Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Jan 062006

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…

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News 

Jan 052006

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…

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News 

Jan 042006

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…

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News 

Jan 042006

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…

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News 

Jan 032006

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 1980s that gave final review on many death penal­ty cas­es to provin­cial high courts. Under the new pol­i­cy, the…

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News 

Jan 032006

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…

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News 

Jan 032006

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…

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News 

Jan 022006

EDITORIALS: The Year in Death”

The Washington Post edi­to­ri­al­ized about the death penal­ty in 2005, com­ment­ing on many of the points made in DPICs 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…

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News 

Dec 292005

NEW VOICES: Victims’ Rights Advocate Calls for an End to the Death Penalty

Richard Pompelio (pic­tured) estab­lished the New Jersey Crime Victims Law Center (VLC) in 1992 after his 17-year-old son Tony was mur­dered. VLC pro­vides pro bono legal assis­tance to vic­tims of vio­lent crime. He recent­ly wrote in the New Jersey Lawyer’s The Law & More col­umn about the dis­ser­vice that the death penal­ty rep­re­sents to victims and…

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News 

Dec 292005

NEW BOOKS: The Dead Alive” Explores Wrongful Convictions

Rob Warden, Executive Director of the Center on Wrongful Convictions at Northwestern University School of Law, has writ­ten a book about one of the first accounts of a death penal­ty exon­er­a­tion in the U.S. Wilkie Collins, a British author, had writ­ten a nov­el enti­tled​“The Dead Alive” about the con­vic­tions and death sen­tences of Jesse and Stephen Boorn for a mur­der com­mit­ted in 1819. They were lat­er exon­er­at­ed. Warden’s book is entitled ​“Wilkie Collins’s The Dead Alive:…

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