Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Jun 272006

DPIC Bestows Thurgood Marshall Journalism Awards at National Press Club Luncheon

The Death Penalty Information Center held its 10th Annual Thurgood Marshall Journalism Awards at the National Press Club on Monday, June 26. This year’s award recip­i­ents were Jacqui Lofaro and Victor Teich of Justice Productions for their documentary The Empty Chair,” and reporter Robert Nelson of the Phoenix New Times for his cov­er­age of death row exoneree Ray Krone. Lofaro and Teich received this year’s Award for excel­lence in the tele­vi­sion broadcast category.

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News 

Jun 262006

New York Assembly Committee Blocks Death Penalty By Wider Margin

Members of the New York Assembly’s Codes Committee recent­ly vot­ed 13 – 5 against a bill to rein­state the death penal­ty, a vote that revealed a grow­ing bi-par­ti­san oppo­si­tion to cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. Last year’s vote on the same mea­sure was 11 – 7. New York’s death penal­ty was over­turned in 2004 by the state’s high­est court. A num­ber of Assembly mem­bers have said they no longer sup­port the death penal­ty because of grow­ing evi­dence that it risks inno­cent lives and because the state now has the…

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News 

Jun 232006

Chicago Tribune: EXECUTED TEXAS MAN WAS LIKELY INNOCENT

A Chicago Tribune inves­ti­ga­tion set for release this week­end will reveal ground­break­ing evi­dence that Texas may have exe­cut­ed an inno­cent man in 1989. The defen­dant, Carlos DeLuna, was exe­cut­ed for the fatal stab­bing of Texas con­ve­nience store clerk Wanda Lopez in 1983. New evi­dence uncov­ered by reporters Maurice Possley and Steve Mills casts doubt on DeLuna’s guilt and points towards anoth­er man, Carlos Hernandez, who had a record of sim­i­lar crimes and repeat­ed­ly confessed to…

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News 

Jun 232006

Doctors Say There Are Alternatives to Current Lethal Injection Procedures

In the wake of numer­ous law­suits chal­leng­ing cur­rent lethal injec­tion pro­ce­dures and a recent U.S. Supreme Court rul­ing that makes it eas­i­er for those on death row to file such claims, med­ical experts have iden­ti­fied alter­na­tive pro­to­cols that would be less risky to the pris­on­er but more dif­fi­cult for wit­ness­es to observe. There’s an innu­mer­ably long list of med­ica­tions that can be giv­en to cause some­one to die,” said Dr. Mark Dershwitz, a pro­fes­sor of anes­the­si­ol­o­gy at the University of…

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News 

Jun 222006

South Retains the Highest Murder Rate in 2005

According to the FBI’s Preliminary Uniform Crime Report for 2005, all regions of the coun­try expe­ri­enced a rise in mur­der rates in 2005. The Midwest had the largest increase (5.8%) and the West had the small­est increase (3.2%). Based on the increas­es report­ed by the FBI and the pre­vi­ous year’s mur­der rates, the South again had the high­est mur­der rate in the coun­try– 6.9 mur­ders per 100,000 peo­ple – fol­lowed by the West (5.9), Midwest (5.0) and the Northeast (4.4). The rates for…

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News 

Jun 202006

New Voices: League of Women Voters Supports Abolition of the Death Penalty

The League of Women Voters of the United States has adopt­ed an offi­cial nation­al pol­i­cy call­ing for abo­li­tion of the death penal­ty. During the orga­ni­za­tion’s 47th bien­ni­al nation­al con­ven­tion in Minneapolis, del­e­gates adopt­ed pol­i­cy language stating, The League of Women Voters of the United States sup­ports the abo­li­tion of the death penal­ty.” The League of Women Voters has more than 130,000 mem­bers and sup­port­ers. It is a non-par­ti­san polit­i­cal orga­ni­za­tion that encour­ages the informed and…

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News 

Jun 152006

NEW RESOURCE: DPIC Resources Available as 30th Anniversary of Gregg v. Georgia Approaches

July 2, 2006 will mark the 30th anniver­sary of the U.S. Supreme Court’s deci­sion in Gregg v. Georgia, an his­toric rul­ing that upheld new­ly craft­ed death penal­ty statutes and sig­naled the begin­ning of the mod­ern era of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. This mile­stone presents the pub­lic with an oppor­tu­ni­ty to exam­ine the appli­ca­tion of the death penal­ty over the past three decades and to test whether the Court’s expec­ta­tion of a fair­er and less arbi­trary sys­tem of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment has been ful­filled. As…

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News 

Jun 122006

Supreme Court Grants Tennessee Death Row Inmate New Hearing Based on DNA Evidence

The U.S. Supreme has expand­ed the abil­i­ty of death row inmates to chal­lenge their con­vic­tions in fed­er­al court based on DNA evi­dence pro­duced long after their tri­als. The rul­ing marks the first time that the Justices have con­sid­ered the new evi­den­tiary tech­nol­o­gy of DNA evi­dence when re-exam­­in­ing a death sen­tence. In its 5 – 3 deci­sion, the Court held that new evi­dence, includ­ing DNA test results, raised suf­fi­cient doubt to mer­it a new hear­ing in fed­er­al court for Tennessee death row inmate…

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News 

Jun 122006

Editorials Praise Virginia Governor’s Decision to Delay Walton Execution

Recent edi­to­ri­als in The Washington Post and Roanoke Times praised Virginia Governor Tim Kaine’s deci­sion to delay the exe­cu­tion of Percy Walton in order to ensure that he is sane enough to exe­cute. The papers not­ed that Kaine’s deci­sion, which drew crit­i­cism from some death penal­ty advo­cates, demonstrated com­pe­tence in law­ful­ly apply­ing the death penal­ty” and was…

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News 

Jun 122006

U.S. Supreme Court Unanimously Rules that Death Row Inmates Can Raise Lethal Injection Challenges

The U.S. Supreme Court has unan­i­mous­ly ruled that death row inmates seek­ing to chal­lenge lethal injec­tion as a method of exe­cu­tion after they have exhaust­ed their reg­u­lar appeals may pur­sue the issue as a civ­il rights claim. Though the deci­sion in Hill v. McDonough did not answer the broad­er ques­tion regard­ing whether the chem­i­cals used in lethal injec­tions around the nation are uncon­sti­tu­tion­al because they may cause excru­ci­at­ing pain, it does per­mit inmates to chal­lenge lethal injection…

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