Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Aug 15, 2006
Execution of “Volunteers” Raises Questions About the Purpose of Death Penalty
South Dakota has scheduled the execution of Elijah Page for August 28. If this execution goes forward, it will mark the fifth inmate in the past six weeks who waived his appeals and was then executed. This will also be the first execution in South Dakota in 59 years. About 12% of those who have been executed since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976 have voluntarily waived appeals that would likely have delayed their execution.Such executions raise questions about the…
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Aug 14, 2006
RESOURCES AND RESEARCH: Symposium to Explore the Future of Death Penalty Research
A symposium entitled “The Next Generation of Death Penalty Research: Priorities, Strategies, and an Agenda” will be sponsored by the Capital Punishment Research Initiative of the State University of New York in Albany on October 6 & 7, 2006. Speakers will explore contemporary death penalty laws and practices, and the role of empirical research in changing capital punishment policies. Included in an extensive list of impressive speakers are: David Baldus of the University of Iowa…
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Aug 11, 2006
NEW PERSPECTIVES: “Like Being Struck by Lightning”
The August 2006 edition of the National Geographic Magazine contains a chart illustrating the probabilities of dying from particular causes. For example, the chances of dying from heart disease are 1 in 5. The chances of dying in a motor vehicle accident during one’s lifetime are 1 in 84. Far down in the list is the chance of dying by legal execution: 1 in 62,468. The very next item in the list is dying by a stroke of lightning: 1 in 79,746.In 1972, in his concurring opinion in Furman…
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Aug 10, 2006
NEW VOICES: Kenneth Starr and Other Officials Join Discussion of Death Penalty
The Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, together with the Federalist Society and the Constitution Project, recently sponsored a panel in Washington, D.C., examining the application, morality and constitutionality of the death penalty in the United States. The panel was moderated by Virginia Sloan of the Constitution Project and featured Samuel Millsap, Jr., former Texas District Attorney, William…
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Aug 09, 2006
ABA Passes Resolution On Mental Illness and the Death Penalty
The American Bar Association passed a resolution on August 8 at its annual conference recommending that jurisdictions refrain from sentencing to death or executing individuals with severe mental disorders. Using language adopted earlier by the American Psychological Association and the American Psychiatric Association, the resolution asserted that defendants should not be executed or sentenced to death if, at the time of the offense, they had “significant limitations in…
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Aug 07, 2006
Advocates in Upcoming North Carolina Execution Present Case for Mercy
Samuel Flippen is scheduled to be executed on August 18 in North Carolina for the 1994 death of his two-year-old step-daughter, Britnie Hutton. On the day of Britnie’s death, Flippen made emergency 911 calls seeking medical attention for her. There had been no history of him previously injuring Britnie. Defense attorneys claim that Flippen’s actions preceding Britnie’s death are strong evidence that he had no intention of harming his step-daughter. The attorneys are seeking clemency from the…
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Aug 06, 2006
Federal Court Dismisses Ohio Death Sentence Where Co-defendants Received Life
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit overturned the death sentence of an Ohio man convicted in a 1995 contract killing, stating that the death sentence was arbitrary because other equally culpable defendants received lesser sentences. While three other defendants were sentenced to life imprisonment, only nineteen-year-old Jason Getsy was sentenced to…
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Aug 04, 2006
NEW RESOURCES: The Dead Man Walking School Theatre Project
The stage play of Tim Robbins’ Academy Award winning film, Dead Man Walking, is available to colleges and universities across the country. The play is based on the acclaimed book of the same title by Sister Helen Prejean. Through the Dead Man Walking School Theatre Project, the play provides an opportunity to broaden discussion about the death penalty and involve schools and their local communities in an inter-disciplinary dialogue about this major social…
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Aug 02, 2006
Federal Death Penalty Is Focused on New York – Almost All Defendants From Minorities
Although New York’s death penalty was overturned by the state’s high court in 2004, and the legislature has not reinstated it, the federal government has sought the death penalty more in New York than in any other state except Virginia. However, none of the federal cases has resulted in a death sentence. Since the federal death penalty was reinstated in 1988, thirty-seven federal capital cases have been authorized in New York, compared with 50 in Virginia and 385 nationwide, according to data…
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Aug 01, 2006
U.N. Human Rights Committee Urges U.S to Place Moratorium on Death Penalty
Citing the 1966 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, a United Nations panel recommended that the United States impose a moratorium on executions. The report, issued on July 28 by the U.N. Human Rights Committee, stated the panel was “concerned by studies according to which the death penalty may be imposed disproportionately on ethnic minorities as well as on low-income groups, a problem which does not seem to be fully acknowledged.” The panel, made up of 18…
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