Publications & Testimony

Items: 1441 — 1450


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…

Read More

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…

Read More

Dec 30, 2019

Law Review: New Article Highlights Decline of Judicial Death Sentences

At least 99 men and one woman are on death row in eight U.S. states, con­demned to death by judges with­out the pri­or autho­riza­tion of a jury, accord­ing to a 2019 study by researchers Michael Radelet and Ben Cohen (pic­tured) pub­lished in the Annual Review of Law and Social Science. Another 18 pris­on­ers sen­tenced to death since the resump­tion of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in the U.S. in the 1970s, the study shows, have been executed after…

Read More

Dec 27, 2019

New Podcast: The DPIC 2019 Year End Report

In the December 2019 edi­tion of the Discussions with DPIC pod­cast, Death Penalty Information Center Executive Director Robert Dunham and Managing Director Anne Holsinger dis­cuss DPIC’s 2019 Year End Report. The pod­cast explores the major themes pre­sent­ed in the year’s death-penal­­ty news and devel­op­ments, includ­ing inno­cence, declin­ing use of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment, and sys­temic prob­lems revealed by the new death sentences and…

Read More

Dec 26, 2019

Billy Joe Wardlow Faces Execution in Texas Based on False Evidence of Future Dangerousness

Billy Joe Wardlow (pic­tured) was 18 years old, when he killed 82-year-old Carl Cole dur­ing a botched attempt to steal Cole’s car so that Wardlow and his girl­friend could pur­sue their fan­ta­sy of run­ning away from their abu­sive homes in Carson, Texas to start a new life in Montana. Wardlow, who had no pri­or his­to­ry of vio­lence, has regret­ted his action ever since. In the cov­er sto­ry for the Winter 2020 issue of the mag­a­zine The American…

Read More

Dec 23, 2019

DPIC Analysis: Death Penalty Erosion Spreads Across the Western United States in 2019

In a year of declin­ing death-penal­­ty usage across the United States, nowhere was the ero­sion of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment as sus­tained and pro­nounced in 2019 as it was in the west­ern United States. Continuing a wave of momen­tum from Washington​’s judi­cial abo­li­tion of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in October 2018, one state halt­ed exe­cu­tions and dis­man­tled its death cham­ber, anoth­er cleared its death row, two cut back on the cir­cum­stances in which the death penalty…

Read More

Dec 20, 2019

With Newly Discovered Evidence of Prosecutorial Misconduct, Alabama Death-Row Prisoner Hopeful to Win New Trial

Alabama sen­tenced Toforest Johnson to death, his lawyers and nation­al experts say, because of pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al mis­con­duct, false eye­wit­ness tes­ti­mo­ny, and inad­e­quate rep­re­sen­ta­tion. In an ami­cus brief filed in a Birmingham tri­al court on December 12, 2019, the Innocence Project says,​“If ever a case bore the hall­marks of a wrong­ful con­vic­tion, Toforest Johnson’s…

Read More

Dec 18, 2019

James Dailey Faces Execution in Florida Based on Testimony of Serial Jailhouse Informant Police Called Con Man Extraordinaire”

Paul Skalnik is a sex offend­er and con man whose jail­house​“snitch” tes­ti­mo­ny was used by Florida and Texas pros­e­cu­tors to con­vict more than 37 defen­dants, includ­ing four who were sen­tenced to death. His tes­ti­mo­ny that James Dailey (pic­tured) alleged­ly con­fessed to the bru­tal 1985 stab­bing and drown­ing death of 14-year-old Shelley Boggio con­tributed to Dailey’s con­vic­tion and death sen­tence, despite the prosecution’s admission that…

Read More