Publications & Testimony
Items: 991 — 1000
Feb 24, 2021
Virginia Death Penalty Repeal Bill Gains Final Legislative Approval, Moves to Governor’s Desk
Death-penalty repeal legislation in Virginia will move to Governor Ralph Northam’s desk, after both houses approved the bill passed earlier in the session in the opposite chamber. Virginia’s legislative rules required the House of Delegates to pass the Senate bill or vice versa, even though the bill text was identical. Governor Northam has pledged to sign the bill, which will make Virginia the 23rd state, and the first in the South, to abolish capital…
Read MoreFeb 23, 2021
NEWS BRIEF — Federal Appeals Court Reinstates Death-Row Exoneree’s Solitary Confinement Lawsuit
NEWS (2/16/21) — Pennsylvania: The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has reinstated death-row exoneree Roderick Johnson’s lawsuit seeking damages for his placement in solitary confinement for almost twenty years. Johnson was sentenced to death in 1998 in Berks County, Pennsylvania. He was not released from solitary confinement on death row even…
Read MoreFeb 23, 2021
Ohio Legislators Launch Bipartisan Effort to Repeal State’s Death Penalty
A bipartisan group of legislators has announced the introduction of a bill to repeal Ohio’s death penalty. In a virtual press conference on February 18, 2021, four Republican and four Democratic legislators spoke about the latest effort to end capital punishment in the Buckeye…
Read MoreFeb 22, 2021
DPIC Analysis: U.S. Enters Longest Period in 40 Years Without Any State Carrying Out an Execution
The United States has entered the longest period in 40 years without any state carrying out an execution, an analysis of data in the Death Penalty Information Center execution database has…
Read MoreFeb 19, 2021
National Geographic Publishes Feature Story on Innocence and the Death Penalty
For the first time in its history, National Geographic magazine has tackled the subject of capital punishment. Sentenced to death, but innocent, a feature story in the March 2021 issue of the magazine, chronicles the stories of fifteen death-row exonerees and illuminates the pervasive issue of innocence and the death penalty in the United States. The article, released on the same day as the Death Penalty Information Center’s new report The Innocence…
Read MoreFeb 18, 2021
DPIC Adds Eleven Cases to Innocence List, Bringing National Death-Row Exoneration Total to 185
New research by the Death Penalty Information Center has found 11 previously unrecorded death-row exonerations, bringing the total number of people exonerated after being wrongfully convicted and sentenced to death to 185. The data now show that for every 8.3 people who have been put to death in the U.S. since executions resumed in the 1970s, one person who had been wrongfully convicted and sentenced to death has been exonerated. Wrongful capital convictions occurred in virtually every part…
Read MoreFeb 17, 2021
Divided Federal Appeals Court Reinstates Death Sentence for Texas Mother of Child Who May Have Died in Accidental Fall
Continuing an unparalleled pattern of rulings adverse to Texas death-row prisoners, a divided U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has reinstated the conviction and death sentence of a mother convicted of killing her two-year-old daughter in what, the defense has argued, was actually an accidental…
Read MoreFeb 17, 2021
Exonerations Discovered During DPIC Death Penalty Census Research
In the course of researching the outcome of every death sentence since 1973 — more than 9,700 death sentences nationwide — DPIC identified 12 cases not previously included on the innocence list in which people who had been wrongfully convicted and sentenced to death were later exonerated. Read more about the cases…
Read MoreFeb 16, 2021
BOOKS: “Let The Lord Sort Them: The Rise and Fall of the Death Penalty”
In his new book, Let the Lord Sort Them: The Rise and Fall of the Death Penalty, journalist Maurice Chammah presages the death of America’s capital punishment system. Chammah expertly weaves together systemic issues with individual, humanizing case details to illustrate the efforts of lawyers, organizations, and activists who are challenging the foundations of the system with the goal of abolishing the death penalty. The New York Times called it “a case…
Read MoreFeb 15, 2021
Associated Press Finds Federal Executions Were Likely COVID Superspreader Events
Inadequate testing, resistance to contact tracing, and poor social distancing practices likely made the thirteen federal executions in 2020 – 2021 COVID-19 superspreader events, the Associated Press has concluded. In the ten days after the December 10, 2020 execution of Brandon Bernard, 70% of prisoners on federal death row and hundreds of others incarcerated in the Terre Haute Correctional Complex where the executions took place tested positive for COVID-19.
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