Publications & Testimony
Items: 1851 — 1860
Jul 30, 2018
New Conservative Voices Criticize Death Penalty as an ‘Inept, Biased and Corrupt’ Big Government Policy
Calling the death penalty a wasteful“big government” policy that is“inept, biased, and corrupt,” a libertarian think tank and a New Orleans columnist have joined the chorus of conservative voices calling for the end of the death…
Read MoreJul 30, 2018
Disposition of Cases Since Reinstatement of Federal Death Penalty in 1988
The information below is quoted in full from the Federal Death Penalty Resource…
Read MoreJul 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 MoreJul 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 MoreJul 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 MoreJul 24, 2018
Arkansas Prisons Suspend Search for Execution Drugs, Ask For Even Broader Drug Secrecy Law
Unable to legitimately purchase lethal-injection drugs or carry out executions without revealing who manufactured its drugs, Arkansas has suspended efforts to obtain a new supply of execution drugs until state law is amended to keep secret the identity of the drug…
Read MoreJul 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 MoreJul 20, 2018
Ohio Governor Commutes Death Sentence Based on Jurors Concerns About Unfair Sentencing
Ohio Governor John Kasich (pictured, left) has commuted the death sentence imposed on Raymond Tibbetts (pictured, right) to life without parole, in response to a juror’s concerns about the unfairness of the sentencing proceedings in the case. It was the seventh time Kasich had commuted a prisoner’s…
Read MoreJul 19, 2018
Court Order: No Executions in Louisiana For Another Year
A Louisiana federal court judge has ordered that executions in the state be stayed for at least another year. On July 16, 2018, in proceedings brought by Louisiana death-row prisoners challenging the state’s lethal-injection protocol, U.S. District Court Judge Shelly Dick granted a request by state officials to extend by one year the temporary stay of execution that has been in effect in Louisiana since 2014. Jeffrey Cody, the state’s lawyer in the case,…
Read MoreJul 18, 2018
Texas Executes Another Defendant of Color Over Objection of Victim’s Family
Against the wishes of the victim’s family and amidst charges that the rejection of his clemency application was rooted in racial bias, Texas executed Christopher Young (pictured) on July 17, 2018. Young — who had been drunk and high on drugs when he killed Hashmukh Patel during a failed robbery in 2004 — had repeatedly expressed remorse for the murder and had been mentoring troubled youth in an effort to prevent them from repeating his…
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