Publications & Testimony
Items: 1431 — 1440
Jan 15, 2020
As Texas Prepares for First Execution of 2020, Oklahoma Marks Five Years with No Executions
As Texas prepared to carry out the first execution of 2020 on January 15, neighboring Oklahoma — once the second most prolific executioner in the United States — marked five years since its last execution. The states present a contrast in execution practices. Though the use of the death penalty has sharply declined in both states, Texas continues to lead the nation in executions, while Oklahoma will join the nearly two-thirds of…
Read MoreJan 14, 2020
‘Just Mercy’ Movie Opens Nationwide With a Message and Big Box Office Receipts
Just Mercy, the movie adaptation of Equal Justice Initiative (EJI) Executive Director Bryan Stevenson’s book of the same name, celebrated its nationwide release on January 10, 2020 with weekend ticket sales of more than $9.7 million. The film, which focuses on the wrongful conviction of Walter McMillian—one of Stevenson’s early death-penalty cases — ranked fifth among all movies in domestic box…
Read MoreJan 13, 2020
Georgia Set to Execute Man Jurors Would Have Sentenced to Life Without Parole
On January 16, Georgia plans to execute Jimmy Meders (pictured in his National Guard uniform), a man whom jurors say they would have sentenced to life without parole if that option had been available and who, state sentencing practices suggest, would not face the death penalty today. For those reasons, Meders’ lawyers say in court pleadings and an application before the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles, his execution would violate…
Read MoreJan 13, 2020
Death Penalty News and Developments for January 13 — January 19, 2020
NEWS — January 14 and 17: Florida juries have rejected the death penalty in capital sentencing retrials of two prisoners who had initially been unconstitutionally sentenced to death following non-unanimous jury votes for…
Read MoreJan 10, 2020
Exonerees in Florida, Idaho Murder Cases Initiate Lawsuits for Wrongful Prosecution
In two cases in which the death penalty played a central role, recent exonerees in Florida and Idaho have initiated legal proceedings against government officials, alleging that they were wrongfully prosecuted…
Read MoreJan 09, 2020
Nebraska Supreme Court: Death-Penalty Repeal Bill Overturned by Voters Didn’t Invalidate Prisoners’ Death Sentences
The Nebraska Supreme Court has ruled that the 2015 legislative repeal of the state’s death-penalty statute did not invalidate the death sentences of the prisoners on the state’s death row because the repeal bill never became law before it was rejected by a statewide…
Read MoreJan 08, 2020
Controversial Mississippi Prosecutor Recuses Himself from Further Involvement in Curtis Flowers’ Case
After having been rebuked by the U.S. Supreme Court in June 2019 for his pattern of racially biased jury selection in the capital prosecutions of Curtis Flowers and sued in federal court to bar future race-based jury strikes, Mississippi prosecutor Doug Evans has voluntarily recused himself from future involvement in…
Read MoreJan 07, 2020
Louisiana Reaches Ten Years Without an Execution
On January 7, 2020, Louisiana marked the passage of ten years since its…
Read MoreJan 06, 2020
Criticism by Government Leaders, Victim’s Son Fuel Growing Doubts About Viability of Ohio’s Death Penalty
With executions on hold due to problems with the lethal-injection protocol, the future of capital punishment in Ohio is uncertain. High-ranking Ohio officials have expressed concerns about the effectiveness and viability of the state’s death penalty, and two recent columns in leading Ohio newspapers have argued that the state should end…
Read MoreJan 03, 2020
Death Sentences Decline by More than Half in Decade of the 2010s
Death sentences imposed in the United States fell by more than half over the course of the 2010s, continuing a steep nationwide decline that has seen death sentences fall by more than 89% since the peak death sentencing years of the mid 1990s. Fewer death sentences were imposed in the second half of the 2010s than in any other five-year period since capital punishment resumed in the United States in 1973. [Click here to enlarge…
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