Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Jan 10, 2006
NEW VOICES: California Prosecutors Urge Death Penalty Moratorium
As California lawmakers consider legislation that would put executions on hold for two years while a 13-member commission reviews the problem of wrongful convictions in the state, a group of current and former prosecutors have sent members of the state Assembly a letter urging passage of the measure. “The execution of an innocent person is unacceptable, and it is imperative that California takes every precaution that it never happens. This is not just a matter of justice for these…
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Jan 10, 2006
New Jersey Lawmakers Vote to Suspend Executions As Death Penalty Study Proceeds
New Jersey lawmakers have voted to suspend executions in the state while a task force studies the fairness and costs of imposing capital punishment. After passing the Senate in December and the Assembly on January 9 by a vote of 55 – 21, the measure now goes to Governor Richard Codey for his signature into law. Codey has indicated that he will sign the bill, an act that will make New Jersey the first state to pass a death penalty moratorium into law through legislation. The bill establishes a…
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Jan 06, 2006
Virginia Governor Orders DNA Testing in Case of Executed Man
Virginia Governor Mark Warner has ordered DNA evidence retested to determine whether Roger Keith Coleman, who was executed in 1992, was actually innocent. Warner said he ordered the tests because of technological advances that could prove a level of certainty that was not available at the time of Coleman’s execution. Warner, who will leave office on January 14, noted, “This is an extraordinarily unique circumstance, where technology has advanced significantly and can be applied in the case…
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Jan 05, 2006
Texas Review Finds “Severe and Pervasive Problems” in DNA Testing, Including Three Death Penalty Cases
An ongoing review of DNA tests conducted by the Houston Police Department has revealed “severe and pervasive problems” with the lab’s findings in more than two dozen cases, including three death penalty cases. The new report released by independent investigator Michael Bromwich, who is reviewing more than 1,100 Houston Police Department DNA cases analyzed between 1987 and 2002, also linked the DNA lab’s troubles to “very disturbing problems” within the Houston Police Department’s…
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Jan 04, 2006
PUBLIC OPINION: British Support for Death Penalty At Lowest Level in 40 Years
Support for restoration of the death penalty in Great Britain, even when the murder victim is a police officer, has fallen below 50% for the first time since its abolition four decades ago. According to a YouGov poll conducted for The Daily Telegraph, the number of people who oppose capital punishment even when the victim is a police officer has risen to 43%. The figure is a dramatic changed from the 20% who voiced opposition to the death penalty in a 1960 poll conducted by Gallup. Only 49%…
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Jan 04, 2006
Virginia Man Denied Consular Rights, Will Not Face Death Penalty
A Virginia judge ruled that prosecutors may not seek the death penalty against a Vietnamese man accused of murdering two people because police violated the man’s rights under the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations by not informing him that he could contact his country’s consulate. “[T]he duty to give notice is absolute.… [T]he idea that the state can completely ignore its treaty obligations without consequence essentially obliterates the purpose for which the rights under the Vienna…
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Jan 03, 2006
Innocence Questions Lead China to Reform Death Penalty Procedures
Amidst widespread suspicion that innocent people have been sentenced to death or executed, China has announced that reforming its death penalty system is a priority and it is implementing procedural changes to protect against wrongful convictions. In October 2005, the People’s Supreme Court announced that it would reverse a decision from the early 1980’s that gave final review on many death penalty cases to provincial high courts. Under the new policy, the People’s Supreme Court would reclaim…
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Jan 03, 2006
NEW VOICES: Former Warden and Supreme Court Justice Seek Clemency for California Man
Former California Supreme Court Justice Joseph Grodin and former San Quentin warden Daniel Vasquez are urging California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger to grant clemency to Clarence Ray Allen. Allen, who will turn 76 just a day before his scheduled execution on January 17, is blind and disabled, conditions that his attorneys have argued would make his execution cruel and unusual punishment. In a letter to Schwarzenegger, Grodin, who authored the court’s 1986 opinion upholding Allen’s…
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Jan 03, 2006
Public Opinion: Australians Oppose Capital Punishment
A recent public opinion poll of Australians found that 69% of respondents believe the penalty for murder should be imprisonment, while only 25% of those polled stated it should be the death penalty. The poll, conducted by Roy Morgan International just one week after an Australian citizen was executed by Singapore for possessing less than a half a kilogram of heroin, revealed that public support for capital punishment is continuing to decline in Australia. In November 2005, the same poll found…
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Jan 02, 2006
EDITORIALS: “The Year in Death”
The Washington Post editorialized about the death penalty in 2005, commenting on many of the points made in DPIC’s Year End Report:[T]he overall tendency is unmistakable: At least for now, with crime and murder rates low and the threat of wrongful convictions on people’s minds, the death penalty does not have the same attraction that it once…
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