Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Apr 17, 2008
Supreme Court Issues Fractious Opinion Upholding Kentucky’s Lethal Injection Process
On April 16, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Kentucky’s three-drug protocol for carrying out lethal injections does not amount to cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth Amendment. The case, Baze v. Rees, had resulted in executions being put on hold around the country from the day after the Court agreed to review the issue. Thirty-five of the 36 states with the death penalty and the federal government use lethal injection as their primary method of execution.
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Apr 15, 2008
INTERNATIONAL: Amnesty International Reports Worldwide Drop in Executions
Amnesty International recently reported that at least 1,252 people were executed in 24 countries and at least 3,347 people were sentenced to death in over 50 countries in 2007. Amnesty estimates that there are up to 27,500 people on death row worldwide. Their figures represent a drop in executions from 1,591 in 2006, particularly in China which went from over 1,000 executions in 2006 to 470 last year. However, execution figures are considered a state secret in China and the…
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Apr 15, 2008
NEW RESOURCES: Pierce Law Review Releases Special Death Penalty Issue
The March 2008 issue of the Pierce Law Review explores many aspects of the death penalty through articles written by renowned death penalty scholars and attorneys. With a forward by Christopher M. Johnson, the Review examines the death penalty at individual, societal, and international levels. To coincide with the publication of this issue, the Franklin Pierce Law Center in New Hampshire held a panel discussion on the death penalty on April 15,…
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Apr 14, 2008
NEW RESOURCES: Study Finds Homicide Rates Unrelated to Execution Rates
The Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice (CJCJ) recently completed a study of the effect of executions on homicide rates and found that both states that execute many people and states that execute no one show the biggest decline in homicides (34% and 36% declines, respectively). States that execute few people have the least decline (24%) in homicides. According to the study, “This peculiar result suggests the death penalty is irrelevant to homicide.” The study looked at the effect…
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Apr 10, 2008
Senate Judiciary Committee Hears Testimony on Adequacy of Counsel in Death Penalty Cases
On April 8, the U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary held a hearing on “The Adequacy of Representation in Capital Cases.” Sen. Russ Feingold (D‑WI) presided over the session of the Subcommittee on the Constitution, which heard testimony from a variety of experts including Michael Greco, former President of the American Bar Association, Bryan Stevenson, Executive Director of the Equal Justice Initiative, the Honorable Carolyn Temin of the Court of Common Pleas in Pennsylvania, and…
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Apr 07, 2008
NEW RESOURCES: Study Finds Lethal Injection Drug Barred for Use with Animals
A forthcoming study to be published in the Fordham Urban Law Journal found that almost all states that use a paralyzing drug in the lethal injection of death row inmates forbid the use of this same drug in euthanizing animals. Ty Alper, the associate director of the Death Penalty Clinic at the University of California-Berkeley School of Law, conducted the research that found that 42 states do not approve neuromuscular blocking agents in the ordinary euthanasia of animals.
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Apr 04, 2008
Death Penalty Poses Problems for Military Commission Trials
After the Pentagon announced earlier this year that it would seek the death penalty for six Guantánamo Bay detainees, little progress has been made in the case. According to The American Lawyer, the military commissions have had difficulties in finding qualified and willing defense attorneys to represent the six men who are accused of planning the September 11 attacks. Tom Fleener, a former military lawyer, said, “I don’t believe any [of the 15 attorneys in the office of the…
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Apr 04, 2008
In New Mexico, Judge and Prosecutor Agree: No Funds Means No Death Penalty
In a potentially far reaching ruling, a trial judge in New Mexico has barred the state from seeking the death penalty because the legislature has failed to provide adequate funding for defense representation. The state’s Attorney General, Gary King, agreed that the capital prosecution cannot go forward. After finding that funding for the defense was insufficient and raised constitutional problems, King wrote, “The state now confesses the motion to dismiss filed herein and cannot in…
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Apr 03, 2008
PUBLIC OPINION: Colorado Voters Would Rather Spend Money on Cold Cases than on Death Penalty
A recent Colorado poll conducted by RBI Strategies and Research found that 63% of citizens believe that money spent on the death penalty would be better used to close unsolved murder cases. Citizens likely to vote in the next election were told that the death penalty costs the state an extra $3 million per year, and then asked “would you favor or oppose replacing the death penalty with life imprisonment with no possibility of parole, and using the money saved to track down and…
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Apr 02, 2008
128th Inmate Exonerated and Freed From Death Row
Glen Edward Chapman, a North Carolina man who was sentenced to death for the 1992 murders of Betty Jean Ramseur and Tenene Yvette Conley, was released from death row on April 2 after prosecutors dropped all charges against him. In 2007, North Carolina Superior Court Judge Robert C. Ervin granted Chapman a new trial, citing withheld evidence, “lost, misplaced or destroyed” documents, the use of weak, circumstantial evidence, false testimony by the lead investigator, and ineffective…
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