Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Jun 19, 2008
European Union Reasserts Its Opposition to the Death Penalty in All Countries and All Cases
On June 16, 2008, the Council of the European Union (EU) meeting in Luxembourg released a statement on General Affairs and External Relations. The document contained a restatement of its 1998 Human Rights Guideline on the death penalty. The Council, consisting of almost all Foreign Ministers in the EU, stated that it “reaffirms that working towards universal abolition of the death penalty constitutes an integral objective of the EU’s human rights policy.” The Council reasserted the…
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Jun 18, 2008
CONFLICT OF INTEREST RAISED IN UPCOMING TEXAS EXECUTION
UPDATE: The Texas District Court judge that set Charles Hood’s execution date has withdrawn the warrant for execution and recused himself from the case, thereby likely delaying the execution indefinitely. Hood’s attorneys filed a motion for discovery of information about the affair between the judge and prosecutor at Hood’s trial. (Dallas Morning News, June 17, 2008). Hood was granted a 30-day reprieve by the governor.Charles Hood is scheduled to be executed in…
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Jun 18, 2008
Texas Inmate Granted Execution Reprieve After Confusion in the Courts
Charles Hood was placed in the death chamber several times on June 17 before Texas announced that it would be unable to follow its lethal injection protocol prior to midnight when the execution warrant expired. The day was filled with appeal filings, court decisions, and dismissals right until the midnight deadline. The controversy began a week ago when Hood’s attorneys filed motions asserting that the presiding judge and lead prosecutor had a romantic relationship during his…
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Jun 17, 2008
NEW RESOURCES: Why Some Countries Have the Death Penalty and Others Do Not
A new study has been released that explores the correlations between countries’ legal, political, and religious systems and their use of the death penalty. Professors David Greenberg from New York University and Valerie West of John Jay College examined data from 193 nations to test why some countries regularly use capital punishment while others have abandoned it altogether. They found, “In part, a country’s death penalty status is linked to its general punitiveness towards…
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Jun 16, 2008
NEW VOICES: Another Texas Death Penalty Official Has Second Thoughts
Larry Fitzgerald served as the official spokesman for Texas executions for eight years. He represented the state through 219 lethal injections. Retired in August 2003, Fitzgerald left with what he refers to as a, “PhD in prison life.” Due to his expertise with the Texas prison system, defense attorneys have been utilizing his testimony in death penalty cases to describe to the jury why the prison system offers a suitable alternative to a death sentence. He…
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Jun 13, 2008
Costs for New California Death Row Soar to $400 Million
A recent audit of the construction costs for a new death row facility at California’s San Quentin prison revealed that estimates have soared over 80% from previous projections. Ground still has not been broken for the project, but the new death row is likely to require nearly $400 million, instead of the $220 million originally quoted, and it will provide even fewer cells than planned. As an average of 12 new condemned inmates arrive at San Quentin annually, the new…
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Jun 12, 2008
FBI Report: Murder Rate Falls 2.7% Nationally, But Rises in the South
The country’s murder rate declined 2.7% in 2007. The rate dropped the most in the Northeast, and declined in the Midwest and the West, but increased in the South. According to the preliminary Uniform Crime Report published by the FBI, violent crime declined generally by 1.4 percent in 2007 in the U.S. “This report suggests that violent crime is decreasing and remains near historic low levels,” said Peter Carr, Principal Deputy Director of Public Affairs for the Justice Department. (T.
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Jun 10, 2008
Executions in 2008
Since the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision upholding Kentucky’s lethal injection process on April 16, there have been 9 executions:William Lynd GA 5/6/08Earl Berry MS 5/21/08Kevin Green VA 5/27/08Curtis Osborne GA 6/4/08David Hill SC 6/6/08 Karl Chamberlain TX 6/11/08Terry Short OK 6/17/08 James Reed SC 6/20/08Robert Yarbrough VA 6/25/08Race of Defendants: 5 white, 4 blackRace of Victims: 7 white, 5 black, 1 AsianRegions of…
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Jun 10, 2008
ARTICLES:The Story of a Death Row Inmate Who Wanted to Die
In 1996, Illinois Governor Jim Edgar commuted the death sentence of Guin Garcia to life without parole, even though Garcia herself had stopped fighting for her life. Garcia would have been the first woman executed in the U.S. in twelve years. She had been convicted of killing the man who had physically abused her, but she had dropped her appeals because she said she was done “begging for her life.” Chicago Sun-Times reporter Carol Marin followed Garcia’s case after the…
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Jun 10, 2008
VA Governor Commutes Death Sentence of Mentally Ill Man
Virginia Governor Timothy Kaine commuted the death sentence of Percy Walton (pictured) to life in prison without parole. Kaine cancelled the execution, scheduled for 9pm on June 10, because “one cannot reasonably conclude that Walton is fully aware of the punishment he is about to suffer and why he is to suffer it”. The Governor found “that Walton’s clemency petition presented significant evidence that Walton had schizophrenia, that such a mental illness can cause serious…
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