Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Oct 03, 2007
NEW RESOURCE: The Impact of AEDPA Legislation in Limiting Appeals
A recent edition of the Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review features articles about the impact of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA) in limiting appeals by prisoners and death row inmates. AEDPA was enacted in 1996, and Harvard Law School sponsored a symposium marking the legislation’s tenth anniversary. One article by Bryan Stevenson, Director of the Alabama-based Equal Justice Initiative, “Confronting Mass Imprisonment and Restoring Fairness to Collateral…
Read MoreNews
Oct 03, 2007
Court of Criminal Appeals Decision Signals Likely Shutdown of Executions in Texas
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has granted a stay of execution to Heliberto Chi, following the U.S. Supreme Court’s lead after it decided to review Kentucky’s lethal injection procedures. Chi was scheduled to be executed on October 3. Attorneys for both the prosecution and defense said that the stay signals a probable slowdown, if not a complete shutdown, of executions in Texas until the Supreme Court issues a decision in the lethal injection case. Andrea Keilen, executive director of…
Read MoreNews
Oct 03, 2007
EDITORIAL: Atlanta Journal Constitution Calls for Abolition of Georgia’s Death Penalty
In an editorial that followed a four-part news series reviewing death penalty-eligible murder cases in Georgia between 1995 and 2004, the Atlanta Journal Constitution called on the state to abandon capital punishment because death sentences are often unfairly influenced by geography, a prosecutor’s personal politics, or the victim’s race. The paper also said that Georgia fails to meet minimum standards to ensure an accurate and fair capital punishment system,…
Read MoreNews
Oct 01, 2007
Presidential Powers at Issue in Supreme Court Arguments in Texas Death Penalty Case
On October 10, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments in Medellin v. Texas, a case that will determine whether President Bush overstepped his authority by ordering state courts to comply with a 2004 International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruling. The case involves Texas death row inmate Jose Medellin, one of 51 Mexican foreign nationals who were denied their right to contact Mexican consular officials after their arrest. The ICJ’s 2004 ruling called on U.S. courts to review the cases in…
Read MoreNews
Oct 01, 2007
DNA Exonerations Lead to Key Policy Changes Throughout the U.S.
In the wake of more than 200 exonerations based on DNA evidence, including some wrongfully convicted death row prisoners, jurisdictions throughout the U.S. are enacting key policy reforms that add safeguards to protect against wrongful convictions and provide inmates with better access to crucial evidence during appeals. All but eight states now give inmates varying degrees of access to DNA evidence that might not have been available at the time of their convictions, and many states are…
Read MoreNews
Oct 01, 2007
NEW BOOK: “Jingle Jangle” Explores Innocence Case of Ray Krone
In “Jingle Jangle,” author Jim Rix tells the story of his cousin, Ray Krone, who was wrongly convicted and sentenced to die in 1992 for the murder of a bartender in Phoenix. The book details efforts to exonerate Krone, including the important role Rix played in investigating his cousin’s innocence claim. “Jingle Jangle” reveals how inaccurate testimony from a forensic science expert and prosecutorial misconduct led to Krone’s wrongful conviction. It also closely examines other problems that…
Read MoreNews
Sep 28, 2007
BOOKS: “The Death Penalty: America’s Experience with Capital Punishment”
“The Death Penalty: America’s Experience with Capital Punishment” by Professors Raymond Paternoster, Robert Brame, and Sarah Bacon is a comprehensive review of the death penalty in the U.S. Issues covered include the history of the death penalty in America and the changing nature of the U.S. death penalty, including such topics as eligible crimes, trial procedures, and methods of execution. In addition, the book covers questions about the influence of race on the death penalty, the execution…
Read MoreNews
Sep 28, 2007
NEW RESOURCES: Reviews on Jailhouse Snitch Testimony, Expanded Discovery in Criminal Cases
The Justice Project has released two new policy reviews about jailhouse snitch testimony and expanded discovery in criminal cases, both topics that are part of the organization’s broader National Agenda for Reform initiative. Jailhouse Snitch Testimony: A Policy Review offers recommendations and solutions for improving the standards of admissibility of in-custody informant or “snitch testimony.” The review includes an overview of current snitch testimony laws, case studies, information about…
Read MoreNews
Sep 28, 2007
Texas, Alabama Executions Stayed As Lethal Injection Controversy Spreads
Two executions scheduled to take place on Thursday, September 27, in Alabama and Texas were stayed just two days after the U.S. Supreme Court announced it will consider the constitutionality of Kentucky’s lethal injection protocol. In Alabama, Governor Bob Riley granted Thomas Arthur a 45-day stay of execution to allow time for the state to change its current lethal injection protocol. The change is designed to address concerns that inmates are not fully unconscious when given…
Read MoreNews
Sep 27, 2007
Italian Premier Calls for Worldwide Death Penalty Moratorium
Italian Premier Romano Prodi called for a worldwide moratorium on the death penalty in an address to world leaders at the United Nations General Assembly. Prodi advocated passage of a U.N. moratorium resolution, saying, “If genuine politics means showing foresight, we shall perform a great political act through the adoption of this resolution. It will demonstrate that humankind isn’t capable of making progress only in science but also in the field of ethics.” Prodi told the…
Read More