Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Mar 162007

Babysitter Scheduled for April Execution in Texas

Cathy Henderson (pic­tured with Sr. Helen Prejean) is sched­uled to be exe­cut­ed in Texas on April 18 for the 1994 mur­der of Brandon Baugh, an infant she was babysit­ting. Henderson would be the 12th woman put to death in the U.S. since cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment was rein­stat­ed. Since her arrest, Henderson has main­tained that the child’s death was acci­den­tal. She said that she dropped the baby, frac­tur­ing his skull, and then pan­icked after real­iz­ing she could not revive him. She then buried the boy’s…

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News 

Mar 162007

Victims and Law Enforcement Support Kentucky Death Penalty Review

Legislation to estab­lish a com­mis­sion to exam­ine Kentucky’s death penal­ty and report its find­ings to the General Assembly has gained sup­port from for­mer law enforce­ment offi­cials and vic­tims’ fam­i­ly mem­bers. The bill, pro­posed by Rep. Tom Burch, would require the task force to review whether cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment deters crime, is applied fair­ly, and is still accept­able to the pub­lic. It would mark the first time in four decades that the state has exam­ined its death penalty…

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News 

Mar 152007

NEW VOICES: Law Enforcement Officials Gather in Maryland to Oppose Death Penalty

Corrections offi­cials, pros­e­cu­tors and police chiefs recent­ly gath­ered in Annapolis, Maryland, to voice sup­port for a leg­isla­tive mea­sure that would repeal the state’s death penalty. It is a human sys­tem, and because it is fal­li­ble and because it is human, it makes mis­takes. Executions make those mis­takes irre­versible,” said Matthew Campbell, a for­mer deputy state’s attor­ney for Montgomery and Howard coun­ties. Gary J. Hilton, a for­mer war­den at the Trenton State Prison in New Jersey, added…

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News 

Mar 132007

DOCTOR’S VIEW: In the Execution Chamber, Medicine is Misplaced”

Dr. Philip B. Woodhall, M.D., who prac­ticed emer­gency med­i­cine in North Carolina for many years, recent­ly wrote about the pro­posed role of doc­tors in car­ry­ing out lethal injec­tions. He stat­ed that med­i­cine and exe­cu­tions do not mix. “[D]octors are giv­en extra­or­di­nary rights and priv­i­leges,” he wrote, and these pow­ers are ded­i­cat­ed to the preser­va­tion of human life, not to the ser­vice of death.” Woodhall urged North Carolina’s Department of Corrections to aban­don efforts to include doctors in…

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News 

Mar 092007

COSTS: High Number of Capital Cases Will Cost Arizona County Millions of Dollars

Maricopa County, Arizona, has more pend­ing death penal­ty cas­es than Los Angeles County, which has more than twice as many res­i­dents, and more than the so-called death penal­ty cap­i­tal” of Harris County, Texas. There are more than 130 cas­es in tri­al or await­ing tri­al, and its four indi­gent defense agen­cies say that they have run out of attor­neys to han­dle the cas­es. Strained by the record num­ber of cas­es, Judge James Keppel gave pros­e­cu­tors, defense attor­neys, and coun­ty offi­cials five days to…

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News 

Mar 082007

DOCUMENTARIES: Race to Execution”

The doc­u­men­tary film Race To Execution by Rachel Lyon will air nation­al­ly on the Emmy Award-win­n­ing PBS series Independent Lens on Tuesday, March 27, 2007 at 10 p.m. Race to Execution offers a com­pelling and orig­i­nal inves­ti­ga­tion of America’s death penal­ty, prob­ing how race dis­crim­i­na­tion infects the cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment sys­tem. The film reveals the poten­tial bias­es in the racial por­tray­al of vic­tims and per­pe­tra­tors in the media, par­tic­u­lar­ly where poten­tial jurors internalize these…

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News 

Mar 082007

BOOKS — Litigating in the Shadow of Death: Defense Attorneys in Capital Cases

Litigating in the Shadow of Death by the late Welsh White is an absorb­ing account of the ways in which defense attor­neys rep­re­sent cap­i­tal defen­dants. The author brings to light the para­mount role these attor­neys have played in shap­ing the mod­ern sys­tem of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, show­ing how high­ly skilled defense lawyers are some­times able to avoid death sen­tences for their clients even in very dif­fi­cult cas­es. In oth­er cas­es, attor­neys have demon­strat­ed to the pub­lic that some innocent…

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News 

Mar 072007

BOOKS — Lethal Punishment: Lynchings and Legal Executions in the South

In her book, Lethal Punishment: Lynchings and Legal Executions in the South,” University of Memphis pro­fes­sor Margaret Vandiver explores the com­plex rela­tion­ship between these two forms of pun­ish­ment and chal­lenges the assump­tion that exe­cu­tions con­sis­tent­ly grew out of — and replaced — lynch­ings. Vandiver’s book exam­ines lynch­ings and legal exe­cu­tions in three cul­tur­al­ly and geo­graph­i­cal­ly dis­tinct south­ern regions. First she researched rur­al north­west Tennessee, where lynchings outnumbered…

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News 

Mar 062007

ABA Panel Finds Executions In Indiana Random’

Florida Commission Recommends Changes to Lethal Injection Process ABA Panel Finds Executions in Indiana Random’ The Indiana Death Penalty Assessment Team, under the aus­pices of the American Bar Association, has called for a halt to exe­cu­tions in the state because of con­cerns about the arbi­trari­ness of the state’s death penalty. The seem­ing­ly ran­dom process of charg­ing deci­sions, plea agree­ments, and jury rec­om­men­da­tions is just part of a death penal­ty sys­tem that has…

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News 

Feb 282007

Maryland Poll Shows Broad Support for Life Without Parole

According to a recent Maryland poll, a large major­i­ty of vot­ers in the state sup­port replac­ing the death penal­ty with a sen­tence of life with­out parole. The poll, con­duct­ed by Mason-Dixon Polling & Research, Inc., found that 61% of those sur­veyed believe that the sen­tence of life with­out the pos­si­bil­i­ty of parole is an accept­able sub­sti­tute for the death penal­ty.” Only 27% of respon­dents dis­agreed. Support for life with­out parole in Maryland has jumped near­ly 20 percentage…

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