men, and he may have killed as many as 23 men. Terrebonne Parish District Attorney Joe Waitz, Jr. decid­ed against seek­ing the death penal­ty after con­sult­ing with mem­bers of the vic­tims’ familes. The fam­i­ly mem­bers reached a unan­i­mous agree­ment to accept a plan of back-to-back life…

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News 

Sep 262008

NEW VOICES: Former U.S. Attorney Cites Improper Pressure in Use of Federal Death Penalty

Former U.S. Attorney Paul Charlton expressed relief that the Justice Department is no longer seek­ing to exe­cute a defen­dant in the case that was cause for his ter­mi­na­tion. Charlton told the Associated Press that he did not think the gov­ern­ment had suf­fi­cient evi­dence to pur­sue the death penal­ty in the pros­e­cu­tion of Jose Rios Rico. Charlton’s boss, for­mer Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez, want­ed him to pur­sue it any­way and tes­ti­fied to a Senate pan­el that he…

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News 

Sep 252008

NEW RESOURCES: The Espy File on Executions to Become Part of National Archive

The files on exe­cu­tions in America com­piled by not­ed his­to­ri­an M Watt Espy, Jr are to become part of the National Death Penalty Archive locat­ed at the State University of New York at Albany. The Espy col­lec­tion, entitled Executions in America,” doc­u­ments more than 15,000 exe­cu­tions in the United states dat­ing back to 1608 and colo­nial Jamestown. Among the unique mate­ri­als are hand­writ­ten ledgers with an alpha­bet­i­cal list­ing of exe­cut­ed indi­vid­u­als by state and by date from the 1600s through…

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