Publications & Testimony
Items: 1321 — 1330
Mar 12, 2020
News Brief — Florida Supreme Court Upholds Death Sentence for Man Who Pled Guilty and Waived Jury
NEWS (3/12/20): The Florida Supreme Court on March 12, 2020 denied death-row prisoner Hector Sanchez-Torres’s post-conviction challenge to his conviction and death sentence for a 2008 armed robbery and murder. In an unsigned opinion, the court ruled that Sanchez-Torres’s counsel had not been ineffective in advising him to plead guilty to the charges and to waive a sentencing jury based on counsel’s belief that “a Clay County jury would…
Read MoreMar 12, 2020
News Brief — Federal Capital Case Dismissed Because of Prosecution’s 14-Year Delay
NEWS (3/12/20): Citing a 14-year delay by federal prosecutors in bringing the case to trial, a federal district court in Texas has dismissed a federal capital murder indictment against a Salvadoran man charged with killing two Honduran…
Read MoreMar 12, 2020
Winter 2020 Death Row USA: U.S. Death Row Shrinks 20% During the 2010s
The number of people on death row across the United States or facing potential capital resentencings declined by nearly 20% in the 2010s, according to a Death Penalty Information Center analysis of data from the latest quarterly death-row census by the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational…
Read MoreMar 11, 2020
Timothy Hurst, Whose Case Struck Down Florida’s Death-Penalty Statute, Is Resentenced to Life
Former Florida death-row prisoner Timothy Hurst (pictured), whose case led the U.S. Supreme Court to strike down Florida’s death-penalty statute in 2016 and spurred the elimination of non-unanimous jury verdicts for death in Florida and Delaware, has been resentenced to life without parole. Hurst was officially removed from Florida’s death row after his capital resentencing jury did not reach a unanimous sentencing recommendation on March 5,…
Read MoreMar 11, 2020
News Brief — Texas Appeals Court Rejects Recommendation for New Trial for Rigoberto Avila
NEWS (3/11/20): The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (TCCA) has rejected the recommendation of an El Paso County trial court that death-row prisoner Rigoberto Avila should be granted a new trial as a result of the prosecution’s reliance on false and outdated scientific…
Read MoreMar 10, 2020
Paul Hildwin Released from Florida Prison 34 Years After Being Sentenced to Death
Paul Hildwin, whose death sentence was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1989 in a decision it overruled 26 years later, has been released from prison in Florida after spending nearly 34 years incarcerated for a murder DNA evidence now shows he did not…
Read MoreMar 10, 2020
News Brief — Utah Federal Court Grants New Trial to Death-Row Prisoner Von Taylor
NEWS (3/10/20): A Utah federal district court has granted a new trial to death-row prisoner Von Taylor based on defense counsel’s ineffectiveness in failing to investigate the facts before advising him whether to plead guilty. Taylor pled guilty to a double murder and was sentenced to death based upon the mistaken belief that he had killed the two victims. Because of counsel’s failure to investigate, Taylor…
Read MoreMar 09, 2020
Media and Legal Organizations Urge Idaho Supreme Court to Require Execution Transparency
Saying that states have “no compelling need” to keep execution information secret, the American Bar Association (ABA) has asked the Idaho Supreme Court to require the state to disclose numerous execution-related documents under Idaho’s freedom of information law. On February 28, 2020, the ABA and a coalition of Idaho media organizations led by the Idaho Press Club filed amicus curiae briefs in Cover v. Idaho Board of Correction in support of an Idaho…
Read MoreMar 08, 2020
Death-Penalty News and Developments for the Week of March 8 — March 14, 2020
NEWS (3/13) — North Carolina: The North Carolina Innocence Inquiry Commission voted 5 – 3 to empanel a three-judge review committee to determine whether four men convicted as teens should be exonerated of the murder of NBA star Chris Paul’s grandfather, Nathaniel Jones. A fifth teen convicted in the murder died before he could submit his case for review by the…
Read MoreMar 08, 2020
Legislative Roundup — Recent Legislative Activity as of March 7
Washington — A bill that would formally remove Washington’s judicially abolished death penalty from the state’s statute books has failed. SB 5339, which passed the state senate on January 31 and was approved by the House Committee on Public Safety on February 27, did not come up for a vote on the floor of the state House of Representatives by the March 7 deadline for consideration during the 2020 legislative session. The failure has no effect on the judicial abolition of the…
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