Publications & Testimony
Items: 1511 — 1520
Aug 27, 2019
New Podcast: Interview with Clemency filmmaker Chinonye Chukwu
In the latest episode of Discussions with DPIC, writer/director Chinonye Chukwu (pictured) speaks with DPIC Senior Director of Research and Special Projects Ngozi Ndulue about her award-winning new film Clemency. Chukwu discusses her inspiration for the story, the years-long process of research and immersion that helped her shape the narrative, and her hopes for how this film will be…
Read MoreAug 26, 2019
Death-Penalty News and Developments for the Week of August 26 – September 1, 2019
NEWS — August 30: A Tennessee trial judge has approved a plea deal to vacate the death sentence of Abu-Ali Abdur’Rahman as a result of prosecutorial misconduct. Abdur’Rahman, who was scheduled to be executed next year, argued that prosecutor John Zimmerman excluded potential jurors based on race during Abdur’Rahman’s 1987 capital trial. The current district attorney’s office agreed with Abdur’Rahman that his trial was infected by “overt racial bias” and that as…
Read MoreAug 26, 2019
Oregon’s New Law Narrowing Use of Death Penalty: How Retroactive is “Not Retroactive”?
When Oregon’s legislators passed a new law limiting the scope of the state’s death penalty, the sponsors of the measure offered assurances that it would not apply retroactively to prisoners on the state’s death row. Now, a new legal opinion by the Oregon Department of Justice has raised questions as to how retroactive “not retroactive” actually is and whether the new law applies to legal proceedings involving current death-row prisoners whose convictions or death sentences…
Read MoreAug 23, 2019
Ohio House Speaker Expresses Doubts About Death Penalty, as Opioid Experts, Governor Blast Call to Use Seized Fentanyl for Executions
The turmoil surrounding Ohio’s death penalty continued to grow as public health experts criticized a legislator’s suggestion that the state use seized drugs to carry out executions and the Speaker of the Ohio House of Representatives, Larry Householder (pictured), expressed growing doubts about capital punishment itself. Governor Mike DeWine joined critics of the fentanyl proposal, declaring that it was “not an option” for resuming executions in the…
Read MoreAug 22, 2019
No Court Has Reviewed the Evidence that Gary Bowles May Be Intellectually Disabled; Florida Plans to Execute Him Anyway.
In a case that raises concerns about procedural impediments that prevent enforcement of constitutional rights, Florida is preparing to execute a man whose claim of intellectual disability has never been reviewed by the state or federal courts. [UPDATE: Florida executed Gary Ray Bowles on August 22,…
Read MoreAug 21, 2019
Texas to Execute Larry Swearingen Based on Forensic “Quackery,” Lawyers Say
With serious doubts swirling as to virtually every piece of forensic evidence in his case, Texas plans to execute Larry Swearingen—who has always maintained his innocence in the murder of Melissa Trotter — on August 21, 2019. His attorneys say his conviction is grounded in junk science that has been repudiated by numerous forensic experts, including false testimony regarding pantyhose used to strangle Trotter, blood found under her fingernails, and the time of…
Read MoreAug 20, 2019
Jewish Congregations Ask Attorney General Not to Seek Death Penalty in Pittsburgh Synagogue Shooting
Leaders from two of the three congregations affected by the October 27, 2018 shootings at the Tree of Life synagogue (pictured) in Pittsburgh are asking the federal government not to seek a death sentence for the accused white supremacist…
Read MoreAug 19, 2019
U.S. House Oversight Committee Launches Investigation into Resumption of Federal Executions
The U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Oversight and Reform announced on August 14, 2019 that it has launched an investigation into the Department of Justice’s plan to restart federal executions using the drug pentobarbital. Citing concerns about the source of drugs the Administration intends to use in five executions it has scheduled in December 2019 and January 2020, the Oversight Committee’s Subcommittee on Civil Rights and Civil Liberties has sought documents and information from…
Read MoreAug 19, 2019
Death-Penalty News and Developments for the Week of August 19 – 25, 2019: Executions in Texas and Florida
NEWS: Texas and Florida carried out the 12th and 13th U.S. executions in 2019 on August 21 and August 22. They were the fourth execution in Texas and the second in Florida this…
Read MoreAug 16, 2019
Life Sentence in America’s Deadliest Death-Penalty County Illustrates Impact of Alabama’s End of Judicial Override
A life sentence recently imposed in America’s deadliest death-penalty county illustrates the impact of Alabama’s 2017 repeal of its former law permitting trial judges to impose the death penalty despite jury votes for life. On August 9, 2019, Houston County Judge Larry Anderson sentenced Nathaniel Dennis to life in prison without parole for the murder of a convenience store clerk, after the jury in his case recommended a life sentence.
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