Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Nov 30, 2006
Supreme Court 2007
Supreme Court and the Death Penalty The U.S. Supreme Court will be hearing four death penalty cases in January 2007: SCHRIRO V. LANDRIGAN, No. 05 – 1575 This Arizona case will be argued on January 9. The Court will decide whether defense counsel has a duty to develop and offer evidence favorable to the client in a death penalty case when the client actively opposes presentation of such mitigating evidence. On a habeas corpus petition, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th…
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Nov 30, 2006
Kentucky Court Orders State to Hold Public Hearings on Lethal Injection Process
In a ruling that may put all executions on hold in the state of Kentucky, a Franklin County Circuit Judge held that the state must hold public hearings because it changed the way the state plans to carry out executions. A group of death row inmates had challenged the state’s lethal injection protocol in 2004, and subsequently the state altered the mixture of drugs used and the way they would be administered without going through the necessary administrative process for such a change.
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Nov 29, 2006
Pennsylvania Commission to Study Innocence Cases
Pennsylvania State Sen. Stewart J. Greenleaf, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, announced the formation of an advisory committee to examine the cases of people who have been wrongly convicted in the state. The commission will consist of about 30 members drawn from the state’s prosecutors, defense attorneys, judges, corrections officials, police, victim advocates and others. The commission will report its findings and recommendations to the Senate by Nov. 30,…
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Nov 28, 2006
Unanimous Jury Votes for Life Sentence, but Alabama Judge Imposes Death
Oscar Doster was found guilty earlier this year of capital murder in the course of a robbery in Alabama. Doster claimed that his co-defendant actually committed the murder. The jury unanimously recommended that Doster be sentenced to life without parole. In Alabama, unlike most other death penalty states, the judge is allowed to override a jury’s recommendation for life. Typically in other states, even one juror’s vote for a life sentence will prevent the court from imposing a death sentence.
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Nov 27, 2006
NEW VOICES: Former Death Row Warden Changes His Views
Dennis O’Neill had been an assistant warden at Florida State Prison for two years and warden at Union Correctional Institution for 7 years, both death row prisons. He eventually left the correctional system and became an Episcopal priest. He was assigned back to the town of Starke, Florida, where death row inmates reside. As a correctional officer, he had been involved in more than a dozen executions over 14 years, but now O’Neill opposes the death penalty. “For years, I told myself it was…
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Nov 26, 2006
Concerns Grow About the Mentally Ill on Death Row
There is growing concern among national mental health and legal organizations regarding inmates on death row who are severely mentally ill. Many of these inmates had been exhibiting clear signs of mental illness at the time of their crimes, and some, like Scott Panetti in Texas and Guy LeGrande in North Carolina, were allowed to represent themselves at trial, despite their bizarre behavior. Mr. Panetti, who was hospitalized 14 times for mental problems prior to his trial, represented himself…
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Nov 25, 2006
Kentucky Supreme Court Upholds State’s Lethal Injection Process
The Kentucky Supreme Court rejected claims by death row inmates that the state’s lethal injection process risks wanton and excruciating pain in violation of the ban on cruel and unusal punishments. The Court upheld a 2005 lower court ruling similarly rejecting the claims of inmates Ralph Baze and Thomas C. Bowling. In its unanimous ruling, the Supreme Court held: “Conflicting medical testimony prevents us from stating categorically that a prisoner feels no pain. But the prohibition is against…
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Nov 22, 2006
Florida Schedules Execution of Man Who Defended Himself, But Could Not Speak English
The last execution scheduled for 2006 involves a Florida inmate, Angel Nieves-Diaz, who defended himself at his trial and needed an interpreter because he did not speak English. Diaz, a native of Puerto Rico, was convicted and sentenced to death in 1986 for a murder in connection with a robbery of a bar in Miami in 1979. Diaz’s execution is scheduled for December 13 and would be the 4th execution in Florida this year, the most executions in that state in 6 years. In addition to his claims…
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Nov 18, 2006
Texas Death Sentences Drop 65% in Past Ten Years
The annual number of death sentences in Texas has declined from 40 in fiscal year 1996 to 14 in 2006, a drop of 65%, according to the State Office of Court Administration. Last year there were 15 new death sentences. This decrease is in line with the national decline in death sentences, which dropped from about 300 per year in the 1990s to 125 in 2005. The drop in Texas was particularly marked in Harris County (Houston), which produced the most death sentences of any county in Texas and the…
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Nov 17, 2006
Governor’s Adviser Recommends Clemency for Mentally Ill Inmate
Mark Urban, chairman of the Governor’s Advocacy Council for Persons with Disabilities, has requested that North Carolina Gov. Mike Easley fully consider death row inmate Guy LeGrande’s request for clemency. LeGrande (pictured), who is scheduled for execution on December 1, has been diagnosed as psychotic and…
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