Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Jun 09, 2008
Mexico Asks World Court to Stay U.S. Executions of Foreign Nationals
Mexico has returned to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in seeking a stay of execution for Mexican-born inmates in the U.S. Mexico requested the U.N.‘s highest court, commonly referred to as the World Court, to intervene because the United States has failed to comply with an earlier ICJ judgment ordering a review of the trials of the Mexican citizens. The World Court ruled in 2004 that the U.S. violated the 1963 Vienna Convention on Consular Relations because it had not…
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Jun 06, 2008
Criminal Justice Integrity Unit created by Texas High Court to Address Growing Concerns
A new Texas Criminal Justice Integrity Unit has been formed by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals to address concerns in the justice system and to work with inmates who may have been wrongfully convicted. The state’s highest court for criminal matters will study issues such as eyewitness identification, crime lab reliability, police interrogations, and standards for preserving evidence. Since 2001, 33 men have been exonerated in Texas, including one man from death row. Texas leads the…
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Jun 05, 2008
NEW RESOURCES: Study on Quality of Defense Representation in Tennessee Death Penalty Cases
A recent law review article explores the quality of defense representation in capital cases in Tennessee. Authors William Redick, Jr., Bradley Maclean, and M. Shane Truett conducted an in depth study of Tennessee death penalty cases in their article, “Pretend Justice – Defense Representation in Tennessee Death Penalty Cases” in the University of Memphis Law Review. The article argues that Tennessee fails to provide effective defense representation in death penalty cases, citing…
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Jun 04, 2008
Severely Mentally Ill Death Row Inmate Resentenced to Life 27 Years After Crime
Richard Taylor, a death row inmate in Tennessee suffering from severe mental illness, was resentenced to life without the possibility of parole after a plea bargain with the state. Taylor was convicted and sentenced to death for the killing of a prison guard in 1981 after the prison had stopped giving him his anti-psychotic medication. Deputy District Attorney Derek Smith said, “Our office decided that it would be in the best interest of the taxpayers to spend the…
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Jun 03, 2008
Oklahoma Man to Be Executed Based on Jailhouse Snitch; Rebuttal Evidence Excluded by Judge
Terry Lyn Short is scheduled to be executed on June 17 in Oklahoma. He was convicted of causing a fire that killed Ken Yamamoto in 1995. A key witness against Short at trial was a jailhouse informant who testified in return for leniency on charges that he was facing. Defense counsel at trial sought to present testimony of a third inmate in the same cell who was prepared to refute everything that the jailhouse informant had said. However, the trial judge refused to let…
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May 30, 2008
NEW RESOURCES: Sentence Reversals in Mental Retardation Cases
Prof. John Blume of Cornell University Law School has compiled the cases in which an inmate’s death sentence was reduced because of a finding of mental retardation. His research revealed 83 such reversals since 2002. In Atkins v. Virginia (2002), the U.S. Supreme Court held that it is unconstitutional to apply the death penalty to defendants with mental retardation. The Court did not, however, establish a definition for mental retardation or determine the procedures for proving a claim…
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May 30, 2008
District Court Deems Scott Panetti Mentally Competent for Execution in Texas
U.S. District Court Judge Sam Sparks in Texas has ruled Scott Panetti mentally competent enough to be executed. Panetti’s earlier path to execution was blocked by the U.S. Supreme Court, which heard his appeal in 2007 (Panetti v. Quarterman). The Court held that the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit had used too narrow a standard in deciding whether Panetti had an understanding of why he was to be executed. The Court also held that Texas had not given Panetti an adequate…
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May 29, 2008
“At the Death House Door” Film Debuts
The highly acclaimed film At the Death House Door premieres on the Independent Film Channel on May 29, 2008. This documentary provides a unique perspective into the people who participate in executions in Huntsville, Texas. Viewers experience what it means to work on death row through the eyes of Pastor Carroll Pickett, who served 15 years as the death house chaplain and presided over 95 executions (including the world’s first lethal injection). Following each execution, Pastor Pickett…
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May 28, 2008
Upcoming Georgia Execution Involves Racially Biased and Unprepared Defense Lawyer
On June 4, Georgia has scheduled the execution of Curtis Osborne. (UPDATE: Osborne was executed on June 4.) Osborne’s own defense lawyer at trial was racially biased against him and failed to do the most basic investigation that might have saved his client’s life. The attorney repeatedly referred to Osborne with a racial epithet, saying, “that little n____r deserves the chair.” At the time of the murder that sent Osborne to death row, he was suffering from mental problems and…
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May 27, 2008
Texas Death Row Inmate May Be Exonerated As Prosecution Recommends Overturning Conviction
Based on statements from the District Attorney’s office, it appears that Texas wrongly convicted Michael Blair and sentenced him to death in 1994 for the sexual assault and murder of 7‑year-old Ashley Estell. The case led to the passage of “Ashley’s Laws” to increase punishments for such offenses. Collin County District Attorney John Roach announced that new DNA tests show no physical evidence linking Blair to the crime. The only forensic evidence that pointed to Blair for the kidnap-murder…
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