Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Oct 19, 2004
NEW VOICES: Bush and Kerry Express Views on Executing Juvenile Offenders
In a forum hosted by the New Voters Project, U.S. Presidential candidates George Bush and John Kerry expressed their views on executing juvenile offenders. “Federal law prohibits execution of those under 18 when the offense was committed, and I see no reason to change that statute,” said President Bush. Senator John Kerry stated, “I do not think that executing minors is good policy.” (Knight-Ridder, October 17, 2004). On October 13th, the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Roper v.
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Oct 18, 2004
INNOCENCE: After 19 Years, Innocent Man to Walk Free
The Utah Attorney General’s office has recommended that Bruce Dallas Goodman’s murder conviction be set aside as a result of new DNA tests that have confirmed Goodman’s steadfast claims of innocence. Goodman was convicted in 1984 for the murder of his girlfriend, Sherry Ann Fales, who was raped, sodomized, beaten to death and abandoned off an interstate exit, a crime that qualified for the death penalty. Since his arrest, Goodman has maintained that he did not murder Fales, and the state’s…
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Oct 14, 2004
EDITORIAL: Examine the systemic problems in the death penalty before reinstating it in NY
New York’s death penalty remains in abeyance, having been found unconstitutional by the state’s high court. A recent N.Y. Newsday editorial called on lawmakers to carefully examine the fundamental problems with the death penalty before considering any reinstatement legislation. The editorial noted: On the steps of New York City Hall on Thursday, a coalition of death penalty opponents — prominently including City Council Speaker Gifford Miller and former gubernatorial candidate Andrew Cuomo -…
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Oct 14, 2004
Newspapers, Opinion Leaders Call for End to Juvenile Death Penalty
As the Supreme Court heard arguments in the case of Roper v. Simmons on October 13, newspapers throughout the country featured editorials and opinion pieces calling on the U.S. to abandon the practice of executing juvenile offenders:The New York Times When the Supreme Court considers an Eighth Amendment challenge, it looks to “evolving standards of decency” — and there has been a steady movement nationally away from the juvenile death penalty. In the 15 years since the Supreme Court…
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Oct 14, 2004
117th Innocent Person Freed From Death Row
117th INNOCENT PERSON FREED FROM DEATH ROW Ernest Willis became the eighth person exonerated from Texas’s death row on October 6, 2004, and the 117th person freed nationwide since 1973. Willis was sentenced to death 17 years ago for allegedly setting a house fire that killed two people. U. S. District Judge Royal Ferguson held that the state had administered medically inappropriate antipsychotic drugs without Willis’ consent; that the state supressed evidence favorable to Willis;…
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Oct 12, 2004
NEW VOICES: Major Texas Newspapers Call for a Halt to Executions in Cases from Houston
Following a call from the Houston Police Chief and from state legislators to halt executions in cases from Harris County, four of the state’s largest newspapers published editorials in support of a moratorium on executions. The Houston police crime lab has been plagued with errors in DNA testing and preservation of evidence. There have been far more executions from Harris County (Houston) than from any other county in the country. AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN (N)othing can justify an execution…
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Oct 12, 2004
NEW RESOURCE: An Account of Life on Death Row
In “Waiting to Die: Life on Death Row,” Richard M. Rossi provides a first-hand account of his daily life on Arizona’s death row. Rossi was sentenced to death in 1983 and has taken responsibility for the murder he committed. He was originally offered a plea bargain with a life sentence, but he decided to go to trial. He has been on death row for 20 years. In his book, Rossi details how prisoners survive on death row, the conditions under which they live, and the psychological toll that…
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Oct 10, 2004
LEGISLATION: Senate and House Pass Versions of Innocence Protection Act
On October 9, the U.S. Senate passed by voice vote a bill called the “Justice for All Act of 2004” that contains important elements of the Innocence Protection Act, originally introduced in 2000. A similar bill recently overwhelmingly passed the House of Representatives (HR 5107), and it is expected that the final legislation will now be signed into law. The bill provides for expanded access to DNA testing for prison inmates and assistance to states for both defense and prosecution in…
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Oct 08, 2004
ARBITRARINESS: Execution May Go Forward Despite Nearly Even Split on Innocence
A deeply divided U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit ruled 8 – 7 that the execution of Tennessee death row inmate Paul Gregory House may move forward despite the fact that nearly half of the judges believe he is not guilty and should be freed immediately. “We are faced with a real-life murder mystery, an authentic ‘who-done-it’ where the wrong man may be executed,” wrote dissenting judge Ronald Lee Gilman. A N.Y. Times article noted that although courts are often closely divided on…
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Oct 08, 2004
NEW RESOURCE: Research with Jurors Finds Reluctance to Sentence Juveniles to Death
A recently published study by Northeastern criminal justice professors William J. Bowers and Michael E. Antonio, in conjunction with University of Delaware professors Valerie P. Hans and Benjamin D. Fleury-Steiner, finds jurors very reluctant to give the death penalty to juvenile defendants because of their immaturity and dysfunctional family backgrounds. “ In interviewing almost 1,200 jurors, we’ve found that jurors across the nation would nearly always sentence a juvenile to life,” said…
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