Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Mar 03, 2005
BOOKS: “Desire Street” Examines the Exoneration of Curtis Kyles in New Orleans
In his new book, Desire Street: A True Story of Death and Deliverance in New Orleans (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2005), the Times-Picayune city editor Jed Horne examines the exoneration of Louisiana death row inmate Curtis Kyles and how his case has impacted the New Orleans criminal justice system. The book investigates the murder of Delores Dye, a 60-year-old housewife who was gunned down in full view of six eyewitnesses. Kyles was arrested and tried twice for the crime.
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Mar 01, 2005
New Mexico House Votes to End Death Penalty
Members of New Mexico’s House of Representatives have passed a bill to abolish the death penalty, marking the first time that either chamber of the state’s legislature has passed such a measure. Representative Gail Beam, who has sponsored the abolition bill every two years since she was elected in 1996, noted that the vote was“a historic opportunity for New Mexico to take a step that’s both thoughtful and practical and to join other industrialized democracies in…
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Mar 01, 2005
Former FBI Chief and Former Federal Judges Ask Supreme Court to Review Ohio Capital Case
Former FBI Chief and federal judge William Sessions recently joined two other former federal judges and a prosecutor urging the U.S. Supreme Court to consider an appeal from Ohio death row inmate John Spirko. In their brief, Sessions and his colleagues assert that the prosecution argued a theory at Spirko’s trial that it had to know was at least partly suspect.“When the ultimate penalty is at issue, justice demands scrupulous conduct from prosecutors. It is not…
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Feb 28, 2005
NEW VOICES: Hearings in New York Help Shift Stance of Judiciary Committee’s Leader
The Chair of the Judiciary Committee of the New York Assembly recently voiced her strong concerns about the state’s death penalty. Although she supported capital punishment earlier, Assemblywoman Helene E. Weinstein spoke about the evolution in her thinking and her particular concerns about the risk of executing the innocent:“It was an evolutionary process. But clearly the advent of DNA evidence and the dramatic number of individuals who have been…
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Feb 24, 2005
Capital Consequences: Families of the Condemned Tell Their Stories
Capital Consequences: Families of the Condemned Tell Their Stories is a new book by Rachel King of the ACLU’s Capital Punishment Project. The book focuses on the impact that the death penalty has on the families of those who have been condemned to die. King, who also wrote“Don’t Kill in Our Names: Families of Murder Victims Speak Out Against the Death Penalty,” describes these individuals as the unseen…
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Feb 24, 2005
Clemency Reforms Urged In Texas
Texas should overhaul its executive clemency process to ensure a fair and equitable justice system, according to a new report by Texas Appleseed and the Texas Innocence Network. The report,“The Quality of Mercy — Safeguarding Justice in Texas Through Clemency Reform,” offers a series of recommendations intended to improve the process, including holding public hearings in clemency cases, establishing standards and objective criteria that can be used to guide…
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Feb 23, 2005
LATEST DATA FROM “DEATH ROW USA” SHOWS CONTINUING DECLINE
LATEST DATA FROM“DEATH ROW USA” SHOW CONTINUING DECLINE The January 1, 2005 figures from“Death Row USA,” a publication of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund’s Capital Punishment Project, show another decline in the number of inmates on death rows across the U.S. A comparison with previous issues of this publication show the trend: Date Size of Death Row Jan. 1, 2003 3,692 Jan. 1, 2004 3,503 Oct. 1, 2004 3,471 Jan. 1, 2005 3,455 Other Recent Data: Largest Death Rows:…
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Feb 23, 2005
NEW RESOURCE: Bar Association Report Catalogs New York’s Death Penalty Flaws
New York’s dormant death penalty law fails to meet the minimum standards recommended to ensure accuracy and fairness, according to a new report issued by the Committee on Capital Punishment of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York. Based on a comparison of New York’s existing statute to standards established by expert committees in Illinois and Massachusetts, the Committee urged New York lawmakers to thoroughly analyze the state’s statute in light of…
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Feb 22, 2005
Kansas Lawmakers Refuse to Fix State’s Death Penalty
Kansas lawmakers have decided not to vote on a proposed fix to the state’s death penalty statute, a decision that could put the future of the law in the hands of the U.S. Supreme Court. In 2004, the Kansas Supreme Court overturned the death penalty because of the way jurors were instructed in capital cases. Some legislators are hoping that the U.S. Supreme Court will reverse the Kansas court’s decision. It could be months before the U.S. Supreme Court decides whether to take…
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Feb 21, 2005
NEW VOICES: Former New York Prison Superintendent Talks About the Emotional Costs of Capital Punishment
Retired New York prison superintendent Stephen Dalsheim recently cautioned legislators about re-instating the death penalty, noting his concerns about innocence and the toll executions take on prison employees.“You know, as I grow older, I realize maybe we can get beyond vengeance,” Dalsheim said.“The death penalty is fraught with the possibility that you could execute an innocent man. Who could live with that?” Dalsheim testified before a panel of state…
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