Publications & Testimony
Items: 1261 — 1270
May 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…
Read MoreMay 01, 2020
Missouri Supreme Court Denies Stay of May 19 Execution for Brain-Damaged Man Tried Five Times for the Same Murder
In a case long marred by prosecutorial misconduct, the Missouri Supreme Court has denied a stay of execution for Walter Barton (pictured), rejecting his claims of innocence and incompetence to be executed. The court’s ruling on April 27, 2020 made no mention of Barton’s additional request to put off his execution because of public health dangers relating to the coronavirus…
Read MoreMay 01, 2020
Capital Case Roundup — Death Penalty Court Decisions the Week of April 27, 2020
NEWS (5/1/20) — California: A split three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has upheld the conviction and death sentence of Richard Allen Benson for the sexual molestation of two young girls, murdering them, their mother, and their baby brother. The court unanimously agreed that a police officer’s false statement during interrogation that Benson would not face the death penalty did not render his confession invalid. In a 2 – 1 penalty-phase…
Read MoreApr 30, 2020
Federal Appeals Court Denies New Orleans Prosecutors Immunity for Allegedly Threatening Witnesses with Fake Subpoenas
A federal appeals court in New Orleans has ruled that Orleans Parish, Louisiana prosecutors who illegally issued fake subpoenas to intimidate reluctant witnesses into cooperating in murder and other criminal cases are not immune from being sued for their…
Read MoreApr 29, 2020
Conservative Commentator: Facing Coronavirus Budget Shortfalls, States Should Cut the Death Penalty
Conservative commentator Drew Johnson (pictured) has a suggestion for states whose budgets have been gutted by declining tax revenue and rising costs related to the coronavirus pandemic: end the death…
Read MoreApr 28, 2020
Arizona Death-Row Prisoner Dies of COVID-19, 7 Others Test Positive for Coronavirus
UPDATE: Arizona has experienced the first known COVID-19 death-row fatality and the coronavirus is spreading on the state’s death row, lawyers for the prisoners have…
Read MoreApr 27, 2020
Texas Court Issues Nation’s Seventh Coronavirus Stay of Execution
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has stayed the May 6, 2020 execution of Edward Busby (pictured) for sixty days. Busby’s was the nation’s seventh execution postponed in the United States because of the coronavirus and the sixth in…
Read MoreApr 25, 2020
News Brief — Coronavirus Effects Continue to be Felt in Capital Prosecutions
NEWS (4/24/20) — California: The death penalty trial of Kori Muhammad for the killings of four people in two separate incidents ended without advancing to a penalty phase just two days after a Fresno County jury convicted him of one count of first-degree murder and three counts of second-degree murder. The trial had been interrupted by coronavirus court closures, with guilt-phase jury deliberations halted for four weeks in March, then completed on April…
Read MoreApr 24, 2020
Federal Judge Orders Jury Trial on Claim that Kentucky Exoneree Who Was Threatened With Death Penalty Was Framed for Murder
A federal judge has ruled that a civil rights lawsuit against a detective who allegedly framed a Kentucky woman for a murder she was physically incapable of committing may proceed to a jury…
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