Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Nov 17, 2005
NEW RESOURCE: Law Review Explores Mental Illness and the Death Penalty
A new edition of the Catholic University Law Review includes papers from the university’s recent symposium on mental illness and the death penalty. The presentations by experts delivered during the symposium address how policy makers and the courts might resolve the propriety of executing those with mental illness. Articles examine recommendations from the Task Force of the ABA’s Section of Individual Rights and Reponsibilities regarding mental disabilities and the death penalty.
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Nov 17, 2005
NEW RESOURCE: Sentencing Project Examines Relationship Between Incarceration and Crime
Incarceration and Crime: A Complex Relationship, a new report by The Sentencing Project, examines the financial and social costs of incarceration, and evaluates the limited effectiveness it has on crime rates. The report notes that the number of people incarcerated in the United States has risen by more than 500% over the past three decades, up from 330,000 people in 1972 to 2.1 million people today. Though an increase in the number of offenders who are incarcerated has…
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Nov 16, 2005
Pennsylvania Man Becomes the 122nd Inmate Freed From Death Row
More than 16 years after a Pennsylvania jury returned three death sentences against Harold Wilson (pictured), new DNA evidence has helped lead to his acquittal. Yesterday, Wilson became the nation’s 122nd person freed from death row according to the Death Penalty Information Center (DPIC). During his 1989 capital trial, Wilson was prosecuted by former Philadelphia Assistant District Attorney Jack McMahon, a man best known for his role in a training video that advised new Philadelphia…
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Nov 16, 2005
Massachusetts Death Penalty Bill Rejected
A bill to reinstate the death penalty in Massachusetts was rejected by the House of Representatives, ending Governor Mitt Romney’s effort to establish a “gold standard” for capital punishment. House members defeated the measure by a vote of 100 – 53 after four hours of floor debate. Romney had described the bill as “foolproof,” stating that it contained strict safeguards that could protect against wrongful convictions and that the narrow scope of the bill meant that the death penalty would be…
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Nov 15, 2005
NEW VOICES: Judge Urges Public to Reconsider Death Penalty
U.S. District Judge B. Lynn Winmill recently announced that he is rethinking capital punishment because it is expensive, can be politically motivated, and risks innocent lives. Winmill, who freed death row exoneree Charles Fain in 2001 after DNA evidence proved his innocence, said that Fain’s case and the very different experience of sentencing a guilty man to die for murder prompted him to rethink capital punishment. During a speech before the City Club of Boise, Winmill was joined by Fain…
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Nov 15, 2005
U.S. Catholic Bishops Issue Strong Statement on Ending U.S. Death Penalty
A statement approved during this week’s meeting of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) calls for an end to the death penalty in the United States and notes that the death penalty “contributes to a cycle of violence in our society that must be broken.” The statement, drafted by the USCCB Domestic Policy Committee, is the first comprehensive statement focused on the death penalty by the Catholic bishops of the United States in 25 years. It is part of the wider “Catholic…
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Nov 10, 2005
NEW RESOURCE: Justice Department Releases “Capital Punishment, 2004” Report
The Bureau of Justice Statistics released its latest report on the status of the death penalty in the U.S., Capital Punishment, 2004, on November 13. According to the report, the nation’s death row population, executions, and the number of people given death sentences last year all declined. There were 3,315 people on state and federal death rows at the conclusion of 2004, 63 fewer than in 2003. Last year, 125 people were sentenced to death, the fewest since 1973. Twelve…
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Nov 09, 2005
North Carolina Law Results in Sharp Drop in Death Sentences
According to the North Carolina News & Record, death sentences in the state have significantly declined since the 2001 enactment of legislation that allows defendants to plead guilty to first-degree murder and receive a sentence of life without parole rather than go to trial and risk the death penalty. Juries are also returning fewer death sentences. The paper argues that the emergence of the life-without-parole alternative should result in a reconsideration of the sentences of…
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Nov 08, 2005
Georgia Supreme Court Denounces Official Misconduct, Orders New Trial
In a ruling that criticized the state for concealing a $500 payoff to a key state witness in a 1997 death penalty case, the Georgia Supreme Court unanimously upheld a lower court decision ordering a new trial for Willie…
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Nov 08, 2005
SUPREME COURT Agrees to Hear Cases with Death Penalty Implications
On November 7, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear cases in two areas that could have broad implications for many defendants facing the death penalty. In Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, No. 05 – 184, the Court will rule on the constitutionality of the military tribunals established by President Bush following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. A U.S. District Court had halted the military trial of Salim Ahmed Hamdan, who had been captured in Afghanistan, because the trial violated…
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