Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Jun 19, 2007
Texas Scores Poorly in Mental Health Services While Executing Many with Mental Illness
A recent study conducted by the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) has revealed that Texas is almost last among states in spending on mental health services and performs poorly in other mental health areas. According to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Texas ranked 47th in the nation in per-capita spending on mental health services, and received a grade of “D” for information access and a grade of “C”…
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Jun 14, 2007
BOOKS: “The Big Eddy Club” Explores Race and the Death Penalty
In his new book, “The Big Eddy Club: The Stocking Stranglings and Southern Justice,” author David Rose examines issues of race and the death penalty. The book relates the story of Carlton Gary, who was convicted of capital murder in 1986 and remains on Georgia’s death row for the rape and murder of several elderly women in Columbus, Georgia. Rose, a contributing editor at Vanity Fair, links Gary’s conviction to a history of bias in Columbus and the South. “The Big Eddy Club” details…
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Jun 14, 2007
New Mexico Trial Judge Finds State Death Penalty Unconstitutional
Ruling in a pre-trial matter in New Mexico, Judge Timothy Garcia of Santa Fe County’s First Judicial District Court held the state’s death penalty law to be unconstitutional based on a study by the Capital Jury Project. The Project’s research in 14 states had found that jurors often do not follow the law in making their sentencing decision. In particular, the judge found that the jurors’ propensity toward making their sentencing decision during the guilt-innocence phase of the…
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Jun 13, 2007
Supreme Court Decision Allows Broader Exclusion of Jurors, But May Further Isolate the Death Penalty
The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Uttecht v. Brown on June 4, 2007 appears to enhance the state’s ability to remove potential jurors with doubts about the death penalty. But by expanding the class of people who cannot serve on capital juries, the decision may ultimately render the death penalty invalid as juries fail to represent the true diversity of the American public. In a 5 – 4 decision overturning an opinion written by Judge Alex Kozinski of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the…
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Jun 12, 2007
Texas Court Grants Stay on Basis of Possible Innocence
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals stayed Cathy Henderson’s scheduled execution of June 13 and has remanded her case back to the trial court for a more careful review of new scientific evidence that casts doubt on the state’s claim that she intentionally killed Brandon Baugh, an infant in her care. The appeals court decision was largely based on a recent affidavit submitted by former Travis County medical examiner Dr. Roberto Bayardo (pictured), whose expert testimony was crucial to…
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Jun 11, 2007
Tennessee Legislature Overwhelmingly Approves Death Penalty Study
By a vote of 79 – 14, the Tennessee House of Representatives passed bipartisan legislation creating a study commission to examine the state’s death penalty system. A similar measure unanimously passed the state’s Senate in May, just one month after the American Bar Association issued a report finding that the state was not in full compliance with most of the benchmarks established to guarantee a fair death penalty system. The new commission will consist of representatives from the…
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Jun 11, 2007
Rwanda Votes to Abolish the Death Penalty
Rwanda’s parliament has voted to abolish the death penalty and replace it with life without parole, a move that officials hope will clear the way for suspects in the nation’s 1994 genocide to be extradited back to Rwanda for trial. Many of the suspects are believed to be at large in Europe, North America, and West Africa, regions where many countries refuse to extradite criminal suspects to nations that continue to practice capital punishment or torture. Rwandan genocide…
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Jun 11, 2007
A Crisis of Confidence
Read the Newsweek Feature About DPIC’s Poll & ReportThe Trials of Darryl Hunt premieres around the USA DPIC’s New Poll and Report Shows America Becoming More Distant from the Death Penalty Because of mistakes and a lack of efficacy, the death penalty is losing the confidence of the American public, according to a new poll and report issued by the Death Penalty Information Center. Nearly 40% of the American public believes they would be disqualified from serving on death penalty…
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Jun 08, 2007
Executions Declining in China
A new requirement that every death sentence be reviewed and approved by China’s highest court has resulted in a sharp decline in executions there. A spokesman for the Supreme People’s Court in China said that lower courts are reporting a 10% drop in executions during the first five months of 2007. Human rights experts estimate that China executes 10,000 — 15,000 people each year, more than the rest of the world combined, but officials do not release specific numbers to the public. In recent…
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Jun 08, 2007
NEW DPIC REPORT and POLL: “A Crisis of Confidence”
According to a new report and opinion poll issued today by the Death Penalty Information Center, the American public is losing confidence in the death penalty as doubts about innocence and the purpose of capital punishment increase. The report, A Crisis of Confidence: Americans’ Doubts About the Death Penalty, is based on a recent national opinion poll conducted by RT Strategies and commissioned by DPIC. “Public confidence in the death penalty has clearly eroded over the past 10 years,…
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