Publications & Testimony
Items: 1251 — 1260
May 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…
Read MoreMay 08, 2020
Study Reflects Increasing Futility of Judicial Review in Texas Death Penalty Cases
Judicial enforcement of constitutional rights in Texas death penalty cases has become increasingly rare and is virtually non-existent in the state’s federal courts, a new University of Houston Law Center study has found. The study, Reversal Rates in Capital Cases in Texas, 2000 – 2020, published online on April 27, 2020 in the UCLA Law Review, reports that reversal rates in cases in which Texas capital defendants were sentenced to death in the first two decades of the 21st…
Read MoreMay 07, 2020
News Brief — Texas Appeals Court Stays Randall Mays’ Execution on Issue of Intellectual Disability
NEWS (5/7/20) — Texas: The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has granted a stay of execution to Randall Mays, directing a Henderson County trial court to review Mays’ claim that he is ineligible for the death penalty because of intellectual disability. The appeals court declined to address claims that Mays’ conviction and death sentence had been tainted by racial bias and juror misconduct and that he had been subject to improper interrogation by law…
Read MoreMay 07, 2020
Executions Remain On Hold as Federal Litigation on Oklahoma’s ‘Risky and Incomplete’ Lethal-Injection Protocol Moves Forward
Oklahoma will not seek to carry out any executions while litigation continues in federal court on the state’s lethal-injection protocol, a U.S. federal district court judge has…
Read MoreMay 07, 2020
Capital Case Roundup — Death Penalty Court Decisions the Week of May 4, 2020
NEWS (5/7/20) — Florida: The Florida Supreme Court has upheld the death sentence imposed on Leonardo Franqui, denying post-conviction challenges to his death sentence based upon claims that he is ineligible for the death penalty because of intellectual disability and that his death sentence was unconstitutionally imposed after some members of his jury voted for…
Read MoreMay 06, 2020
In Case Permeated with Race Bias, Tennessee Plans to Execute Possibly Innocent and Intellectually Disabled Black Man in Murder of White Woman
Pervis Payne (pictured) was young, black, and, he says, in the wrong place at the wrong time. The son of a minister, he is on death row in Tennessee, convicted of the horrific murders of a white woman and her two-year-old daughter and the stabbing of her three-year-old son in 1987. His case, profiled by Steven Hale in The Appeal on April 29, 2020, features evidence of innocence, intellectual disability, prosecutorial misconduct, and racial…
Read MoreMay 05, 2020
Texas Prisoners File Lawsuit Over Death-Row Conditions During Pandemic
Alleging that the Texas prison system is “failing to undertake take basic measures to protect [them] from the risk of disease and death” presented by the coronavirus pandemic, prisoners on the state’s death row have filed a class-action motion to join a federal prison-conditions lawsuit against the Texas Department of Criminal Justice…
Read MoreMay 04, 2020
Appeals Court Questions Federal Use of Death Penalty Against Navajo Prisoner, But Turns Down Appeal
In a federal capital case with implications relating to tribal sovereignty, a federal appeals court has denied a Native-American prisoner’s appeal seeking to investigate racial bias in his case, while questioning the federal government’s pursuit of the death penalty against…
Read MoreMay 01, 2020
News Brief — Ohio Parole Board Recommends that Governor Commute Gregory Lott’s Death Sentence
NEWS (5/1/20) — Ohio: By a vote of 6 – 2, the Ohio Parole Board has recommend that Governor Mike DeWine commute the sentence of death-row prisoner Gregory Lott (pictured) to life without parole. The decision on clemency is now up to Gov. DeWine, who has twice delayed Lott’s…
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