Publications & Testimony
Items: 1101 — 1110
Dec 14, 2020
Capital Case Roundup — Death Penalty Court Decisions the Week of December 7, 2020
NEWS (12/11/20) — Texas: The U.S. Army Court of Criminal Appeals has upheld the convictions and death sentences imposed on Major Nidal Hasan in the mass shooting at Fort Hood that killed 13…
Read MoreDec 11, 2020
Federal Government Carries Out Two More Executions, Capping Deadliest Federal Death Penalty Year Since the 1890s
The federal government carried out back-to-back executions of Brandon Bernard and Alfred Bourgeois on December 10 and 11, 2020, capping the deadliest run of federal executions in the United States in the 20th and 21st centuries. According to the Espy file, a database of executions in the U.S. and its colonies between 1608 and 2002, the ten executions since July 14 constitute the most federal civilian executions in a calendar year…
Read MoreDec 10, 2020
Federal Execution Team Members Test Positive for COVID-19 After Orlando Hall Execution
Eight members of the federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) execution team and a religious advisor have tested positive for the coronavirus after participating in the November 19 execution of Orlando Hall (pictured). The COVID-19 infections, which federal authorities had not previously revealed, came to light in documents produced in a lawsuit two prisoners have filed to halt the remaining…
Read MoreDec 09, 2020
New DPIC Podcast Discusses the Consequences and Cruelty of Lethal Injection
In the December 2020 episode of Discussions with DPIC, anesthesiologist Dr. Joel Zivot from Emory University Hospital speaks with Death Penalty Information Center Executive Director Robert Dunham about his discoveries from the autopsies of more than 200 executed prisoners. Those autopsies revealed the gruesome effects of execution by lethal injection and shattered the popular myth that lethal injection is a humane and painless execution…
Read MoreDec 08, 2020
Jurors and Appellate Prosecutor Say Teen Offender Brandon Bernard Should Not be Executed
As the December 10, 2020 execution date of federal death-row prisoner Brandon Bernard (pictured with his family) approached, jurors and a former prosecutor in his case came forward saying that the teen offender’s life should be spared. Bernard, who was 18 years old at the time of the offense, became the youngest offender executed by the federal government in at…
Read MoreDec 07, 2020
Prosecutors Call for Ending Federal Executions
Saying“our nation’s long experiment with the death penalty has failed,” a coalition of nearly 100 criminal justice officials is calling on the federal government to halt the five executions currently scheduled for December 2020 and January 2021 and to end its use of the…
Read MoreDec 07, 2020
Capital Case Roundup — Death Penalty Court Decisions the Week of November 30, 2020
NEWS (12/4/20) — Nevada: The Nevada Supreme Court has overturned the death sentence imposed on Mexican foreign national Carlos Gutierrez. In a 4 – 3 ruling, the court held that Nevada had violated the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations when police and prosecutors failed to notify Gutierrez of his rights to consular assistance by his government. The court further held, based upon extensive mitigating evidence presented with the assistance of the…
Read MoreDec 04, 2020
DPIC Analysis — Intellectually Disabled Defendants of Color, Foreign Nationals Disproportionately Subject to the Death Penalty
Defendants of color and foreign nationals who are intellectually disabled are disproportionately likely to be sentenced to death, a Death Penalty Information Center analysis of cases involving intellectually disabled defendants…
Read MoreDec 03, 2020
COVID-19 Prison Outbreaks Kill Death-Row Prisoners in Ohio and Missouri and Infect At Least 11 on Tennessee’s Death Row
New COVID-19 outbreaks on the nation’s death rows have killed prisoners in Ohio and Missouri and sickened at least 11 men on Tennessee’s…
Read MoreDec 02, 2020
Citing State’s Lack of Execution Drugs, South Carolina Supreme Court Stays Richard Moore’s Execution
Saying that the state lacked the ability to carry out a lethal injection, the South Carolina Supreme Court has stayed the scheduled December 4, 2020 execution of Richard Moore (pictured). With no state executions scheduled for the remainder of the year, the stay means that states will carry out fewer executions in 2020 than in any…
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