Publications & Testimony
Items: 1731 — 1740
Jan 07, 2019
Scott Dozier, Who Unsuccessfully Tried to Force Nevada to Execute Him, Dead of Apparent Suicide
Nevada death-row prisoner Scott Dozier (pictured), who unsuccessfully tried to force the state to execute him, was found dead in his prison cell on January 5, 2019 of an apparent suicide. News reports indicated that Dozier had hanged himself. Dozier had told the court and several reporters that he would rather die than spend life in prison and had attempted to speed up his execution by dropping his appeals. However, his prior suicide…
Read MoreJan 04, 2019
NEW VOICES: Retiring Georgia Bureau of Investigation Director Predicts End of Death Penalty
As he prepared for retirement, the long-time director of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) said he does not support the death penalty and believes the punishment is on its way out in Georgia and across the country. In a television interview on his final day of work as GBI director, Vernon Keenan (pictured) told WXIA-TV, Atlanta’s NBC television affiliate, that he has“never believed in the death penalty” and “[t]he day will come…
Read MoreJan 03, 2019
Study: International Data Shows Declining Murder Rates After Abolition of Death Penalty
Nations that abolish the death penalty then tend to see their murder rates decline, according to a December 2018 report by the Abdorrahman Boroumand Center, a Washington, DC-based organization that promotes human rights and democracy in Iran. The report examined murder rates in 11 countries that have abolished capital punishment, finding that ten of those countries experienced a decline in murder rates in the decade following abolition. Countries were included if…
Read MoreJan 02, 2019
Disparate Death-Penalty Rulings in Same Florida Murder Case Raise Arbitrariness Concerns
The Florida Supreme Court issued rulings in thirteen death penalty cases in the last two weeks of 2018, upholding convictions and death sentences in ten, reversing one death sentence, remanding one case for a new hearing on intellectual disability, and allowing limited DNA testing in another case. The most notable of the decisions came in the cases of Gerald Murray (pictured left) and Steven Taylor (pictured,…
Read MoreJan 01, 2019
Federal Death Sentences by Year Since 1988
Year Death Sentences 1989 0 1990 0 1991 1 1992 0 1993 5 1994 0 1995 2 1996 4 1997 3 1998 5 1999 1 2000 2 2001 2 …
Read MoreJan 01, 2019
Federal Laws Providing for the Death Penalty
SOURCE: Federal Death Penalty Resource Counsel, Statutes; Bureau of Justice Statistics: Capital Punishment…
Read MoreJan 01, 2019
Criteria for Inclusion on DPI’s Innocence List
For Inclusion on DPI’s Innocence List: Defendants must have been convicted, sentenced to death and subsequently either- 1. Been acquitted of all charges related to the crime that placed them on death row, or 2. Had all charges related to the crime that placed them on death row dismissed by the prosecution or the courts, or 3. Been granted a complete pardon based on evidence of innocence. The list includes cases in which the release occurred 1973 or…
Read MoreDec 31, 2018
Justice Anthony Kennedy’s Death Penalty Jurisprudence
The retirement of Justice Anthony Kennedy from the U.S. Supreme Court after the 2017 – 2018 court term and his replacement with Justice Brett Kavanaugh marked a potentially pivotal change in the constitution of the Court with respect to death-penalty…
Read MoreDec 28, 2018
Record Lows Set Across the U.S. For Death Sentences Imposed in 2018
2018 was a record-low year for death-penalty usage in the United States, as eighteen death-penalty states set or matched records for the fewest new death sentences imposed in the modern history of U.S. capital punishment. (Click here to enlarge map.) Thirty-five U.S. states — including sixteen that authorized capital punishment in 2018 — did not impose any death sentences in 2018, while California and Pennsylvania, which…
Read MoreDec 27, 2018
National Think Tank Calls on Conservatives to Reject Death Penalty
The R Street Institute, a Washington-based policy think tank, has joined the growing number of conservative voices advocating for death-penalty abolition. In a commentary in the November/December 2018 issue of The American Conservative, the institute’s criminal justice and civil liberties policy director Arthur Rizer (pictured, left) and its Southeast region director Marc Hyden (pictured,…
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