Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Jun 192008

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 EUs human rights pol­i­cy.” The Council reasserted the…

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News 

Jun 182008

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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News 

Jun 182008

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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News 

Jun 172008

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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News 

Jun 162008

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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News 

Jun 132008

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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News 

Jun 122008

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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News 

Jun 102008

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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News 

Jun 102008

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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News 

Jun 102008

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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