Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
May 04, 2005
NEW VOICES: Louisiana Chief Justice Demands Fair Trials for the Poor
Chief Justice Pascal Calogero of the Louisiana Supreme Court called upon the state legislature to provide adequate funding for indigent defendants in his State of the Judiciary address. The court had earlier ruled that judges may halt prosecutions in cases where funds have not been made available for an adequate defense. The Justice concluded: As a Supreme Court Justice, I must be an advocate of compliance with the mandates of our state and federal constitutions, and therefore, I admonish…
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May 03, 2005
PUBLIC OPINION: Little Change For U.S. Death Penalty Views
Many Americans are in favour of capital punishment, according to a poll by TNS released by the Washington Post and ABC News. 65 % of respondents support the death penalty for persons convicted of murder. Since 1976, 961 people have been put to death in the United States, including 17 during 2005. More than a third of all executions have taken place in the state of Texas. 12 states and the District of Columbia do not engage in capital punishment, and moratoriums on executions have been issued…
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May 03, 2005
Death Row Inmate’s Mental Health Crumbles Even As Relief May Be Near
During 25 years on Texas’ death row, Cesar Fierro’s mental health has deteriorated to the extent that his attorney hardly recognizes him. Since being sentenced to death in 1980, his mother has died, his brother has died, his wife divorced him and his daughter stopped visiting him. Gradually, he refused to even speak with his lawyers. “He wouldn’t come out of his cell for months at a time unless he was forcibly extracted,” says David Dow, a constitutional law professor at the University of…
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May 03, 2005
Puerto Ricans Again Reject Federal Death Sentence
Two Puerto Rican defendants were given life sentences by the same jury that had convicted them of murder in the course of an armored truck robbery that occurred in 2002. Puerto Rico has not used the death penalty for almost 80 years and forbids the practice in its constitution. However, the U.S. federal death penalty applies to the Commonwealth. Gov. Anibal Acevedo Vila said that the jury acted in accordance with Puerto Rican tradition, which “loathes and is against the death penalty.”…
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Apr 29, 2005
PUBLIC OPINION: New Jersey Citizens Favor Life Without Parole Over Death Penalty
In a dramatic shift from 1999, citizens in New Jersey now favor life without parole over the death penatly for those who commit murder. In a Rutgers University poll released on April 28, 47% of N.J. respondents preferred life without parole rather than the death penalty. In a similar poll six years ago, 44% of respondents chose the death penalty, while 37% supported life without…
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Apr 29, 2005
DNA Evidence May Lead to Exoneration in Former Capital Case
Results from DNA testing may soon lead to the exoneration of Larry Peterson in New Jersey. He would become the first person in the state to be cleared of a homicide through DNA evidence. Peterson was convicted of a rape and murder that occurred in 1987. For the past 10 years, Peterson tried to have DNA evidence from his case tested. At his original trial in which he faced the possibility of a death sentence, the prosecution maintained that hairs from the crime scene belonged to Peterson. He…
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Apr 29, 2005
Soldier Sentenced to Death for Iraq War Murder
A 15-member military jury sentenced Sgt. Hasan Akbar to death for killing 2 U.S. military officers in Kuwait in 2003 during the opening days of the Iraq invasion. At his sentencing, Akbar said, “I want to apologize for the attack that occurred. I felt that my life was in jeopardy, and I had no other options. I also want to ask you for forgiveness.” He is the first American since the Vietnam era to be prosecuted for murdering a fellow soldier in wartime. (N.Y. Times, April 29, 2005 (AP)). No…
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Apr 26, 2005
Death Sentences Decline in 2004
News
Apr 26, 2005
Supreme Court to Consider “Lingering Doubt” Evidence in Capital Cases
Oregon v. Guzek — The U.S. Supreme Court has announced that it will consider whether capital defendants have a constitutional right to present evidence that would cast doubt on their conviction during the penalty phase of their death penalty trials, a question that has divided state and lower federal courts for many years. The defendant, Randy Lee Guzek, sought to introduce alibi evidence after he was convicted during the sentencing phase of his trial. This evidence tended to show that he had…
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Apr 22, 2005
Los Angeles Times Calls for Moratorium on California Death Penalty
A recent Los Angeles Times editorial called on California lawmakers to impose a moratorium on executions until a state commission charged with examining the fairness and accuracy of California’s death penalty laws can finish its work. The paper noted that a similar review led by New York state lawmakers resulted in findings that effectively ended capital punishment in that state for this year. The editorial stated:Many Californians, lawmakers as well as voters, share those concerns (as…
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