Publications & Testimony
Items: 1561 — 1570
Jul 01, 2019
Death-Penalty News and Developments for the Week of July 1 – 7, 2019: Pennsylvania Joins States Without an Execution in 20 Years
NEWS: July 6—Pennsylvania has joined the list of states that have not carried out an execution in more than 20 years. Five death-penalty states (Colorado, Kansas, Oregon, Pennsylvania, and Wyoming) and the U.S. military now have not conducted an execution in at least two decades. More than half of the states in the U.S. (26), as well as the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. military either do not have the death penalty or have not executed…
Read MoreJun 28, 2019
During National Pride Month, South Dakota Schedules Execution in Case Tainted by Anti-Gay Bias
In the midst of National Pride Month commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall Riots and the birth of the modern LGBTQ rights movement, South Dakota has issued a death warrant seeking to execute a gay man whose death sentence was tainted by anti-gay bias. Charles Rhines (pictured) was sentenced to death by a jury that, according to juror affidavits, was influenced by bigoted stereotypes in reaching its decision. On June 25, 2019, in response to a…
Read MoreJun 27, 2019
Texas State Comptroller Denies Compensation to Death-Row Exoneree Alfred Dewayne Brown, Despite Declaration of Actual Innocence
The Texas State Comptroller has denied compensation to death-row exoneree Alfred Dewayne Brown (pictured), despite a formal court declaration that he is “actually innocent” of the murders of a store clerk and a Houston police officer that sent him to death row in 2005. Claiming uncertainty as to whether a Harris County judge had jurisdiction to declare Brown innocent of the murders, comptroller Glenn Hegar on June 26, 2019…
Read MoreJun 26, 2019
Charles Ray Finch Becomes 166th Death-Row Exoneree as North Carolina Prosecutor Formally Drops All Charges
In July 1976, false forensic testimony and an eyewitness identification manipulated by police misconduct sent Charles Ray Finch to North Carolina’s death row. Forty-three years later, he has become the 166th person in the United States since 1973 to be exonerated after having been wrongfully convicted and sentenced to death. On June 14, 2019, after a federal appeals court said Finch had proven his “actual innocence” and a federal district court had given the…
Read MoreJun 25, 2019
Supreme Court Orders Alabama to Unseal Execution Documents
The U.S. Supreme Court has ordered the unsealing of court documents related to Alabama’s May 30, 2019 execution of Christopher Price. On June 24, the Court granted a motion filed by National Public Radio (NPR) and the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press (RCFP), to unseal all Supreme Court pleadings in the case of Price v. Dunn, in which — based on redacted filings — the Court permitted Price’s execution to…
Read MoreJun 24, 2019
A Snapshot in Time: The U.S. Reaches 1500 Executions
When Georgia executed Marion Wilson, Jr., on June 20, 2019, it marked the 1500th execution in the United States since the U.S. Supreme Court struck down all death-penalty statutes in Furman v. Georgia in 1972, then four years later permitted executions to go forward under new statutes ostensibly enacted to address the unconstitutional arbitrariness that had plagued the old laws. His execution, analysts say, reflects a number of…
Read MoreJun 24, 2019
Death-Penalty News and Developments for the Week of June 24 – 30, 2019: New Mexico Supreme Court Clears the State’s Death Row
NEWS: JUNE 28—The New Mexico Supreme Court has overturned the death sentences of the two prisoners who had remained on the state’s death row after the legislature repealed the state’s death-penalty statute in 2009. In 3 – 2 decisions in Fry v. Lopez and Allen v. Lemaster, the court found that the death sentences imposed on Robert Fry and Timothy Allen were disproportionate to “other equally horrendous cases in…
Read MoreJun 21, 2019
Supreme Court Vacates Conviction in Mississippi Death Penalty Case Finding Race Discrimination in Jury Selection
Finding that a Mississippi prosecutor had intentionally struck black jurors in an attempt to empanel as white a jury as possible, the United States Supreme Court has overturned the conviction of death-row prisoner Curtis Giovanni Flowers. The Court’s 7 – 2 decision on June 21, 2019, found that Mississippi’s Fifth Circuit Court District Attorney Doug Evans had undertaken extraordinary efforts to prevent African Americans from serving as jurors…
Read MoreJun 21, 2019
Flowers v. Mississippi, No. 17 – 9572
In a 7 – 2 decision, the Supreme Court overturned the conviction of Curtis Giovanni Flowers, a Mississippi death row prisoner who has been tried six times for a notorious 1996 quadruple murder in Winona, Mississippi. Three of the first five trials ended in convictions that were overturned on appeal and two trials resulted in hung juries. The lead prosecutor for all six trials was Doug Evans, the District Attorney in Mississippi’s Fifth…
Read MoreJun 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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