Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Apr 02, 2008
NEW RESOURCES: “Confronting Evil: Victims’ Rights in an Age of Terror”
In “Confronting Evil: Victims’ Rights in an Age of Terror,” Prof. Wayne Logan of Florida State College of Law examines the use of victim impact evidence in mass-victim prosecutions, such as the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing and the terrorist attacks of September 11. The article will appear in the forthcoming issue of the Georgetown Law Journal. Victim impact evidence (VIE) is “information on decedents’ personal traits and the ways in which their deaths have adversely affected those left…
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Apr 02, 2008
NEW RESOURCES: Studies on Cost and Arbitrariness of California’s Death Penalty
The American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California has released two reports on California’s death penalty dealing with the high costs and arbitrariness of the system. The report on costs, “The Hidden Death Tax,” found that a capital trial costs counties at least $1.1 million more than a non-capital murder trial, and that the state spends an additional $117 million a year pursuing the execution of those already on death row. One trial alone cost California $10.9 million.
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Apr 01, 2008
Virginia Governor Issues Statement Staying Executions
Gov. Tim Kaine of Virginia stayed the upcoming execution of Edward Bell, scheduled for April 8, 2008. In so doing, the governor issued a statement staying other executions and noting the U.S. Supreme Court’s consideration of the lethal injection issue (Baze v. Rees). The statement also remarked on the disruption that the setting of an execution date can…
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Apr 01, 2008
NEW VOICES: Law Enforcement Officers and Judges Address California Death Penalty
“California’s Death Penalty is…
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Mar 31, 2008
NEW VOICES: Law Enforcement Officials Say “California’s death penalty is broken”
On March 28, two letters were sent to the California Commission on the Fair Administration of Justice–one from members of the law enforcement community and the other from judges, raising concerns about the state’s death penalty. Thirty law enforcement officers, including current and former prosecutors, police chiefs and other officers, signed a letter stating that “California’s death penalty is broken.” The letter cites multiple reasons why the state’s death…
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Mar 27, 2008
Maryland Approves Death Penalty Study Commission
On March 24, Maryland lawmakers voted to create a commission to study the state’s death penalty. The House voted 89 – 48 and the Senate by 32 – 15 to establish the Maryland Commission on Capital Punishment to research racial, socio-economical, and geographic disparities in the application of the death penalty as well as evaluate the risk of executing an innocent person. The commission will consider the costs of the death penalty as compared to a sentence of life without parole. Its findings and…
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Mar 26, 2008
STUDIES: “Prosecutorial Discretion and Capital Punishment in Missouri”
A recent Arizona Legal Studies paper on murder cases in Missouri found both geographical and racial disparities in the application of the death penalty. “Life and Death Decisions: Prosecutorial Discretion and Capital Punishment in Missouri,” by Katherine Barnes of Arizona University Law School, and David Sloss and Stephen Thaman of St. Louis Univeristy Law School, studied 1046 cases of intentional homicide in Missouri to determine geographical and racial effects in the rates at which…
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Mar 25, 2008
U.S. Supreme Court Exempts Texas Courts from World Court Ruling
On March 25, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6 – 3 in Medellin v. Texas (No. 06 – 984) that the President does not have the authority to order states to bypass their procedural rules and comply with a ruling from the International Court of Justice (ICJ). The case arose from an appeal by Jose Medellin, a Mexican citizen on Texas’ death row who, along with 50 other Mexican death row inmates, filed suit in the ICJ alleging a violation of their rights under the Vienna Convention on Consular…
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Mar 25, 2008
Georgia Rejects Non-Unanimous Jury Verdicts Proposal
On March 20, the Georgia State Senate overwhelmingly (44 – 7) rejected a proposal that would have allowed non-unanimous jury sentencing verdicts in capital cases. The proposal would have permitted a judge to impose a death sentence when at least 10 of 12 jurors supported it. Current Georgia law requires that the jury vote unanimously for a death sentence. Some opponents of the bill said it would have put Georgia’s entire death penalty law in jeopardy. (All other death penalty states that allow…
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Mar 24, 2008
After Two Supreme Court Reversals, Texas Man Sentenced to Life
Thomas Miller-El received a life sentence from a Texas judge after pleading guilty to a Dallas murder in exchange for the prosecution’s agreement not to seek the death penalty. Miller-El had originally been sentenced to death in 1986. He raised an appeal asserting that potential black jurors had been improperly stopped from serving at his trial. The appeal was denied by the lower courts, but the U.S. Supreme Court ruled (8 – 1) in 2003 that he should have been granted additional review…
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