Publications & Testimony
Items: 1821 — 1830
Sep 07, 2018
Filming Underway for Movie Adaptation of ‘Just Mercy’
Filming for the movie adaptation of Bryan Stevenson’s best-selling book, Just Mercy, began August 27, 2018 in Montgomery, Alabama. The film will feature Michael B. Jordan (Creed, Black Panther) as Stevenson and Oscar-winner Jamie Foxx (Ray, Django Unchained) as wrongfully convicted death-row prisoner Walter…
Read MoreSep 06, 2018
BOOK: Slavery and the Death Penalty
“It is widely recognized that capital punishment in the United States of America continues to be imbued with the legacy of slavery” and, to end it, American death-penalty abolitionists“should draw on the radicalism of [anti-slavery] abolitionists.” So argues British death-penalty scholar and abolitionist Dr. Bharat Malkani, a Senior Lecturer at the Cardiff University School of Law and Politics, in his new book, Slavery and the Death…
Read MoreSep 05, 2018
Louisiana Death-Penalty Case Tainted by Judge’s Conflict of Interest Returns to U.S. Supreme Court
A Louisiana death-row prisoner is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to review the constitutionality of his conviction and death sentence a second time based upon allegations that the trial judge had an undisclosed conflict of interest. In his petition to review his conviction for a triple-murder involving the death of a New Orleans police officer, Rogers Lacaze (pictured) argues that his right to due process was violated when his…
Read MoreSep 04, 2018
Nebraska Supreme Court Hears Challenge to Three-Judge Death Sentencing
The Nebraska Supreme Court heard oral argument on August 30, 2018 in a case challenging the constitutionality of the state’s capital sentencing procedure, which requires a three-judge panel to decide whether to impose a death sentence. Attorneys for death-row prisoner John Lotter said the state’s three-judge sentencing violates the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments as applied to Florida’s capital sentencing law in Hurst v.
Read MoreAug 31, 2018
Cases in Sudan, Saudi Arabia Illustrate Use of Death Penalty Against Women to Enforce Gender Norms
In high-profile cases in Sudan and Saudi Arabia, human rights advocates are protesting the threatened use of the death penalty against women for resisting oppression. In the Sudan, prosecutors are seeking to reinstate the death sentence against Noura Hussein (pictured), a teen girl forced into marriage who killed her abusive husband as he tried to rape her. The Saudi Arabian government is seeking the death penalty…
Read MoreAug 30, 2018
Cincinnati’s Aggressive DA and a Vatican Priest (His High School Classmate) Spar About the Death Penalty
Pope Francis’ recent declaration committing the Catholic Church to opposing capital punishment in all circumstances has produced an unusual public war of words about the practices of Catholic public officials in one of the country’s most aggressive death-penalty…
Read MoreAug 29, 2018
Congressional Black Caucus Asks Oklahoma Governor to Review Case of Julius Jones
The Congressional Black Caucus has urged Oklahoma Governor Mary Fallin to review the case of death-row prisoner Julius Jones (pictured) and to use her authority to correct what it characterized as his“wrongful conviction.” In an August 21, 2018 letter to the Governor, the Black Caucus — an organization of African-American members of the U.S. House of Representatives — expressed its“deep concerns” about racial bias in the…
Read MoreAug 28, 2018
Amnesty International Issues Report on the Death Penalty in Florida
A new report by Amnesty International says Florida’s approach to redressing the nearly 400 unconstitutional non-unanimous death sentences imposed in the state has deepened its status as an outlier on death-penalty issues by“add[ing] an extra layer of arbitrariness to [the state’s] already discriminatory and error-prone capital…
Read MoreAug 27, 2018
New Study Finds Link Between Perception of Resource Scarcity and Support for Death Penalty
A new study by an interdisciplinary team of Arizona State University psychology researchers has found a link between the actual and perceived scarcity of resources and support for capital punishment. The study, currently in press but available online on August 10 in the science journal, Evolution and Human Behavior, discovered that countries with greater resource scarcity were more likely to have a death penalty, as were U.S. states with…
Read MoreAug 24, 2018
Amidst Nebraska Execution-Secrecy Controversy, California Judge Lets Execution-Access Lawsuit Proceed
As lawyers for Nevada told their state supreme court that a controversial Nebraska execution had been carried out without problems, a federal judge issued a ruling allowing a lawsuit to proceed that would force California to allow media witnesses to observe executions in that state in their entirety. The developments in the cases in the two states highlight an ongoing controversy over the lack of transparency and…
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