Publications & Testimony
Items: 1441 — 1450
Nov 15, 2019
Texas Court of Criminal Appeals Stays Execution of Rodney Reed
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals stayed the execution of Rodney Reed (pictured) on November 15, 2019, directing the Bastrop County district court to review Reed’s claims that prosecutors suppressed exculpatory evidence and presented false testimony and that he is actually innocent. The court’s action culminated a whirlwind of activity on the Friday preceding Reed’s scheduled November 20 execution. Earlier in the afternoon, the Texas Board of Pardons and…
Read MoreNov 14, 2019
On Election Night, Reform Prosecutors Win in Virginia, California, and Pennsylvania
Reform prosecutors made further inroads into the administration of American law enforcement, sweeping county elections in Northern Virginia and gaining control of prosecutor’s offices in Pennsylvania and California. Progressive prosecutors rode a blue wave of suburban votes on November 5, 2019 that solidified Democratic control of every state legislative and prosecutorial seat in the Northern Virginia counties bordering the nation’s capital and wrested control of county government from one of…
Read MoreNov 13, 2019
Former State and Federal Judges, Prosecutors, and Law Enforcement Officials and Families of Murder Victims Urge Federal Government to Call Off Executions
Hundreds of former state and federal judges, prosecutors, law enforcement and corrections officials, and family members of homicide victims have signed on to a series of letters urging the federal government to halt the five federal executions scheduled for December 2019 and January 2020. In four separate letters addressed to President Donald Trump and Attorney General William Barr, 175 family members of murder victims, 65 former state and federal judges, 59 current and former state and…
Read MoreNov 12, 2019
New Podcast: “Unrequited Innocence” with Rob Warden and John Seasly
At least 166 wrongfully convicted death-row prisoners have been exonerated since the death penalty was reinstituted in the United States in 1973. That number, however, may only scratch the surface in assessing the degree to which innocent men and women are being sent to U.S. death…
Read MoreNov 11, 2019
Texas Prisoner Receives Second Stay of Execution Over Religious Discrimination Issue
A federal district court has granted a stay of execution to a Buddhist death-row prisoner in Texas over allegations that the state is discriminatorily denying him access to religious services that would be available to Christian prisoners on the day of their execution. On November 7, 2019, the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas stayed the November 13 execution of Patrick Murphy (pictured), marking the second time in 2019 that his…
Read MoreNov 11, 2019
Death Penalty News and Developments for November 11 — November 17, 2019
NEWS — November 13: A Cuyahoga County (Cleveland), Ohio judge has imposed a death sentence on Matthew Nicholson for the murders of his girlfriend’s teenage children. It was the third death sentence imposed in Cuyahoga County in 2019, more than in any other county in the country. Cuyahoga County also imposed two death sentences in 2018, making it the only county to impose more than one death sentence in both of the last two years. The five death sentences in that period are also…
Read MoreNov 08, 2019
Jurors Speak About Decision to Impose Life Sentence in Florida Case at Center of Conflict Between Prosecutor and Governor
On March 16, 2017, saying that capital punishment is “not in the best interests of this community or in the best interests of justice,” Orange/Osceola County (FL) state prosecutor Aramis Ayala announced that her office would not pursue the death penalty in any case. That decision, announced in connection with the prosecution of a man charged with killing his ex-girlfriend, her unborn child, and a police officer responding to the crime, ignited a political…
Read MoreNov 07, 2019
Justen Hall Executed in Second 2019 Texas Case to Raise Questions of Competency
Texas executed Justen Hall (pictured) on November 6, 2019 in the second Texas case of the year to present significant questions as to a prisoner’s competency to be…
Read MoreNov 06, 2019
After Being Reversed Twice, Texas Appeals Court Takes Intellectually Disabled Prisoner Off Death Row
After being reversed twice by the United States Supreme Court, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (CCA) has resentenced intellectually disabled death-row prisoner Bobby James Moore to life in prison. In a three-page decision issued on November 6, 2019, 39 years after Moore was sentenced to death in Houston for a 1980 murder during a supermarket robbery, the CCA conceded that the U.S. Supreme Court has determined that “Moore … is a person with intellectual…
Read MoreNov 05, 2019
Idaho Prosecutor Says State’s Longest-Serving Death-Row Prisoner Should Not Be Executed
The prosecutor who sent Thomas Creech, Idaho’s longest-serving death-row prisoner, to jail 37 years ago now says that Creech and others sentenced to death in the Gem State should not be…
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