Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Aug 01, 2008
Mental Retardation Group Pleads for Clemency for Mentally Disabled Man in Arkansas
Arkansas’ leading advocacy organization for people with mental retardation, Arc Arkansas, delivered a letter to Governor Mike Beebe and the Arkansas Parole Board urging clemency for Frank Williams, Jr. because of his mental retardation. He is scheduled for execution on September 9 and the Arkansas Parole Board is holding a clemency hearing on his case on August 4. The letter notes that executing a mentally retarded person is unconstitutional based on both Arkansas’ 1993…
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Jul 29, 2008
Oklahoma Governor Commutes Death Sentence at Juror’s and Parole Board’s Request
Oklahoma Governor Brad Henry commuted the death sentence of Kevin Young to life in prison without parole on July 24. Henry stated, “This was a very difficult decision and one that I did not take lightly.” He explained that, “after reviewing all of the evidence and hearing from both prosecutors and defense attorneys, I decided the Pardon and Parole Board made a proper recommendation to provide clemency and commute the death sentence.” This is only the second time the Governor has…
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Jul 28, 2008
Missouri Doctor Banned for Incompetence took part in Arizona’s Recent Execution
The same doctor who was banned from executions in Missouri has been discovered as a participant in Arizona’s most recent execution. Dr. Alan Doerhoff’s signature was at the bottom of the EKG tape for Robert Comer, who was executed in 2007. Eight months earlier, Dr. Doerhoff was prohibited from participating in further Missouri executions because of questions about his standards and competence. Doerhoff had assisted in more than 54 executions in Missouri, developed procedures, inserted…
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Jul 25, 2008
Pennsylvania Court Allows Forced Medication of Mentally Incompetent Death Row Inmates, Moving Them Closer to Execution
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court recently ruled that the state can force two death row inmates to take anti-psychotic medication so they are mentally competent enough to proceed with their appeals and be executed. The two inmates were sentenced to death but were found incompetent to participate in the appeals filed on their behalf. The U.S. Supreme Court has held that mentally incompetent inmates may not be executed. The Pennsylvania court overturned lower court decisions and directed them “to…
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Jul 25, 2008
NEW VOICES: Request for Texas to Honor Treaty for Safety of U.S. Citizens Abroad
An op-ed by Texas state Senator Rodney Ellis and law professor Craig Jackson argues that Gov. Rick Perry and the Texas Board of Pardons should follow the International Court of Justice’s order to stay the executions of Mexican citizens in Texas. They believe the World Court’s decision was the “right thing to do” and Gov. Perry “would do well to consider how defiance of the World Court ruling will affect the safety of Americans abroad who rely on the same treaty protections that Texas violated…
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Jul 24, 2008
Pennsylvania Court Allows Forced Medication of Mentally Incompetent Death Row Inmates, Moving Them Closer to Execution
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court recently ruled that the state can force two death row inmates to take anti-psychotic medication so they are mentally competent enough to proceed with their appeals and be executed. The two inmates were sentenced to death but were found incompetent to participate in the appeals filed on their behalf. The U.S. Supreme Court has held that mentally incompetent inmates may not be executed. The Pennsylvania court overturned lower court decisions and directed…
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Jul 23, 2008
Accuracy of DNA “Matches” to Definitively Identify Suspects Questioned
New research has called into question the reliability of some use of DNA tests to definitively identify suspects in criminal investigations. After recent evidence of chromosomal “matches” based on DNA testing turned out to belong to unrelated individuals, some scientists wonder whether there are flaws in the assumptions that underlie the FBI’s statistical estimates of DNA accuracy. In 2001, Arizona state crime lab analyst Kathryn Troyer was running tests on the state’s database when…
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Jul 22, 2008
STUDIES: DNA Testing and the Use of Forensic Science
The Justice Project has just released two policy reviews related to DNA testing and the criminal justice system. The first, “Improving Access to Post-Conviction DNA Testing,” chronicles the lessons to be learned from the case of Kirk Bloodsworth. Bloodsworth was sentenced to death in Maryland and spent almost nine years in prison for the rape and murder of nine-year-old Dawn Hamilton before DNA testing proved he did not commit the crime. The report contains the Justice Project’s…
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Jul 18, 2008
STUDIES: Death Penalty Decisions Influenced by Practice of Electing Judges
A new study published in the American Journal of Political Science investigates the connection between death penalty decisions and the practice of electing judges. “The analysis presented considers public opinion’s influence on the composition of courts … and its influence on judge votes in capital punishment cases. In elective state supreme courts, public support for capital punishment influences the ideological composition of those courts and judge willingness to uphold death…
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Jul 18, 2008
Execution Stayed Because Jurors May Have Been Misinformed about Life Sentence
Oklahoma Governor Brad Henry granted a 30-day stay of execution for Kevin Young who was scheduled to die on July 22. The Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board recommended clemency for Young a week earlier after hearing tape recorded statements from jurors stating that they hadn’t wanted to give Young the death sentence but didn’t receive clarification when they asked whether he would be eligible for parole if he was sentenced to life without parole. One juror explained, “We felt that the crime…
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