Publications & Testimony
Items: 1601 — 1610
Jun 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…
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…
Read MoreJun 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,…
Read MoreJun 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…
Read MoreJun 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…
Read MoreJun 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…
Read MoreJun 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…
Read MoreJun 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…
Read MoreJun 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…
Read MoreJun 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…
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