Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Aug 182008

Texas to Review Possible Innocence of Executed Man

The Texas Forensic Science Commission will review the case of Cameron Todd Willingham (pic­tured) as its first case in its inves­ti­ga­tion of foren­sic mis­con­duct alle­ga­tions. Willingham was exe­cut­ed in 2004 in Texas for three deaths that occurred in 1991 from a fire in his home. The State Fire Marshal’s office had orig­i­nal­ly ruled that the blaze was an arson start­ed by an accel­er­ant. But the Innocence Project of Cardozo Law School in New York sub­mit­ted a 2006 report by five…

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News 

Aug 162008

Maryland Commission on Death Penalty Conducts Hearings

The Maryland Commission on Capital Punishment began hear­ing tes­ti­mo­ny from a wide vari­ety of wit­ness­es on issues relat­ed to the state’s death penal­ty sys­tem. After gath­er­ing infor­ma­tion regard­ing mat­ters such as pos­si­ble racial, geo­graph­ic and socioe­co­nom­ic dis­par­i­ties, on costs, and on the risks of exe­cut­ing the inno­cent, the 23-mem­ber Commission will offer rec­om­men­da­tions to the General Assembly to ensure that Maryland’s use of the death penalty is free from bias and error” and achieves…

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News 

Aug 142008

Upcoming Texas Execution Raises Concerns about Death Penalty for Accomplices

Jeffrey Wood is sched­uled for exe­cu­tion on August 21 for a mur­der com­mit­ted by anoth­er man dur­ing a botched rob­bery at a gas sta­tion. Wood did not fire the gun that killed the vic­tim and was not inside the sta­tion when anoth­er man, Danny Reneau, com­mit­ted the mur­der. At Reneau’s tri­al, the pros­e­cu­tion had argued that Reneau was the per­son chiefly respon­si­ble for the crime and that Wood’s role was sec­ondary. The pros­e­cu­tion in Wood’s case changed their the­o­ry and argued that he was…

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News 

Aug 132008

NEW RESOURCES: Symposium: The Lethal Injection Debate: Law & Science

The Fordham Urban Law Journal has pub­lished a series of arti­cles based on a sym­po­sium on lethal injec­tion that was held at Fordham Law School in March 2008. The issue includes arti­cles by Professor Deborah Denno of Fordham, a lead­ing his­to­ri­an and expert on meth­ods of exe­cu­tion, Judge Jeremy Fogel, a fed­er­al judge over­see­ing the chal­lenge to lethal injec­tion in California, Judge Fernando Gaitan, a fed­er­al judge who over­saw the chal­lenge to Missouri’s lethal injec­tion process, and…

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News 

Aug 112008

COSTS: Georgia County Finds the Costs of Death Penalty Case Adding Up

Georgia’s Hall County is encoun­ter­ing the high costs of seek­ing the death penal­ty as they pros­e­cute their first cap­i­tal case in nine years. The coun­ty expects the death penal­ty tri­al to cost at least four times as much as a reg­u­lar mur­der tri­al. Capital tri­als are by far the most expen­sive crim­i­nal pro­ceed­ing that takes place in local supe­ri­or courts. Estimates put the cost for jurors and bailiffs alone at more than sev­en times the nor­mal cost for a mur­der tri­al with­out seeking the…

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News 

Aug 082008

Execution of Foreign Nationals Raises Legal Concerns

In a 5 – 4 vote on August 5, the U.S. Supreme Court reject­ed a stay of exe­cu­tion for Jose Medellin, a Mexican cit­i­zen, who was then exe­cut­ed in Texas that night. On August 7, Heliberto Chi, an Honduran cit­i­zen, was also exe­cut­ed in Texas. Medellin’s case had come before the Supreme Court on two pre­vi­ous occa­sions because the International Court of Justice had ruled that the U.S. had vio­lat­ed the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations by not informing…

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News 

Aug 072008

Hours Before Scheduled Execution, Doubts About Guilt Persisted in Alabama Case

An inmate in Alabama came with­in hours of exe­cu­tion despite the fact that seri­ous doubts arose about whether he had even com­mit­ted the crime that put him on death row. Thomas Arthur had been sched­uled to die in Alabama on July 31, but the Alabama Supreme Court vot­ed 5 – 4 on July 30 to stay his exe­cu­tion after anoth­er inmate con­fessed to the mur­der for which Arthur had been sen­tenced to death. In a sworn state­ment, Bobby Ray Gilbert con­fessed to killing Troy Wicker Jr. more than…

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News 

Aug 062008

Arkansas Parole Board Recommends Life Without Parole for Mentally Disabled Man

In a 4 – 3 vote, the Arkansas Parole Board rec­om­mend­ed that Frank Williams’ death sen­tence be com­mut­ed to life with­out parole. The Board had received peti­tions for clemen­cy from 13 state, nation­al, and inter­na­tion­al orga­ni­za­tions and devel­op­men­tal dis­abil­i­ties experts which con­clud­ed that Mr. Williams suf­fers from men­tal retar­da­tion based on his sub-aver­age adap­tive func­tion­ing and the diag­no­sis of psy­cho­log­i­cal experts. The requests for clemen­cy empha­sized the fact that executing…

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News 

Aug 012008

NEW RESOURCES: The Absence of Adequate Counsel in Alabama Death Penalty Appeals

Professor Celestine Richards McConville explores the plight of inmates on Alabama’s death row who face exe­cu­tion despite being denied ade­quate rep­re­sen­ta­tion for key parts of their appeal in her law review article, The Meaninglessness of Delayed Appointments and Discretionary Grants of Capital Postconviction Counsel.” The arti­cle is part of a University of Tulsa Law Review sym­po­sium issue on The Death Penalty and the Question of Actual Innocence.” The arti­cle points out that Alabama’s…

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