Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Jan 09, 2007
PUBLIC OPINION: Pennsylvanians Prefer Life Sentences Over Death Penalty
A recent poll administered by the Center for Survey Research at Penn State Harrisburg revealed that more Pennsylvanians prefer a life sentence over the death penalty for those convicted of murder. The poll found that only 42.9% of respondents chose the death penalty when also given the sentencing options of life with parole and life without parole. A total of 45% of respondents chose either life-without-parole (35.5%) or the sentence of life-with-parole (9.6%). Larry Frankel, legislative…
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Jan 08, 2007
NEW VOICES: Victims’ Advocates, Prosecutors Caution Against Expansion of Texas Death Penalty
Victims’ advocates and prosecutors are urging Texas legislators to exclude the death penalty from new legislation designed to toughen penalties for repeat child molesters. Those opposed to the measure fear that threatening death sentences for sex offenders could lead to fewer reported cases of sex crimes and might even give incentive to offenders to kill their victims to prevent the child from testifying in court. Annette Burrhus-Clay, executive director of the Texas Association…
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Jan 08, 2007
Supreme Court Takes Fourth Texas Death Penalty Case
The U.S. Supreme Court agreed on January 5 to hear another death penalty case from Texas, this one involving a defendant who may be mentally incompetent. In 1986, the Supreme Court held that it is unconstitutional to execute an inmate who is presently insane. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit ruled that Scott Panetti, who was allowed to defend himself in his Texas trial despite his schizophrenia and 14 stints in mental hospitals, and who says the devil compelled his actions, was…
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Jan 05, 2007
EDITORIAL: Declining Support for Kentucky’s Death Penalty
An editorial published by the Lexington Herald-Leader noted that support for Kentucky’s death penalty has declined since the state resumed executions a decade ago. The paper stated that 68% of state residents questioned in a recent poll preferred a long prison sentence over execution for those convicted of murder. The Herald-Leader concluded that Kentuckians’ growing unease about capital punishment is reflective of a broader national trend away from the death penalty and that the death…
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Jan 04, 2007
NEW RESOURCES: Death Nation: The Experts Explain American Capital Punishment
Professor Matthew Robinson of Applachian State University has written a new book entitled Death Nation: The Experts Explain American Capital Punishment. This book provides a solid yet brief background on the major issues pertaining to capital punishment in the United States. It covers topics such as the history of the death penalty in America, American death penalty law, justifications for capital punishment, as well as alleged problems with its practice. The book also presents a study…
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Jan 04, 2007
NEW VOICES: New Jersey Commission Represented a Broad Spectrum of Officials and Citizens
The report from the New Jersey Death Penalty Study Commission that called for an end to the state’s death penalty was prepared by a group of individuals representing a wide variety of viewpoints and experience. The members of the Commission were:Governor Jon S. Corzine…
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Jan 02, 2007
New Jersey Commission Recommends Abolition of the Death Penalty
EXECUTION REPRIEVES Gov. Ted Strickland of Ohio granted temporary reprieves to three inmates scheduled for execution in the next 5 weeks in order to allow more time to consider whether clemency should be granted: Kenneth Biros, James Filiaggi, and Christopher Newton. (Jan. 19, 2007). See…
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Jan 02, 2007
New Jersey Legislative Commission Recommends Abolition of State’s Death Penalty
After extensive public hearings, the New Jersey Death Penalty Study Commission issued a report on January 2 calling for an end to the state’s death penalty and replacing it with a sentence of life without parole. The 13-member Commission was appointed by the state legislature, which also placed a moratorium on all executions until a report was prepared. The report cited the risks of executing the innocent, the high costs of the death penalty, and society’s evolving standards of decency…
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Dec 28, 2006
Execution Approaching for Longest Serving Inmate on Texas Death Row
One of the first inmates scheduled to be executed in 2007 is Ronald Chambers, who has been on death row since Gerald Ford was President, and longer than any other inmate in Texas. He is facing execution on January 25, thirty-one years after he was first sentenced to death for murder. His co-defendant in the crime, Clarence Ray Williams, pleaded guilty and is serving two life sentences. Chambers’ conviction was overturned twice since 1976, including once on the grounds that…
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Dec 28, 2006
Executions on Hold in Ten States
As 2006 draws to a close, most executions in ten states are effectively on hold as aspects of their capital punishment laws are examined. Two states, Illinois and New Jersey, have a formal moratorium on all executions while the viability of the death penalty is considered. In eight other states, almost all executions are being stayed as the states grapple with the lethal injection issue. Those states are Arkansas, California, Delaware, Florida, Maryland, Missouri,…
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