Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Aug 132004

Ryan Matthews is Latest Exonoree

RYAN MATTHEWS IS LATEST INMATE FREED FROM DEATH ROW On Monday, August 9, 2004, Ryan Matthews became the lat­est death row inmate to be freed, and the 14th exon­er­at­ed with the help of DNA evi­dence. Matthews was sen­tenced to die in 1999 and spent near­ly five years on death row before being cleared of a mur­der that occurred just two weeks after his 17th birth­day. Matthews’ appel­late attor­neys had physical…

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News 

Aug 122004

NEW RESOURCE: Jurors’ Stories of Death

In his new book ​“Jurors’ Stories of Death: How America’s Death Penalty Invests in Inequality,” author Benjamin Fleury-Steiner draws on real-life accounts of white and black jurors in cap­i­tal tri­als to dis­cuss the effect of race on the sen­tenc­ing process. Through his sur­vey of the jurors’ expe­ri­ences, he reveals that race is often a fac­tor in sen­tenc­ing and that the U.S. jus­tice sys­tem can fos­ter an​“us ver­sus them” men­tal­i­ty among jurors serv­ing in capital…

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News 

Aug 102004

NEW VOICES: Maryland Families Urge Prosecutor to End Death Penalty Bid

Expressing their desire to end emo­tion­al­ly strain­ing court pro­ceed­ings, the fam­i­lies of Maryland mur­der vic­tims Betina​“Kristi” Gentry and Cynthia V. Allen recent­ly urged Anne Arundel County’s top pros­e­cu­tor to end his 3rd attempt to get a death sen­tence for the man accused of killing the two women 10 years ago.​“They’ve been through so much. I can’t look them in the eye and say,​‘Nah, you have to relive it again.’ I can’t do that,” said State’s Attorney Frank R. Weathersbee…

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News 

Aug 102004

NEW VOICES: Massachusetts DA Asks that the Death Penalty Be Avoided

Suffolk County District Attorney Daniel F. Conley has sent a let­ter to U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft request­ing that the Justice Department not seek the death penal­ty for a Dorchester drug deal­er charged with mur­der­ing a rival. Ashcroft has indi­cat­ed that the 25-year-old defen­dant, Brima Wurie, could be a can­di­date for the fed­er­al death penal­ty. Conley believes a fed­er­al death penal­ty case against Wurie would alien­ate com­mu­ni­ty lead­ers whose assis­tance has been…

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News 

Aug 102004

Houston Crime Lab Scandal Escalates

The pos­si­ble exon­er­a­tion of a man con­vict­ed of rape in 1987 has led inves­ti­ga­tors of the Houston police depart­ment crime lab­o­ra­to­ry to con­clude that the lab’s reli­a­bil­i­ty cri­sis may be worse than was first antic­i­pat­ed. This rev­e­la­tion could lead to re-test­ing of evi­dence in thou­sands of addi­tion­al cas­es from the past 25 years. Six inde­pen­dent foren­sic sci­en­tists said that a crime lab­o­ra­to­ry offi­cial either lacked the basic knowl­edge of blood typing…

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News 

Aug 092004

RYAN MATTHEWS IS 115th DEATH ROW INMATE FREED

Jefferson Parish pros­e­cu­tors today dis­missed all charges against for­mer Louisiana death row inmate Ryan Matthews. He became the nation’s 115th death row inmate to be freed accord­ing to the Death Penalty Information Center (DPIC). Matthews was sen­tenced to die in 1999 and spent near­ly five years on death row before DNA evi­dence helped clear him of a mur­der that occurred just two weeks after his 17th birth­day. (The U.S.

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News 

Aug 092004

ABC’s In the Jury Room” Debuts With Death Penalty Case

ABC-TV begins a new six-part documentary series ​“In the Jury Room” on Tuesday, August 10 (10 PM Eastern time), with a first-hand look at a death penal­ty delib­er­a­tion. Narrated by senior legal cor­re­spon­dent Cynthia McFadden (pic­tured), the debut cap­tures the delib­er­a­tions of twelve jurors select­ed to decide the cap­i­tal mur­der case against Ohio defen­dant Mark Ducic. The pro­gram allows the audi­ence to see jurors strug­gling through the clash­es that often…

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News 

Aug 092004

NEW VOICES: Time to Review the Costs of the Death Penalty

A recent San Jose Mercury News edi­to­r­i­al rec­om­mend­ed includ­ing the death penal­ty in the California Performance Review pre­pared for Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger to reduce pub­lic spend­ing. The paper stat­ed that the aban­don­ment of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment would save valu­able tax­pay­er dol­lars in the state and praised local efforts to sup­port a tem­po­rary halt to exe­cu­tions while cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment is reviewed. The edi­to­r­i­al not­ed: Termination of the death penalty…

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News 

Aug 062004

POSSIBLE INNOCENCE: Federal Judge Throws Out Texas Capital Conviction

A fed­er­al judge has thrown out Ernest Ray Willis’ cap­i­tal con­vic­tion after finding ​“strong rea­son to be con­cerned that Willis may be actu­al­ly inno­cent” and that West Texas author­i­ties need­less­ly drugged him and con­cealed evi­dence at his tri­al. The deci­sion casts doubt on Willis’ 1987 con­vic­tion for the arson-mur­der of two women in Pecos County, a crime that anoth­er death row inmate, David Long, lat­er con­fessed he had com­mit­ted. In his rul­ing, U.S. District…

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News 

Aug 052004

North Carolina Governor Signs Open Discovery Bill Into Law

North Carolina Governor Mike Easley signed a bill into law that requires pros­e­cu­tors to share their files in all felony cas­es. The bill was approved in the wake of alle­ga­tions that pros­e­cu­tors with­held evi­dence in the cap­i­tal mur­der tri­al of Alan Gell, who was lat­er exon­er­at­ed and freed from death row. The new open dis­cov­ery statute requires dis­trict attor­neys to open their inves­tiga­tive files in felony cas­es to defense lawyers who request such access prior to…

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