Entries by Death Penalty Information Center


News 

Oct 062003

Death Penalty Declines in Key Areas

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and Pima County, Arizona have been the main juris­dic­tions in their respec­tive states for death sen­tences in the past. Now they are send­ing con­sid­er­ably few­er peo­ple to death row or seek­ing the death penal­ty less. Philadelphia pros­e­cu­tors have sought the death penal­ty 24 times since last September, but jurors from the city have not sent any­one to death row in more than a year. In fact, the city has only secured death sen­tences against 4 people…

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News 

Oct 032003

NEW VIDEO: American Constitution Society Death Penalty Panel

A stream­ing video on the death penal­ty from the American Constitution Society​’s first National Conference August 1 – 3, 2003 in Washington, DC is now avail­able. Participants includ­ed Joseph Curran, Attorney General of Maryland; Angela Davis, American University pro­fes­sor of law; John Gibbons, for­mer Chief Justice of the 3d Circuit US Court of Appeals; Bryan Stevenson, Executive Director of Equal Justice Initiative of Alabama; and Diann Rust-Tierney, Director of the ACLU Capital…

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News 

Oct 022003

NEW RESOURCE: Poetic Justice” Explores Life on Death Row

Poetic Justice: Reflections on the Big House, the Death House and the American Way of Justice” is Professor Robert Johnson’s first col­lec­tion of poems about prison and cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. The col­lec­tion explores the day-to-day life of pris­on­ers and exam­ines the emo­tion­al impact of serv­ing time on death row. Johnson, a pro­fes­sor of jus­tice, law and soci­ety at American University, is an award-win­n­ing author of sev­er­al social sci­ence books on crime and pun­ish­ment and has…

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News 

Oct 022003

DPIC Announces New Searchable Database

The Death Penalty Information Center has added a new and ver­sa­tile fea­ture to its exten­sive Web site. Users may now search a ful­ly func­tion­al​“Executions Database” for detailed infor­ma­tion on all exe­cu­tions in the United States in the mod­ern era, 1977 to the present. The data­base enables users to search by year, by state, by race of defen­dant and vic­tim, and by many oth­er cat­e­gories. For exam­ple, you can now find a list of all the exe­cu­tions in Texas involving white…

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News 

Oct 012003

Congressional Leaders Reach Consensus on DNA Legislation

A broad bi-par­ti­san coali­tion of House and Senate law­mak­ers has intro­duced leg­is­la­tion to estab­lish a five-year, $1 bil­lion ini­tia­tive to ensure DNA test­ing for death row inmates who claim inno­cence. The​“Advancing Justice Through DNA Technology Bill,” sup­port­ed by House Judiciary Chairman F. James Sensenbrenner and Senate Judiciary Chairman Orrin Hatch, includes an Innocence Protection Act (IPA) pro­vi­sion aimed at reduc­ing the risk of wrong­ful con­vic­tions. Under this…

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News 

Sep 302003

Florida Supreme Court Suspends DNA Deadline

By a vote of 4 – 3, the Florida Supreme Court has set aside an October 1st dead­line for inmates to request DNA test­ing of evi­dence that could prove their inno­cence. The jus­tices sus­pend­ed the dead­line while they con­sid­er the inmates’ chal­lenge to the rule’s con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty. Arguments in the case are slat­ed for November 7, 2003. According to the law that estab­lished the dead­line, if inmates con­vict­ed pri­or to 2001 fail to file for test­ing before October 1, 2003DNA

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News 

Sep 292003

Support for Death Penalty in North Carolina Drops Below 50%

A recent North Carolina pub­lic opin­ion poll con­duct­ed for The News & Observer found that only 49% of vot­ers polled approve of exe­cu­tions for those con­vict­ed of first-degree mur­der while 42% favor life in prison with­out parole as the pun­ish­ment. Nine per­cent were unsure. The same poll reg­is­tered 40% of respon­dents in sup­port of a mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions and 53% in oppo­si­tion to halt­ing exe­cu­tions for two years while the state stud­ies and fixes possible…

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News 

Sep 262003

Extraordinary Representation Needed to Free Death Row Inmate

The Philadelphia law firm of Morgan Lewis recent­ly cel­e­brat­ed the exon­er­a­tion of John Thompson, who spent 18 years on Louisiana’s death row before two of the fir­m’s part­ners helped to win his free­dom. Firm part­ners J. Gordon Cooney Jr. and Michael L. Banks pro­vid­ed Thompson with pro bono ser­vices that cost the firm $1.7 mil­lion in legal work and expens­es over a 15-year peri­od and involved 90 lawyers and sup­port staff. According to the city’s bar asso­ci­a­tion, there is…

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News 

Sep 242003

Former FBI Director Calls For Broader Access to DNA Testing

Former FBI Director William Sessions recent­ly called on pros­e­cu­tors and law enforce­ment offi­cials to sup­port broad­er access to DNA test­ing to address grow­ing con­cerns about inno­cence. Sessions’ com­ments in an op-ed in The Washington Post came just weeks after Kirk Bloodsworth, the nation’s first death row inmate to be freed based on DNA test­ing, was informed that Baltimore County author­i­ties had genet­i­cal­ly linked anoth­er sus­pect to the crime using DNA evidence.

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News 

Sep 232003

Fewer Death Sentences Sought in New York

Eight years after the death penal­ty was rein­stat­ed in New York, the num­ber of death sen­tences sought by pros­e­cu­tors has sharply declined. According to the New York Capital Defender Office, the num­ber of death penal­ty notices filed has dropped from a record-high 14 in 1998 to just two so far in 2003. Howard R. Relin, a long-time dis­trict attor­ney in Rochester and death penal­ty sup­port­er, not­ed:​“D.A.‘s are being more and more care­ful in mak­ing that deter­mi­na­tion. There’s…

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