Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Aug 29, 2007
Canadian Man Who Once Faced Death Penalty Acquitted After 48 Years
Nearly five decades after Steven Truscott (pictured) was sentenced to die for the murder of 12-year-old Lynne Harper in Clinton, Ontario, he has been acquitted by the Canadian province’s highest court. Truscott, who was only 14-years-old when he was sentenced to hang in 1959, was on death row for four months before his sentence was commuted to life in prison. The case was one of the most high profile cases in Canada’s history, and Truscott was the youngest person on death row. Two attempts to…
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Aug 29, 2007
North Carolina Man Freed by DNA Evidence After Nearly Two Decades in Prison
North Carolina dropped all charges against Dwayne Allen Dail (pictured), who spent nearly half his life in prison for a rape he did not commit. Dail, now 39, was sentenced to two life sentences plus 18 years in 1989. He has always maintained his innocence, but was convicted after the 12-year-old victim identified him as her assailant and the state claimed that hair found at the crime scene was microscopically consistent with his. Standard protocol would have ordered the…
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Aug 29, 2007
NEW RESOURCE: Vanderbilt Study Reveals Decline in Federal Reversals Since AEDPA
A new study led by Vanderbilt University law professor Nancy King has revealed that fewer convictions have been overturned since the 1996 enactment of the Anti-terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA). The 2‑year study was the first to examine the effects of AEDPA. It examined 2,400 non-capital cases that were randomly selected from among the more than 36,000 habeas cases filed in federal district court nationwide by state prisoners during 2003 and 2004, as well as more than 360…
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Aug 27, 2007
Florida Doctors Wear “Moon Suits” to Hide Participation in Lethal Injections
In Florida, doctors hired to monitor and participate in lethal injection executions wear purple “moon suits” and goggles to conceal their identities from witnesses and circumvent an American Medical Association (AMA) code that forbids participation in executions, according to the Associated Press. Though Florida and other states say the participation of medical personnel ensures “a dignified and humane death” for those facing execution, the AMA, the American Nurses Association, the American…
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Aug 27, 2007
BOOKS: New Book Examines the Case of Sacco and Vanzetti
A new book by Bruce Watson examines the case of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, two Italian immigrants whose guilt remains in serious doubt eight decades after Massachusetts carried out their death sentences. The book, “Sacco & Vanzetti: The Men, the Murders, and the Judgment of Mankind” (Viking, 2007), provides a factual account of the case surrounding the two men, who were convicted of stealing a shoe factory’s pay envelopes and killing four people in the crime. Watson’s…
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Aug 23, 2007
U.S. Federal Court Overturns Scottish Citizen’s Conviction and Death Sentence
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit re-affirmed its 2005 ruling that Kenny Richey’s capital conviction and death sentence should be overturned because he received inadequate representation at trial. Richey is on death row for the 1986 arson murder of a two-year-old girl who was in his care, an event that he maintains was an accident. Richey is a dual citizen of the U.S. and Scotland, having been raised in Scotland before coming to Ohio. The Sixth Circuit ruled 2 – 1 that…
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Aug 22, 2007
Since 1996, Federal Courts Have Cut Back in Granting Any Relief to Those on Death Row
A new study by law professors Eric Freedman of Hofstra and David Dow of the University of Houston found that, before the passage of the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act in1996, death row inmates who filed habeas corpus petitions in federal court succeeded in overturning their convictions or death sentences about 40% of the time. After passage of the 1996 law which restricted the Courts’ power to overturn state decisions, the number of successful appeals fell to just 12% between…
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Aug 22, 2007
Men Threatened With the Death Penalty May Have Confessed to a Crime They Didn’t Commit
After lengthy, intensive interrogations, which in some cases included threats to pursue the death penalty, four enlisted Navy sailors confessed to a rape and murder in Norfolk, Va. that occurred in 1997. Now, convincing new evidence has emerged indicating that all four may be innocent. A recent New York Times Magazine article describes how three of the men — Danial Williams, Joseph Dick, and Derek Tice — were sentenced to life without parole for the rape and murder of Michelle Moore-Bosko,…
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Aug 21, 2007
RESOURCES: DePaul University College of Law Offers Death Penalty Resources
The DePaul University College of Law’s Center for Justice in Capital Cases offers a broad range of cutting-edge training programs for those interested in death penalty law, including a wealth of free publications and manuals that capital defense attorneys may find useful. Founded in 2000, the Center is a resource for death penalty attorneys across the nation, providing training and professional seminars on topics such as trial and mitigation investigation, jury decision-making and…
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Aug 20, 2007
EDITORIAL: Paper Says Texas Man Sentenced Under “Law of Parties” Should Not Be Executed
The Fort Worth Star-Telegram is urging the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles and Texas Governor Rick Perry to spare the life of Kenneth Foster (pictured), whose execution is scheduled for August 30. Foster was sentenced to death under the Texas Law of Parties that permits a person involved in a crime to be held accountable for the actions committed by someone else. In this case, Texas maintains that Foster deserves the death penalty because he should have anticipated that a passenger in his…
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