Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Apr 07, 2004
NEW RESOURCES: Amnesty International Issues Latest Report on Worldwide Executions
According to Amnesty International’s latest report on executions around the world, China, Iran, the United States, and Vietnam accounted for 84% of the 1,146 known executions carried out in 21 nations in 2003. China carried out at least 726 executions, Iran executed 108 people, the United States carried out 65 executions, and Viet Nam reported 64 executions last year. Among those executed in 2003 were two juvenile offenders, 1 in China and 1 in the United States. The report noted that…
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Apr 06, 2004
Kansas Turns to Death Penalty Alternative to Save Money
A bill establishing the sentencing option of life without parole in capital cases has been sent to Kansas Governor Kathleen Sebelius for signature into law. The state legislature passed the bipartisan measure in an attempt to curb costs associated with the death penalty. A legislative audit released in December 2003 found that the average cost of a death penalty case in Kansas is $1.2 million. An advisory group of judges and attorneys who studied the state’s death penalty law last year…
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Apr 05, 2004
California Considers Impact of International Court Ruling Regarding Mexican Foreign Nationals
Following an International Court of Justice decision that the U.S. violated the rights of 51 Mexican foreign nationals on death row and should reconsider their sentences and convictions, California Attorney General Bill Lockyer is seeking to determine how the Court’s ruling will impact the 28 Mexican foreign nationals on California’s death row. Of the 28 men awaiting execution, two are exempt from the ruling because they had dual citizenship or were advised of their rights under the 1963…
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Mar 31, 2004
World Court Rules that U.S. Violated Rights of Mexican Foreign Nationals on Death Row
The International Court of Justice ruled in favor of Mexico and found that the United States violated the rights of almost all of the Mexican foreign nationals on death row in the U.S. The World Court, which is the highest legal organ of the United Nations and is based in The Hague, has ordered that the Mexican cases be reviewed by U.S. courts. The defendants were not informed of their right to talk to consular officials after being arrested, as provided by the Vienna Convention on…
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Mar 31, 2004
New Study from Texas Defender Service
NEW STUDY BY TEXAS DEFENDER SERVICE Read Deadly Speculation — Misleading Texas Capital Juries with False Predictions of Future Dangerousness (PDF), a new report from the Texas Defender Service about the unreliability of future dangerousness predictions in Texas death penalty cases. Such speculative testimony is the key factor in who receives the death penalty in Texas. Among those predicted to be a future danger was Randall Dale Adams, who was later found…
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Mar 31, 2004
New Study Points to Unreliability of Future Dangerousness Predictions in Texas
A new study conducted by the Texas Defender Service and Professor John Edens of Sam Houston State University found that state predictions of the future dangerousness of capital defendants were grossly inaccurate. The review examined the cases of 155 inmates in which prosecution expert witnesses had predicted the inmate would be a future danger to society and in which the state asked for the death penalty. However, only 8 (5%) of these inmates later engaged in any seriously assaultive behavior…
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Mar 30, 2004
Federal Court Blocks Texas Death Sentence Over Racially Charged Testimony
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit has blocked a Texas District Attorney’s final attempt to restore the death sentence of Victor Hugo Saldano, who was removed from Texas’s death row in 2000 because of the use of racially charged testimony at his trial. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that former Texas Attorney General John Cornyn was right to dismiss Saldano’s death sentence because it was based on state testimony encouraging racial bias. During the penalty phase of Saldano’s 1996…
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Mar 30, 2004
VICTIMS’ VOICES: Victims’ Family Members Agree, Information Outweighs Death Penalty
Victims’ family members in New Jersey and Pennsylvania who may have lost a loved one because of the actions of Charles Cullen, a nurse charged with multiple killings, have voiced support for sparing Cullen the death penalty in exchange for his agreeing to provide information on victims. New Jersey Attorney General Peter Harvey and seven prosecutors in New Jersey and Eastern Pennsylvania consulted with the victims’ families in deciding whether to seek the death penalty. “It means more for me…
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Mar 30, 2004
DNA Lab Audit Reveals Problems Throughout Texas System
According to a 2003 internal audit of the Texas Department of Public Safety’s (DPS) crime labs, procedural flaws, security lapses and shoddy documentation problems continue to undermine the quality of DNA laboratory testing results throughout the state. These same problems previously shut down criminal laboratories in Houston and McAllen, and the new findings could throw thousands of criminal cases into doubt. According to public records obtained by the Houston Chronicle, an audit of labs in…
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Mar 29, 2004
New Evidence May Exonerate Man on Illinois’s Death Row
The Illinois Attorney General’s office will not appeal a federal judge’s ruling finding that it was “reasonably probable” that Gordon Steidl would have been acquitted had the jury heard all of the evidence in his capital murder case. The court granted Steidl a new trial to prove his long-proclaimed innocence. Steidl was given the death penalty for the 1986 murders of a newlywed couple, but his sentence was reduced to life in prison without parole in 1999 following an Illinois State…
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