Live Updates: Larry Roberts Becomes the 200th Person Exonerated from Death Row

Updated Jul 02, 2024 4:45 pm

Publications & Testimony

Items: 1461 — 1470


Jun 20, 2019

Prosecutors Eavesdropped on 120 Confidential Defense Calls in Kentucky Death-Penalty Case

A Kentucky cap­i­tal defen­dant has moved to dis­miss all charges against him or to bar the death penal­ty in his case as a result of evi­dence that pros­e­cu­tors repeat­ed­ly eaves­dropped on priv­i­leged attor­ney-client tele­phone calls over the span of a year. Lawyers for James Mallory (pic­tured) have filed a motion to dis­miss the case for gross pros­e­cu­to­r­i­al mis­con­duct, alleg­ing that pros­e­cu­tors lis­tened to record­ings of 120 prison phone calls between Mallory and…

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Jun 19, 2019

ACLU Study: Los Angeles Death Penalty Discriminates Against Defendants of Color and the Poor

A new study of the use of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in Los Angeles has con­clud­ed that, through­out the admin­is­tra­tion of District Attorney Jackie Lacey (pic­tured) the death penal­ty has discriminate[d] on the basis of race and against the poor.” The study, released June 18, 2019 by the ACLU, report­ed that under Lacey’s admin­is­tra­tion the Los Angeles death penal­ty has been imposed exclu­sive­ly against defen­dants of col­or, dis­pro­por­tion­ate­ly for…

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Jun 18, 2019

Marion Wilson Files Clemency Plea in Georgia

Arguing that Marion Wilson (pic­tured, cen­ter) did not kill any­one and did not intend that a killing occur, lawyers for the Georgia death-row pris­on­er have filed a clemen­cy peti­tion urg­ing the Georgia State Board of Pardons and Paroles to com­mute Wilson’s sen­tence to life with­out parole. The Board, which declas­si­fied Wilson’s peti­tion allow­ing it to be released to the pub­lic, is sched­uled to hold a clemen­cy hear­ing on Wednesday, June 192019,…

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Jun 17, 2019

Indiana Judge Orders State to Pay $538,000 in Attorney Fees for Stonewalling Release of Lethal-Injection Records

Citing egre­gious” mis­con­duct by state prison offi­cials in try­ing to evade a court order to pro­duce pub­lic records con­cern­ing its efforts to obtain lethal-injec­tion drugs, an Indiana judge has direct­ed the state’s Department of Correction to pay more than a half mil­lion dol­lars in plain­tiffs’ attor­ney fees. On June 12, 2019, Marion County Circuit Judge Sheryl Lynch (pic­tured) award­ed $538,000 in attor­ney fees to plain­tiffs who were seeking…

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Jun 17, 2019

Death-Penalty News and Developments for the Week of June 17 – 23, 2019: The 1,500th Execution in the U.S. …

NEWS (6/​20): Georgia’s exe­cu­tion of Marion Wilson was the 1,500th exe­cu­tion in the United States and the 74th in Georgia since the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of new death-penal­ty laws in 1976. It was the 10th exe­cu­tion in the U.S. in 2019 and the sec­ond in Georgia. 82% of all exe­cu­tions in the United States since the 1970s — and every exe­cu­tion so far in 2019 — have been in the South. See…

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Jun 14, 2019

Death Penalty Information Center Launches New Website

The Death Penalty Information Center has mod­ern­ized and expand­ed its award-win­ning web­site. On June 14, 2019, DPIC launched its redesigned web­site, cul­mi­nat­ing a two-year project that involved the trans­fer and reor­ga­ni­za­tion of infor­ma­tion on the Center’s more than 7,000 web­pages. Among the most notable addi­tions of the new web­site are 20 inter­ac­tive Tableau graph­ics, includ­ing States With and Without the Death Penalty, Prisoners on Death Row, and a number…

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Jun 13, 2019

Death-Row Prisoner Alleges North Carolina Prosecutors Used Racist Training Document to Strike Black Jurors

A North Carolina death-row pris­on­er is seek­ing a new tri­al based on alle­ga­tions that pros­e­cu­tors in his case used a train­ing doc­u­ment steeped in racist stereo­types to man­u­fac­ture pre­tex­tu­al rea­sons to exclude African Americans from serv­ing on his jury. In a June 4, 2019 court fil­ing in the appeal of Russell William Tucker (pic­tured), two nation­al experts say that the Forsyth County pros­e­cu­tors uncon­sti­tu­tion­al­ly exer­cised their dis­cre­tionary juror chal­lenges on the basis of race to strike all…

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Jun 12, 2019

Ohio House Passes Bill to Bar the Death Penalty for Defendants with Serious Mental Illness

The Ohio House of Representatives has over­whelm­ing­ly approved a bill that would ban the death penal­ty for offend­ers who were seri­ous­ly men­tal­ly ill at the time of the offense. House Bill 136, spon­sored by Rep. Brett Hillyer (R – Uhrichsville, pic­tured), passed the House by a vote of 76 – 18 on June 5, 2019 with bipar­ti­san sup­port and was referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee on June 11. Hillyer’s bill would remove the death penal­ty as a sen­tenc­ing option for defen­dants who can show they…

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Jun 11, 2019

Supreme Court Grants Review of Arizona Death-Penalty Case

The U.S. Supreme Court has grant­ed review of an Arizona death-penal­ty case in which the state courts first refused to con­sid­er a defendant’s mit­i­gat­ing evi­dence and then denied his request for a jury sen­tenc­ing hear­ing after his death sen­tence was over­turned. The Court on June 10, 2019 grant­ed the peti­tion for writ of cer­tio­rari filed by Arizona death-row pris­on­er James Erin McKinney (pic­tured) 26 years after he was first sen­tenced to…

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Jun 10, 2019

Complaint Alleges that Prosecutor in Alfred Dewayne Brown’s Case Knowingly Hid Evidence of Innocence

A spe­cial pros­e­cu­tor in Harris County, Texas, has filed a com­plaint with the Texas State Bar Office of Chief Disciplinary Counsel against for­mer Assistant District Attorney Daniel Rizzo, alleg­ing that Rizzo inten­tion­al­ly con­cealed excul­pa­to­ry evi­dence cru­cial to the exon­er­a­tion of for­mer death-row pris­on­er Alfred Dewayne Brown (pic­tured). Brown was wrong­ful­ly con­vict­ed and sen­tenced to death in 2005 for a rob­bery mur­der in which a store clerk…

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