Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Mar 07, 2008
Maryland Cost Study
Study Reveals Maryland’s Death Penalty is Costing Taxpayers $186 MillionA study released on March 6, 2008 found that Maryland taxpayers are paying $186 million dollars for a system that has resulted in five executions since 1978 when the state reenacted the death penalty. That would be equivalent to $37.2 per execution. The study, prepared by the Urban Institute, estimates that the average cost to Maryland taxpayers for reaching a single death sentence is $3 million — $1.9…
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Mar 07, 2008
New Hampshire Moves Toward Death Penalty Study Commission
The New Hampshire House of Representatives passed a bill to establish a Commission to Study the Death Penalty. Many officials who have had first-hand experience with New Hampshire’s death penalty, including former Attorneys General Phillip McLaughlin, Peter Heed and Greg Smith, former Superior Court Chief Justice Walter Murphy and former Supreme Court Justice William Batchelder, support the establishment of a commission to study the state’s death penalty procedures. If passed, the bill will…
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Mar 04, 2008
BOOKS: The Innocence Commission
The Innocence Commission, a new book by Jon B. Gould, describes how the advent of DNA testing and other forensic advances in the criminal justice system have led to serious efforts to understand how so many wrongful convictions have happened. In particular, The Innocence Commission details the first years of the Innocence Commission for Virginia (ICVA), which was the first in the country to conduct systemic research into all wrongful convictions in the state. Gould, the Chair of ICVA,…
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Mar 03, 2008
NEW VOICES: Federal Judge Says Seeking Death Sentence not Worth the Costs
Federal District Court Judge Jack B. Weinstein said recently that seeking the death penalty against Humberto Pepin Taveras in New York is not worth the effort of prosecutors or taxpayers’ money. “Based on the history of cases tried in metropolitan New York, the chance of Pepin receiving the death penalty is virtually nil,” Weinstein said. The case against Taveras, who confessed to murdering two drug traffickers in the 1990s while already serving more than 12 years in prison for other crimes,…
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Mar 03, 2008
NEW VOICES: California Judge Says Death Penalty is “Waste of Taxpayers’ Money”
During his 15-year tenure on the court, Orange County Superior Court Judge Donald McCartin sentenced nine men to death. Now retired, Judge McCartin no longer believes in the death penalty. “It’s a waste of time and taxpayers’ money,” Judge McCartin said. “It cost 10 times more to kill these guys than to keep them alive in prison. It’s absurd. And imagine the poor victims’ families having to go through this again and again.” All but one of the nine men Judge McCartin sentenced to death still…
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Feb 28, 2008
Suit Challenging Racial and Geographic Bias in Death Penalty Prosecutions Allowed to Continue
Connecticut Superior Court Judge Stanley T. Fuger ruled on February 27 that a suit alleging racial and geographic bias in the state’s death penalty should not be dismissed. Judge Fuger is allowing the claim from seven death row inmates to continue because the state’s constitution gives defendants greater legal rights than the U.S. Constitution. The U.S. Supreme Court had rejected a similar claim about Georgia’s death penalty in 1987 based on federal constitutional grounds. In his ruling on a…
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Feb 27, 2008
NOW PLAYING IN NY: “The Two Lives of Napoleon Beazley,” a Play by John Fleming
“The Two Lives of Napoleon Beazley” is a new play by John Fleming that explores the true story of a 17-year-old African-American defendant who was sentenced to death for a carjacking and murder in Texas. The victim was the father of a federal judge. Using a variety of factual resources, including court transcripts and media accounts, the play examines race and the criminal justice system before the Supreme Court ruled in 2005 that the death penalty for juveniles violates the…
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Feb 25, 2008
NEW VOICES: Faith in Texas Criminal Justice System Shaken after Exonerations
Two recent articles in the Dallas Morning News detail the lives of those affected by the wrongful imprisonment of Christopher Ochoa and Richard Danziger in Texas. For some, their faith in the criminal justice system has been shattered. Twelve years after being sentenced to life in prison for a 1988 rape and murder, Ochoa and Danziger were exonerated by DNA evidence. At the time of his arrest, Ochoa, after 15 hours of interrogation, gave a false confession to…
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Feb 22, 2008
NEW VOICES: Mother of Murder Victim Testifies at California Death Penalty Hearing
At a hearing of the California Commission on the Fair Administration of Justice held in Los Angeles, the mother of a murder victim testified about why she believed the death penalty does not serve victims’ needs. Aba Gayle’s daughter, Catherine Blount, was a teenager when she was murdered in 1980 by Douglas Mickey. At first, Gayle told the Commission, “The district attorney assured me that the execution of the man responsible for Catherine’s murder would help me heal, and for…
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Feb 21, 2008
BOOKS: “The Execution of Willie Francis”
Author Gilbert King, in his forthcoming book The Execution of Willie Francis, details the story of a young African-American man who endured the electric chair twice before being executed for the murder of a white man in Louisiana. In 1946, an all-white jury convicted Francis, who was 17, and sentenced him to death. The first attempt to execute him by electrocution did not work, and Francis was returned to his death row cell where he remained for almost another year while the U.S.
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