Publications & Testimony

Testimony and Statements on the Death Penalty

FROM DPIC

For tes­ti­mo­ny by for­mer Executive Director Robert Dunham and for­mer Executive Director Richard C. Dieter, please vis­it our page DPIC Testimony.
 

FROM RELIGIOUS LEADERS AND ORGANIZATIONS

FROM THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY 

FROM ADVOCACY GROUPS

FROM JUDGES, LEGISLATORS, AND OTHER ORGANIZATIONS

FROM MURDER VICTIMSFAMILY MEMBERS

Items: 1441 — 1450


Jan 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…

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Jan 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…

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Jan 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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Jan 02, 2020

Report Addresses Death-Row Family Members’ Barriers to Mental Health Care

Families who have a loved one on death row, or who have expe­ri­enced the exe­cu­tion of a loved one, suf­fer a vari­ety of adverse men­tal health effects, includ­ing depres­sion, anx­i­ety, and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), accord­ing to a new report by the Texas After Violence Project (TAVP). The report, Nobody to Talk to, describes the men­tal health chal­lenges faced by fam­i­ly mem­bers of death row pris­on­ers and the spe­cial dif­fi­cul­ties those family members…

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Jan 01, 2020

Death Penalty News and Developments for December 23 — January 52020

NEWS — January 3: In Florida, a tri­al judge in Fort Myers accept­ed the jury’s rec­om­men­da­tion and sen­tenced Mark Sievers to death for the mur­der of his wife. In Oklahoma, the court for­mal­ly sen­tenced Byron Shepard to death for the mur­der of a Pottawatomie County police offi­cer. They were the first death sentences of…

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