Publications & Testimony

Items: 1831 — 1840


Aug 02, 2018

New Podcast: Authors of Tennessee Death-Penalty Study Discuss Arbitrariness

The lat­est edi­tion of Discussions with DPIC fea­tures H.E. Miller, Jr. and Bradley MacLean, co-authors of a recent study on the appli­ca­tion of Tennessee’s death penal­ty. Miller and MacLean describe the find­ings from their arti­cle, Tennessee’s Death Penalty Lottery, in which they exam­ined the fac­tors that influ­ence death-penal­­ty deci­sions in the state. Based on their sur­vey of thir­ty years of homi­cide cas­es, they found that whether a death sen­tence is imposed is…

Read More

Jul 31, 2018

Associated Press Reporter Michael Graczyk, Who Witnessed More Than 400 Executions, Retires

Michael Graczyk (pic­tured), who wit­nessed more than 400 exe­cu­tions as an Associated Press reporter in Texas, has retired after near­ly 46 years with the news ser­vice. On March 14, 1984, Texas exe­cut­ed James Autry — the sec­ond per­son put to death in Texas since the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the state’s cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment statute in 1976. According to a non-exhaus­­tive list of exe­cu­tion wit­ness­es main­tained by the Texas…

Read More

Jul 27, 2018

Public Health Experts, Generic-Pharmaceuticals Association Warn Lethal-Injection Policies Put Public Health at Risk

State lethal-injec­­tion prac­tices may have col­lat­er­al con­se­quences that place pub­lic health at risk, accord­ing to briefs filed in the U.S. Supreme Court on July 23, 2018 by pub­lic health experts and an asso­ci­a­tion rep­re­sent­ing gener­ic drug man­u­fac­tur­ers. In ami­cus (or friend-of-the-court) briefs filed in con­nec­tion with a chal­lenge brought by death-row pris­on­er Russell Bucklew (pic­tured) to Missouri​’s use of lethal injec­tion, the…

Read More

Jul 26, 2018

Montana Prosecutors Drop Death Penalty Against Mentally Ill Defendant

Lloyd Barrus (pic­tured, left) will not become the first per­son sen­tenced to death in Montana this cen­tu­ry, after pros­e­cu­tors dropped their pur­suit of the death penal­ty for the killing of a sher­if­f’s deputy. In a motion filed July 19, 2018, Broadwater County Attorney Cory Swanson (pic­tured, right) wrote that,​“after exten­sive analy­sis of the Defendant’s his­to­ry of … men­tal ill­ness,” the state would no longer seek the death…

Read More

Jul 25, 2018

Florida Juries Reject Death Sentences for Four Men, Highlighting Impact of Unanimity Requirement

Juries in two Broward County, Florida death-penal­­ty tri­als have hand­ed down life sen­tences for four cap­i­tal defen­dants in the span of one week, high­light­ing the effect of a new Florida law requir­ing the unan­i­mous agree­ment of the jury before a defen­dant can be sen­tenced to death. On July 16, a Broward County jury spared three defen­dants—Eloyn Ingraham, Bernard Forbes, and Andre Delancy—whom it had convicted…

Read More

Jul 23, 2018

North Carolina Death-Row Prisoners Challenge Retroactive Repeal of Racial Justice Act

Four African-American death-row pris­on­ers in North Carolina whose death sen­tences had been over­turned for racial dis­crim­i­na­tion have chal­lenged the con­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of sub­se­quent state court rul­ings that rein­stat­ed their death sen­tences and then denied them a new hear­ing on their dis­crim­i­na­tion claims. The four—Marcus Robinson (pic­tured), Tilmon Golphin, Quintel Augustine, and Christina Walters—had…

Read More