Entries by Death Penalty Information Center
News
Jun 26, 2003
High Death Penalty Expenses Could Be Used to More Effectively Fight Crime
States have been spending tens to hundreds of millions of dollars extra per year in order to pursue the death penalty, while crime fighting strategies that have been proven effective are starting to suffer as states face severe budget deficits. The New York Times recently collected some of the cutbacks to essential…
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Jun 26, 2003
Governor Bush Closing Office That Freed Death Row Inmates
Despite concerns that errors made by poorly paid private attorneys who are unfamiliar with death penalty litigation could risk innocent lives in Florida, Governor Jeb Bush will soon close one of the state’s three Capital Collateral Regional Counsel (CCRC) offices. The offices are designed to defend death row inmates in their post-conviction appeals. Bush is closing the Tallahassee office, where attorneys have successfully freed wrongfully convicted death row inmates. Bush claims that the…
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Jun 26, 2003
Illinois Legislators Approve Sweeping Death Penalty Reforms
Illinois lawmakers recently approved sweeping death penalty reforms and have sent the legislative package to Governor Rod Blagojevich for signature into law. The reforms are expected to transform the investigation and prosecution of every death-eligible crime in Illinois. Based on recommendations made by the Illinois Commission on Capital Punishment, the bill would change police procedures regarding disclosure of evidence, set up a system to get rid of police officers who lie, limit the…
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Jun 26, 2003
NEW RESOURCES: “Death Row USA” (Spring 2003)
The latest edition of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund’s quarterly publication, Death Row USA,” is now available on DPIC’s Web site. As of April 1, 2003, the number of inmates on death rows across the nation is 3,525, a 5% decrease from the 3,701 reported April 1, 2002 (See Homepage). Also reported in “Death Row…
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Jun 26, 2003
Nevada Lawmakers Eliminate Three-Judge Panel
Nevada lawmakers have given final approval to a measure that bans the use of three-judge panels in deciding whether the state should hand down death sentences to those convicted of capital murder. Sentences have been handed down by a panel of three judges when a jury can’t decide on a penalty, but that procedure was called into question by the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in Ring v. Arizona. The new procedure requires judges in cases involving hung juries to decide whether to impanel a new…
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Jun 26, 2003
North Carolina Leaders Call on State Legislature, Governor to Impose Moratorium
More than 150 prominent residents of North Carolina have asked the House of Representatives and Governor Michael Easley to support a two-year suspension of executions in the state and to conduct a death penalty study. North Carolina’s Senate passed the measure in May, and a vote in the House is expected this month. In a letter calling for the bill’s enactment into law, noteworthy North Carolinians, including former judges and corporate leaders, noted that “legitimate concerns about the…
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Jun 26, 2003
NEW RESOURCES: Symposia on Capital Punishment
Two recent law journals feature collections of articles on capital punishment. The University of Missouri-Kansas City Law Review focuses on wrongful convictions. The Summer 2002 issue includes articles on DNA evidence, Innocence Projects around the country, and the role of journalism in helping to rectify wrongful convictions. (70 University of Missouri-Kansas City Law Review 797 (2002)). The second new resource is the Summer 2002 edition of the Northwestern University School of Law’s Journal…
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Jun 26, 2003
Bush’s Gubernatorial Clemency Process Probed
A recent Atlantic Monthly article by Alan Berlow features a review of never-before-seen summaries and related documents used by then-Governor George Bush during his consideration of clemency appeals filed by death row inmates in Texas. The article notes that Bush’s legal counsel, Alberto R. Gonzales, often provided the Governor with case summaries and documents reflecting a “clear prosecutorial bias” and that Gonzales’s briefings failed to raise crucial issues in the cases at hand:…
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Jun 26, 2003
NEW VOICES: Opposing Viewpoints Find Common Ground
Although New York Law School Professor Robert Blecker and Columbia Law School Professor James Liebman frequently take opposing sides in public debates on the death penalty, the two men recently revealed their “common ground” through a co-authored opinion column in the Houston Chronicle. Calling on legislators in Texas and elsewhere to enact a series of death penalty reforms to ensure accuracy and improve fairness, Blecker and Liebman…
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Jun 26, 2003
PUBLIC OPINION: Fox News Probes Death Penalty Support
A recent Fox News poll found that 69% of Americans favor the death penalty for persons convicted of premeditated murder, a drop of 7 percentage points from the number of respondents supporting capital punishment in 1997. The poll revealed that 23% of respondents opposed capital punishment, and 8% were not sure. In previous years, support for the death penalty registered 76% in 1997, 74% in 1998, 68% in 2000, and…
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