Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Apr 25, 2006
United Methodist Church Marks 50th Anniversary of Stance Against Death Penalty
Marking the 50th anniversary of the United Methodist Church’s public call for an end to the death penalty, the church’s General Board of Church and Society recently issued a statement echoing the sentiments of the church’s original call for abolition and urging all United Methodists “to practice transformative love, to comfort the victims of crime, to humanize those convicted of crime, and to advocate for an end to the death penalty in our criminal justice system.” The statement comes five…
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Apr 24, 2006
Amnesty International Report Finds Declining Executions and Trend Toward Abolition
Amnesty International’s most recent death penalty report, “The Death Penalty Worldwide: Developments in 2005,” revealed a substantial drop in recorded executions around the world, as well as a growing number of nations that have abandoned the death penalty. According to the report, four nations accounted for 94% of the 2,148 recorded executions carried out around the world in 2005, a total that is significantly less than the 3,797 executions recorded in 2004 (however, in many…
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Apr 20, 2006
NEW RESOURCE: Human Rights Watch Report Examines Lethal Injection
A new report issued by Human Rights Watch today notes that most U.S. states use execution methods that needlessly risk excruciating pain for inmates subjected to lethal injections. The report, “So Long as They Die: Lethal Injections in the United States,” examines the history of lethal injections and the widespread use of protocols that were created three decades ago with no scientific research. “The U.S. takes more care killing dogs than people. Just because a prisoner may have…
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Apr 18, 2006
California Commission Issues Its First Recommendations for Justice Reform
The California Commission on the Fair Administration of Justice, a blue-ribbon panel established by the state legislature to study and review the death penalty and related matters in California, has proposed significant changes in the use of eyewitness identification in California courts. The commission called on legislators to pass a bill requiring the attorney general’s office to convene a task force to develop guidelines for new procedures and trainings in eyewitness identification.
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Apr 18, 2006
PHILIPPINE PRESIDENT ORDERS COMMUTATIONS OF ALL ON DEATH ROW
Philippine President Gloria Macapagel-Arroyo (pictured) ordered the commutation of all death sentences to life in prison, an order that will spare the lives of the 1,205 people on death row. As her nation marked Easter Sunday, she issued the clemencies: “I wish to announce that we are changing our policy on those who have been imposed the death penalty. We are reducing their penalty to life imprisonment. Anyone who falls and makes mistakes has a chance to stand up and correct the wrong he…
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Apr 13, 2006
RELIGIOUS VIEWS: Catholic Bishops Invoke Holy Day in Calling for End to Executions
In a letter issued prior to Easter, the Catholic Bishops in Missouri called for an end to executions in the U.S. and urged parishioners to “build a culture of life.” The letter noted that violence “is not a solution to society’s problems,” and it summarized church teachings regarding capital punishment and highlighted a campaign by U.S. Catholic Bishops to end the use of the death penalty. “(Christ) was unjustly sentenced to death and executed on a cross, the cruelest form of capital…
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Apr 13, 2006
NEW RESOURCE: New Government Web Site Promotes DNA Technology to “Protect the Innocent”
“Advancing Justice Through DNA Technology” offers a new resource from the President’s DNA Initiative. The Web site, www.dna.gov, includes resources on DNA testing, trainings, and funding, and a history of forensic use of DNA. In one section, “Exonerated by Science,” the site provides overviews of cases in which DNA has played a significant role in freeing defendants who have been wrongly convicted, including some who were exonerated from death row. The program’s goal is to ensure that…
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Apr 12, 2006
Wrongful Convictions Prompt More Jurisdictions to Videotape Interrogations
The wrongful conviction of Eddie Joe Lloyd (pictured), a mentally ill man who was exonerated in 2002 after serving 17 years in prison for a rape and murder he did not commit, has prompted Detroit to join a growing list of jurisdictions that now require videotaped interrogations of suspects. A decade ago, only Minnesota and Alaska required police to videotape interrogations, but today, at least 450 police departments across the country have implemented the practice in an effort to prevent…
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Apr 12, 2006
NEW VOICES: Senior Counsel to 9/11 Commission Questions Death Penalty for Moussaoui
In a recent New York Times op-ed, John Farmer, senior counsel to the 9/11 commission and a former New Jersery attorney general, states that seeking the death penalty for Zacarias Moussaoui detracts from U.S. efforts to seek justice against senior Al Qaeda officials who plotted and carried out the 9/11 attacks. Farmer claims Moussauoi, who was in jail as terrorists plotted and carried out the events of 9/11, was not the “20th hijacker” and is a “poor stand in” for more senior level Al Qaeda…
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Apr 11, 2006
Law Enforcement Officials, Defense Experts, and Researchers Explore Wrongful Convictions at California Conference
The recent “Faces of Wrongful Conviction” conference at UCLA featured a wide variety of speakers, including California’s Senate Majority Leader Gloria Romero, former special prosecutor and federal judge Kenneth Starr, and former Bexar County (TX) District Attorney Sam Milsap. The conference was organized to examine mistakes in the criminal justice system and to explore reforms, particularly in California. A state Senate commission is preparing a study of California’s death penalty…
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