Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Feb 10, 2005
NEW VOICES: Broad Opposition to Reinstating New York’s Death Penalty
Schenectady County District Attorney Robert Carney joined a lengthy list of high-profile New Yorkers testifying that they oppose reinstatement of New York’s death penalty. During a legislative hearing in Albany, Carney testified that New York would be best served by abandoning capital punishment and sentencing offenders to life without the possibility of parole. He cited the high costs of the death penalty and the special protections that would need to be put in place. (Albany Times-Union,…
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Feb 09, 2005
Another Innocent Man Freed
Massachusetts Superior Court Judge Robert Mulligan recently overturned Laurence Adams’ conviction for a 1972 murder of a transit worker because police had withheld critical evidence. Adams had been convicted and sentenced to death in 1974 based on the testimony of two witnesses who had unrelated charges dropped following the trial. The government’s key witness testified that Adams had admitted to the offense in a discussion in a private home, but subsequently discovered records indicated…
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Feb 08, 2005
Kentucky Sentences Man to Death After 10 Years in Mental Hospital
Though he has spent more than a decade in mental hospitals and his trial was postponed for 18 years due to questions regarding his sanity, Sherman Noble was recently sentenced to death in Kentucky after serving as his own defense counsel. In 1988, Noble was declared incompetent to stand trial and was placed in a mental hospital for further evaluation and treatment. He was later declared competent in 1997. Noble attempted suicide on the day of his sentencing and appeared in court in a…
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Feb 02, 2005
NEW VOICES: Kenneth Starr Calls for “Utmost Caution” and “Absolute Certainty” with Death Cases
Kenneth W. Starr, a former federal judge and U.S. Solicitor General, recently represented Virginia death row inmate Robin Lovitt before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit. Though he supports capital punishment, Starr stated that “the death penalty has to be administered with the utmost caution and reserved for the gravest offenses. This is not that kind of case. Robin Lovitt maintains his innocence, and evidence that might prove his innocence has been destroyed. I’m very…
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Feb 02, 2005
Mentally Ill Woman Dies After 20 Years on Nevada’s Death Row
Priscilla Joyce Ford, who suffered from a variety of mental illnesses and who was the lone woman on Nevada’s death row for more than twenty years, died of apparent complications from emphysema on January 29, 2005. A prison spokesman said, “She had been quiet for so long. No one ever had any problems with her (in prison). I don’t remember hearing about her violating any rules.” Ford was sentenced to death row after she was convicted of killing 6 people and injuring 23 others by driving…
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Feb 02, 2005
NEW RESOURCE: Study Examines Mental Status and Childhood Backgrounds of Juveniles on Death Row
A recent study of 18 juvenile offenders on death row in Texas found that nearly all participants experienced serious head traumas in childhood and adolescence, came from extremely violent and/or abusive families, had one or more severe mental illnesses, and had signs of prefrontal brain dysfunction. The study, conducted by Dr. Dorothy Otnow Lewis of Yale along with other experts, suggests that most of the juvenile offenders on America’s death rows suffer from serious conditions which…
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Feb 02, 2005
Florida Supreme Court Judge Criticizes “Worst Lawyering I’ve Seen”
Justice Raoul Cantero (pictured), recently appointed to Florida’s Supreme Court by Gov. Jeb Bush, criticized the quality of private lawyers handling the appeals of death row inmates, noting that some attorneys have botched cases, muddled and omitted key arguments, and generally performed “the worst lawyering I’ve seen.” He also seriously questioned Governor Bush’s effort to replace the state-run regional offices that handle death penalty appeals with private attorneys as a cost-cutting…
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Feb 02, 2005
Connecticut Legislative Hearings Exhibit Strong Opposition to the Death Penalty
A retired prison warden, victims’ family members, and a former death row inmate were among the nearly 75 speakers at a state Judiciary Committee hearing in Hartford, almost all of whom proposed ending Connecticut’s death penalty. Many of the witnesses noted that the death penalty brings no relief to victims’ family members, fails to deter murder, risks innocent lives, and is applied in an arbitrary way. “I’m here to tell you that I never met an inmate for whom I had no hope,” said Mary Morgan…
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Jan 29, 2005
NEW RESOURCES: State Information Now More Readily Available
DPIC has added a new easy-to-use state database of death penalty information to its Web site. In addition, Richard Dieter’s (DPIC’s Executive Director) testimony before the New York State Assembly Standing Committees on Codes, Judiciary, and Correction regarding the costs of the death penalty is also available. The Committees are holding hearings on whether New York should re-instate the death penalty. To access information on any state’s death row population, the number of exonerations,…
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Jan 28, 2005
NEW VOICES: Federal Judge Calls for More Resources for Texas Death Penalty Trials
Judge Patrick Higginbotham of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit called on Texas to pay more than ‘lip service’ to providing individuals facing the death penalty with a truly fair and constitutional trial. He stated that more resources must be placed on training attorneys and judges at the trial level in order to protect against executing the innocent. Higginbotham, writing along with attorney Mark Curriden of Vinson & Elkins, noted that during the past three years, the U.S.
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