Articles
Items: 191 — 200
Aug 20, 2007
EDITORIAL: Paper Says Texas Man Sentenced Under “Law of Parties” Should Not Be Executed
The Fort Worth Star-Telegram is urging the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles and Texas Governor Rick Perry to spare the life of Kenneth Foster (pictured), whose execution is scheduled for August 30. Foster was sentenced to death under the Texas Law of Parties that permits a person involved in a crime to be held accountable for the actions committed by someone else. In this case, Texas maintains that Foster deserves the death penalty because he should have anticipated that…
Read MoreJun 28, 2007
NEW VOICES: Scientific American on the Death Penalty: “Bad Execution”
The July 2007 issue of Scientific American magazine contains both an article discussing the medical implications of lethal injection and an editorial discussing the humaneness of capital punishment generally. The editorial suggests that capital punishment“can never be anything but inhumane,” and offers the opinion that it is“wrong” and an“outrage.” But it further states that even those who believe the death penalty is acceptable, should agree that…
Read MoreJun 13, 2007
Supreme Court Decision Allows Broader Exclusion of Jurors, But May Further Isolate the Death Penalty
The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Uttecht v. Brown on June 4, 2007 appears to enhance the state’s ability to remove potential jurors with doubts about the death penalty. But by expanding the class of people who cannot serve on capital juries, the decision may ultimately render the death penalty invalid as juries fail to represent the true diversity of the American public. In a 5 – 4 decision overturning an opinion written by Judge Alex Kozinski of the U.S.
Read MoreJun 07, 2007
EDITORIALS: Death Penalty for Rape Would “Compound the Error”
In a recent editorial, the Los Angeles Times voiced concerns about a Louisiana Supreme Court decision upholding the death sentence of Patrick Kennedy for the rape of his 8‑year-old stepdaughter. The paper said the Louisiana court’s decision to allow the death penalty in such cases could lead states to seek the death penalty for other non-murder crimes, a development that would worsen an already dysfunctional death penalty system. The editorial noted: The United…
Read MoreMay 31, 2007
NEW VOICES: Former FBI Chief Expresses Concerns about Innocence and the Death Penalty
In a guest column published in the Jurist, former FBI Director William S. Sessions underscored the importance of making DNA testing available for those facing execution. He also encouraged states to thoroughly review their capital punishment systems and to make reforms to ensure greater reliability. DNA testing, he noted, has revealed that police often do not have the right suspect in serious crimes. In about 25% of the cases where DNA was…
Read MoreMay 30, 2007
NEW RESOURCES: Scientific American Examines “The Mysteries of Anesthesia”
The latest issue of Scientific American contains an article about the science of anesthesiology, noting that“the medical specialty of anesthesiology has evolved into a sophisticated art form.” The magazine reports that the scientific understanding of how anesthetic drugs actually work and how to make them better has lagged behind most other areas of drug development, a shortcoming that has resulted in safety concerns. Episodes of awareness during…
Read MoreApr 16, 2007
EDITORIALS: Dallas Morning News Issues Historic Call to End Death Penalty
Noting that they“cannot reconcile the fact that [the death penalty] is both imperfect and irreversible,” the Dallas Morning News has called on Texas to abandon capital punishment. The paper, which has long supported the death penalty, changed its position after careful consideration of mounting evidence that the state has wrongly convicted a number of defendants in capital trials and has likely executed at least one man who…
Read MoreApr 06, 2007
EDITORIAL: Pennsylvania Paper Declares State’s Death Penalty “Useless”
The Sentinel newspaper of Pennsylvania is the latest paper to editorially conclude that the death penalty should be abolished. Shortly after it published an investigative piece outlining the ineffectiveness of Pennsylvania’s death penalty, the newspaper editorialized that the state’s capital punishment laws are“useless” and that the“pendulum is swinging away from Pennsylvania’s position on a law it cannot even execute.” The Central Pennsylvania-based…
Read MoreMar 26, 2007
Chicago Tribune Changes Position and Calls for Abolition of Death Penalty
After decades of maintaining a position that the government should have the legal right to impose capital punishment, the Chicago Tribune is now calling for abolition of the death penalty. Noting concerns about innocence, the arbitrary nature of the punishment, and the public’s shift away from the death penalty, the Tribune announced on March 25 that,“The evidence of mistakes, the evidence of arbitrary decisions, the sobering knowledge that…
Read MoreJan 15, 2007
NEW VOICES: Dallas Morning News Calls for Halt to Executions
In a recent Dallas Morning News editorial, the paper noted the incongruity between the state apologizing to a prison inmate who was freed following DNA testing, and its aggressive pursuit of irrevocable executions. The paper stated that“human error is an inherent part” of the justice system and called on legislators to enact a moratorium on executions until the state can review the accuracy and fairness of its capital…
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