Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Feb 14, 2007
NEW RESOURCES: The Possible Innocence of Troy Davis
A new report issued by Amnesty International focuses on the case of Georgia death row inmate Troy Davis to illustrate the issue of innocence and the legal hurdles that death row inmates face in seeking judicial relief. The report — ‘Where is the justice for me?’ The case of Troy Davis, Facing Execution in Georgia — notes that Davis has been on death row for 15 years for a murder that he maintains he did not commit. Many of the state’s witnesses against Davis have since…
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Feb 14, 2007
Virginia Man Could Face Execution Despite Ineffectual Representation
Christopher Scott Emmett could face execution in Virginia before the end of the year despite the fact that his legal representation fell short of decades-old American Bar Association standards, according to an investigation by McClatchy Newspapers reporter Stephen Henderson. Emmett was sentenced to death in 2001, and his story was among the 73 cases reviewed recently in the McClatchy series. During the sentencing phase of his trial, Emmett’s public defender, Lawrence D. Gott,…
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Feb 14, 2007
PUBLIC OPINION: Poll Reveals Kansans Prefer Life Without Parole
A recent Kansas poll found that nearly two-thirds of respondents said they prefer a sentence of life in prison without parole in which the offenders would work in prison to pay restitution to the victims’ families as an alternative to the death penalty. The poll also revealed that many Kansans think capital punishment is handed out unfairly. Fifty-seven percent of respondents said they believe that some people are executed while others serve prison time for the same type of offense. …
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Feb 13, 2007
BOOKS: In the Shadow of Death: Restorative Justice and Death Row Families
In the Shadow of Death: Restorative Justice and Death Row Families is a new book by Professors Elizabeth Beck, Sarah Britto, and Arlene Andrews that examines the debilitating effects that a death sentence can have on the families of the offenders. With a forward by Steve Earle, the book provides an in-depth analysis of restorative justice, which focuses on crime as an act against an individual or the community, rather than the state. In their examination of how capital punishment…
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Feb 12, 2007
Tennessee Execution Manual Found to be Full of Errors
An Associated Press investigation of Tennessee’s “Manual for Execution” found that the guide for lethal injections contains conflicting instructions and mixes new procedures with old guidelines for carrying out electrocutions. The manual instructs prison officials to shave the condemned prisoner’s head prior to an execution, as if preparing him for electrocution, and orders that they have a fire extinguisher nearby. It also provides instructions for controlling the…
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Feb 12, 2007
BOOKS: “The Fairer Death: Executing Women in Ohio”
The Fairer Death: Executing Women in Ohio is a new book by Victor Streib, a professor at the Ohio Northern University College of Law. The book explores Ohio’s use of the death penalty for women and examines the implications for women on death row throughout the country. Streib carefully describes the cases of all four women executed by Ohio in its history and those of the 11 women sentenced to death in the state during the modern death penalty era (1973-present). Professor Streib’s analysis…
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Feb 12, 2007
RELIGIOUS VIEWS: Leading Baptist Theologian Calls for National Halt to Executions
Professor David Gushee, Graves Professor of Moral Philosophy at Union University in Jackson, Tennessee, called for a national halt to executions because the death penalty as a public policy “fails the most basic standards of justice.” Prof. Gushee, writing for the Associated Baptist Press, stated that the recent moratorium in Tennessee surrounding lethal injection problems should be extended to review the entire application of the death…
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Feb 08, 2007
Colorado House Committee Advances Bill to Abolish Capital Punishment
The Colorado House Judiciary Committee recently voted to abolish the state’s death penalty, replacing it with a sentence of life-without-parole, and use the money currently spent on capital punishment to help solve 1,200 cold-case homicides in the state. The 7 – 4 vote followed four hours of testimony from murder victims’ family members, state law enforcement officials, and death penalty experts, including DPIC Executive Director Richard Dieter. The bill’s sponsor, Rep. Paul…
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Feb 07, 2007
ARBITRARINESS: Oklahoma Case Illustrates Capriciousness of the Death Penalty
An Oklahoma man could be executed or spared based on which side of a gravel road in rural McIntosh County a murder took place. Patrick Murphey, who is borderline-mentally retarded and was drunk at the time of the crime, was originally sentenced to death for the murder in 2000. His trial attorney failed to notice that the prosecution had made a two-mile mistake in locating the site of the crime. Murphey’s second attorney, who spent 11 years as a geologist with Conoco before…
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Feb 07, 2007
NEW VOICES: Missouri Representative Calls for Halt to Executions
Missouri Rep. Bill Deeken (pictured), a Republican death penalty proponent, has introduced legislation that would halt executions in the state until 2011 and would create a capital punishment commission to examine the fairness and accuracy of Missouri’s death penalty. Deeken stated that his motivation for the bill came after realizing that the state’s death penalty has not been implemented fairly in all cases and it does not adequately prevent wrongful convictions. He noted, “I am not against…
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