Publications & Testimony
Items: 1241 — 1250
May 20, 2020
Nebraska Supreme Court Orders Release of Lethal-Injection Drug Records
In a major victory for media outlets and prisoner advocates, the Nebraska Supreme Court has ordered the state’s Department of Correctional Services (DCS) to release public records related to the procurement of drugs used in the 2018 execution of Carey Dean Moore (pictured). The court rejected the state’s argument that drug suppliers and manufacturers are members of the execution team whose identities may be shielded from disclosure but permitted DCS to redact…
Read MoreMay 19, 2020
Oregon Closes Death Row, Joins National Trend Away from Automatic Solitary Confinement
The Oregon Department of Corrections (DOC) has announced that it will close the state’s death row and integrate most of its capitally sentenced prisoners into the general prison population. The move reflects the continuing decline of capital punishment in Oregon and follows a nationwide trend of removing death-row prisoners from automatic solitary…
Read MoreMay 18, 2020
Florida Supreme Court Changes Law Again to Further Diminish Legal Protections in Death Penalty Cases
For the second time in less than four months, the Florida Supreme Court has changed state law to uphold a death-row prisoner’s conviction or death sentence and diminish the legal protections available to other individuals convicted of capital offenses. In an unsigned May 14, 2020 ruling upholding the conviction and death sentence of Sean Bush, the court abrogated a century-old legal standard governing cases in which a conviction is based solely on circumstantial…
Read MoreMay 18, 2020
Capital Case Roundup — Death Penalty Court Decisions the Week of May 18, 2020
NEWS (5/22/2020) — Washington, D.C.: The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit has stayed the issuance of its mandate in the federal execution-protocol lawsuit until June 8, 2020, to allow the federal death-row prisoners to seek review in the U.S. Supreme Court. On November 21, 2019, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia issued a preliminary injunction barring the federal government from implementing the…
Read MoreMay 15, 2020
As Blood Spatter Evidence Causes Jurors to Question His Guilt, Missouri Prepares to Execute Walter Barton
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit has vacated a stay of execution for Missouri death-row prisoner Walter Barton (pictured) who is scheduled to be executed on Tuesday, May 19, 2020. The court’s unsigned opinion, issued on Sunday, May 17, lifted a stay of execution that had been issued May 15 by a federal district court judge. The district court said a stay was necessary to afford it time to address a petition Barton had filed that challenged his…
Read MoreMay 14, 2020
Former Prosecutor, Now on Arkansas Supreme Court, Cited for ‘Bad Faith’ Destruction of Exculpatory Evidence in Death Penalty Case
The United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit has found that a former prosecutor now serving as a justice on the Arkansas Supreme Court deliberately destroyed exculpatory evidence in a case in which he had sought the death penalty. On April 29, 2020, a unanimous three-judge panel of the federal appeals court affirmed the rulings of a federal district court overturning the convictions of life-sentenced prisoners Tina Jimerson and John…
Read MoreMay 13, 2020
Texas Appeals Court Declines to Apply Junk-Science Law to Review Death Sentence Based Upon Hypnotically Assisted Identification Testimony
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (TCCA) has upheld the ruling of a Dallas trial court that denied a new trial to death-row prisoner Charles Flores (pictured), whose conviction and death sentence were the product of hypnotically assisted testimony. The TCCA said its decision was “[b]ased upon the trial court’s findings and conclusions,” which the appeals court acknowledged had simply “adopted the State’s proposed findings of fact and conclusions of…
Read MoreMay 12, 2020
Ohio Death Row Exonerees Reach $18 Million Settlement with City of Cleveland
The city of Cleveland will pay a record $18 million dollars to settle a civil rights lawsuit by three former death-row prisoners who, as a result of police misconduct, spent more than a combined 80 years imprisoned for a murder they did not commit. Kwame Ajamu (pictured, left), his brother Wiley Bridgeman (pictured, center), and Rickey Jackson (pictured, right) were convicted in 1975 of the robbery and murder of Harold Franks based on the…
Read MoreMay 11, 2020
Capital Case Roundup — Death Penalty Court Decisions the Week of May 11, 2020
NEWS (5/15/2020) — Nebraska: The Nebraska Supreme Court ruled in favor of Nebraska media outlets and the state’s ACLU in a public records lawsuit and directed the Nebraska Department of Correctional Services to release records related to the state’s lethal-injection drugs. In BH Media Group, Inc. v. Frakes, the court ordered DOCS director Scott Frakes (pictured) to disclose documents detailing its efforts to obtain lethal-injection drugs to carry out the executions,…
Read MoreMay 11, 2020
New Podcast: Capital Defense Lawyer Kelley Henry on Death Penalty Litigation During a Pandemic
In the May 2020 edition of Discussions with DPIC, veteran capital defense lawyer Kelley Henry (pictured), who is representing several Tennessee death-row prisoners facing execution dates in 2020, speaks with DPIC Executive Director Robert Dunham about the unprecedented challenges of litigating death-penalty cases during the coronavirus pandemic. Henry, a Supervisory Assistant Federal Public Defender in Nashville, provides an inside view of how the…
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