Publications & Testimony
Items: 1011 — 1020
Feb 03, 2021
Records Disclose Taxpayers Picked Up a Nearly Million Dollar Price Tag for Each Federal Execution
The Federal Bureau of Prisons spent nearly $4.7 million dollars on the first five executions carried out by the Trump administration in July and August 2020, according to redacted government financial records recently obtained by the…
Read MoreFeb 02, 2021
Ohio Poll Shows Bipartisan Support for Death Penalty Repeal
A majority of Ohioans support repeal of the state’s death penalty, a newly released statewide poll…
Read MoreFeb 01, 2021
Under Court Order Requiring Protective Measures, Federal Bureau of Prisons Takes No Action After Media Witnesses to Executions Contract COVID-19
Despite being under federal court order to undertake protective measures against the spread of COVID-19, the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) took no action after being alerted that two reporters who had been media witnesses to the federal executions at the Federal Correctional Complex at Terre Haute, Indiana in January 2021 had contracted…
Read MoreFeb 01, 2021
DPIC Infographic Series: The Death Penalty in 2020
Throughout January, DPIC ran an 11-part infographic series looking back on The Death Penalty in 2020. The graphics covered subjects including sentencing and execution trends, death-penalty repeal, exonerations, problematic executions, the election of reform prosecutors, and the federal execution spree, among others. You can see the entire series on the Death Penalty Information Center Facebook page at this…
Read MoreFeb 01, 2021
Capital Case Roundup — Death Penalty Court Decisions the Week of January 25, 2021
NEWS (1/28/21) — California: The California Supreme Court has upheld the conviction and death sentence imposed on Salvadoran national Irving Ramirez for killing a San Leandro police officer in July 2005.
Read MoreJan 29, 2021
Legitimacy and the Rule of Law: Supreme Court’s Institutional Standing Damaged by Rulings During Federal Execution Spree
From July 14, 2020 through January 16, 2021, the federal government executed thirteen prisoners. It was the most consecutive executions by a single jurisdiction since the U.S. death penalty resumed in the 1970s and the longest period of time in which an execution spree by any government went unabated while no other jurisdiction executed…
Read MoreJan 28, 2021
Three Cases Illustrate Federal Death Penalty in Flux as Biden Team Takes Reins at DOJ
Developments in three federal capital cases at the transition between presidential administrations illustrate the choices that the new Biden Department of Justice will face in formulating its policy on the federal death penalty. The cases, each at a critical turning point in determining whether to move forward in a potentially capital prosecution, will shed light on the strength of the DOJ leadership’s commitment to implementing the president’s pledge to end the federal death…
Read MoreJan 27, 2021
Philadelphia Boxer Sent to Death Row by Unrebutted False Medical Testimony Released After 28 Years
Former lightweight and junior welterweight boxing contender Anthony Fletcher (pictured) has been released from prison, 28 years after he was wrongfully convicted of first-degree murder and sent to Pennsylvania’s death row by false medical…
Read MoreJan 26, 2021
Former South Dakota Prosecutor and Judge Introduces Bill to Limit the State’s Death Penalty
A South Dakota state senator who previously served as a prosecutor and a state court judge has introduced a bill to limit the breadth of the state’s death penalty statute. Senate Bill 98, introduced by Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Arthur Rusch (R – Clay, pictured) on January 25, 2021, would restrict capital punishment to a single aggravating circumstance, premeditated murders in which a defendant killed a police officer, corrections officer, or…
Read MoreJan 25, 2021
Death Penalty Opponents Hold Vigils at Virginia Lynching Sites in Push for Abolition
As the Virginia General Assembly considers legislation to abolish the death penalty, opponents of capital punishment gathered at lynching sites across the state to emphasize the historical link between lynchings and executions. Groups in Alexandria, Danville, Norfolk, Richmond, and Roanoke recalled historical injustices, reading the names and stories of lynching victims, and called for an end to capital…
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