Publications & Testimony
Items: 1341 — 1350
Feb 29, 2020
News Brief — Death Warrants and Stays Through February 2020
NEWS (2/29/20): Four states and the federal government had scheduled 12 executions to take place in January or February 2020. Through February 2020, four executions had been carried out: two in Texas and one each in Georgia and Tennessee. (To enlarge map, click…
Read MoreFeb 28, 2020
Alabama Set to Execute Nathaniel Woods Despite Claims of Innocence, Police Misconduct
Nathaniel Woods (pictured, left) did not shoot Alabama police officers Charles Bennett, Carlos “Curly” Owen, and Harley Chisholm III (pictured left to right, below). But because of alleged police misconduct, incompetent representation, and Alabama law allowing death verdicts based on non-unanimous jury votes, he faces execution on March 5, 2020 for their…
Read MoreFeb 28, 2020
Legislative Roundup — Recent Legislative Activity as of February 28, 2020
Virginia — The House Health, Welfare, and Institutions Committee voted 13 – 9 on February 25 to approve a bill that would make the identity of any entity that provides execution drugs public information. SB 270 passed the Virginia Senate by a 22 – 18 vote on February 4. It can now be considered by the full House of…
Read MoreFeb 27, 2020
U.S. Supreme Court Rules that Arizona Man Unconstitutionally Sentenced to Death Is Not Entitled to Jury Resentencing
A divided U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that James McKinney (pictured), an Arizona death-row prisoner who was unconstitutionally sentenced to death by a trial judge who did not consider mitigating evidence relating to his severe Posttraumatic Stress Disorder from relentless childhood abuse, is not entitled to a jury trial to determine his sentence. On February 25, 2020, in a 5 – 4 opinion authored by Justice Brett Kavanaugh, the Court upheld the…
Read MoreFeb 26, 2020
News Brief — Colorado House Votes to Abolish Death Penalty
NEWS (2/26/20): The Colorado legislature has sent to the Governor a bill that would prospectively abolish the state’s death penalty. On February 26, 2020, one day after a marathon 12-hour debate on the floor of the House, the Colorado House of Representatives voted 38 – 27 to pass SB 20 – 100 to repeal the state’s capital punishment statute. The Senate had previously approved the legislation on January…
Read MoreFeb 26, 2020
Tennessee Sets Execution Dates for Two Men With Issues of Innocence, Intellectual Disability, and Competency
Tennessee has set two more execution dates for 2020, directed, advocates say, at men whose cases present unresolved issues of innocence, intellectual disability, and mental…
Read MoreFeb 25, 2020
Vernon Madison, Whose Case Challenged Execution of Prisoners with Dementia, Dies on Alabama’s Death Row
Vernon Madison, an Alabama death-row prisoner whose severe dementia led to a major Supreme Court decision on competency to be executed, has died in prison at the age of…
Read MoreFeb 24, 2020
Report: Failure to Implement Reforms Undermines Legitimacy of Kentucky’s Death-Penalty System
Nine years after an American Bar Association (ABA) study identified systemic deficiencies in Kentucky’s administration of its death-penalty laws, a new report by past and current Kentucky public defenders charges that the Commonwealth’s failure to take any meaningful remedial action undermines the legitimacy of capital punishment in the…
Read MoreFeb 24, 2020
News Brief — Supreme Court Declines to Review Rodney Reed Case
NEWS (2/24/20): On February 24, 2020, the U.S. Supreme Court denied Texas death-row prisoner Rodney Reed’s petition for writ of certiorari, declining to review his case. Reed’s petition raised the question, not yet addressed by the Court, “Does the conviction or execution of a person who is actually innocent of the crime violate the United States Constitution?” It also asked the Court to consider the appropriate standard for lower courts to assess: (1) the prejudice from the…
Read MoreFeb 23, 2020
Legislative Roundup — Recent Legislative Activity as of February 22, 2020
Colorado — The House Judiciary committee voted 6 – 3 on February 18 to approve SB 20 – 100, a bill that would prospectively repeal the death penalty in Colorado. The bill, which has already passed the state senate, is expected to receive a vote in the full House early in the week. Governor Jared Polis has indicated that he will sign the bill if it…
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