Publications & Testimony
Items: 1831 — 1840
Aug 23, 2018
Article Considers “Frontier Justice” and the West’s Legacy of Lynching
In his recent article, Reckoning with History: The legacy of lynching in the West, historian Adam Sowards challenges the view romanticized in American popular mythology that“frontier justice” was a necessary community response in“a violent frontier where the need for justice sometimes preceded an established legal system.” In fact, he says, although Westerners created an elaborate rhetoric of a“Western vigilante tradition” to…
Read MoreAug 22, 2018
NEW RESOURCES: Capital Punishment and the State of Criminal Justice 2018
The American Bar Association’s Criminal Justice Section has released its annual report on issues, trends, and significant changes in America’s criminal justice system. The new publication, The State of Criminal Justice 2018, includes a chapter by Ronald J. Tabak, chair of the Death Penalty Committee of the ABA’s Section of Civil Rights and Social Justice, describing significant death penalty cases and capital punishment…
Read MoreAug 21, 2018
In Dissent, Judge Says Death Penalty Violates Arizona State Constitution
An Arizona appeals court judge has urged the state’s supreme court to rule that the death penalty violates Arizona’s state constitutional prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment. In an August 16, 2018 opinion dissenting from the Arizona Supreme Court’s affirmance of death-row prisoner Jason Bush’s conviction and sentence, Court of Appeals Judge Lawrence Winthrop (pictured) — sitting by designation in the…
Read MoreAug 20, 2018
Military Commission Bars Guantánamo Death-Penalty Prosecutors From Using Statements by 9/11 Detainees
A Guantánamo military commission judge has barred prosecutors from using statements five accused 9/11 plotters made to the FBI after they had been subjected to years of torture in CIA black sites. On August 17, 2018, the military judge, Army Colonel James L. Pohl (pictured), suppressed all use of the statements, ruling that restrictions prosecutors had placed on the ability of defense counsel to interview witnesses and…
Read MoreAug 17, 2018
New Neuroscience Research Suggests Age Limit for Death-Penalty Eligibility May be Too Low
When the U.S. Supreme Court banned the death penalty for juvenile offenders in 2005 in Roper v. Simmons, Justice Anthony Kennedy’s opinion for the Court acknowledged the inherent arbitrariness in selecting an age cutoff.“The qualities that distinguish juveniles from adults do not disappear when an individual turns 18,” he wrote.“However, a line must be drawn.” New neuroscience research suggests that the age-18 line may be too low. The…
Read MoreAug 16, 2018
Pennsylvania’s Death Row Continues to Shrink With Plea Deal for Ronald Champney
Nineteen years after having been sentenced to death in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, and five years after winning a new trial, Ronald Champney entered a no-contest plea to lesser charges in a plea deal that could soon set him free. Under the plea deal, which the court accepted on August 10, 2018, Champney agreed — without admitting guilt — that prosecutors had sufficient evidence for a jury to convict him of third-degree…
Read MoreAug 15, 2018
Fox Commentator: Oklahoma “Frontier Justice” Has Produced “Wretched Record” of Wrongful Capital Convictions
Calling Oklahoma“the notorious home of‘Hang’Em High’ executions,” conservative commentator and Fox News contributor Michelle Malkin (pictured) has urged the state to adopt sytemic reforms to address its“wretched record on…
Read MoreAug 14, 2018
Nebraska Executes Carey Dean Moore in First Execution in 21 Years
On August 14, 2018, more than two decades after last putting a prisoner to death, Nebraska executed Carey Dean Moore (pictured). The execution — which used an untested drug formula of diazepam (the sedative Valium), fentanyl citrate (an opioid painkiller), cisatracurium besylate (a paralytic), and potassium chloride to stop the heart — took 23 minutes. It was the state’s first execution ever by…
Read MoreAug 14, 2018
Florida Justices Halt Execution as Handwritten Notes Contradict Police Testimony
The Florida Supreme Court has halted the execution of Jose Antonio Jimenez (pictured), scheduled for August…
Read MoreAug 10, 2018
Tennessee Executes Billy Ray Irick in First Execution Since 2009
Over sharp dissents by justices of the U.S. and Tennessee Supreme Courts and lingering questions about the prisoner’s history of mental illness and the efficacy of the state’s lethal-injection protocol, Tennessee executed Billy Ray Irick (pictured) on August 9. He was the first person executed by the state since 2009. Justice Sonia Sotomayor described the process as a“rush to execute” and a descent into…
Read More