Publications & Testimony
Items: 1881 — 1890
Jun 14, 2018
Retired Warden, Former Judge and Prosecutor Urge Ohio to Grant Clemency to Raymond Tibbetts
The Ohio Parole Board held a hearing on June 14, 2018 to consider clemency for death-row prisoner Raymond Tibbetts, whose February 13 execution was halted by Governor John Kasich to consider a juror’s request that Tibbets be spared. Ross Geiger, one of the twelve jurors who sentenced Tibbetts to death in 1997, wrote to Governor Kasich on January 30 expressing“deep concerns” about a“very flawed” trial and saying he“would…
Read MoreJun 13, 2018
Television Documentary Chronicles Innocence Claims of Two Death-Row Prisoners
A new documentary airing on ABC tells the stories of Darlie Lynn Routier and Julius Jones, two death-row prisoners who have long argued they were wrongfully…
Read MoreJun 12, 2018
Pew Poll Finds Uptick in Death Penalty Support, Though Still Near Historic Lows
Just under 54% of Americans say they support the death penalty and 39% say they are opposed, according to the results of a Pew Research poll released June 11, 2018. The poll — administered between April 25 and May 1, one month after President Trump called for the death penalty for drug trafficking — reflects a five-point increase in support for capital punishment, up from the record-low 49% recorded in Pew’s 2016…
Read MoreJun 11, 2018
Georgia Supreme Court Hears First Death-Penalty Appeal in Two Years Amidst Sharp Decline in Death Sentences
In the midst of a sharp decline in death sentences in the state, the Georgia Supreme Court on June 4 heard a direct appeal in a capital case for the first time in two years. In March 2018, Georgia reached the four-year mark since it had last imposed a death sentence, a dramatic change for a state that once handed down 15 death sentences in a single year. The decline in Georgia’s death penalty exemplifies broader national…
Read MoreJun 08, 2018
Legislature Lets Illinois Governor’s Death Penalty Reinstatement Proposal Die
An attempt by Illinois Governor Bruce Rauner (pictured) to reinstate Illinois’ death penalty by attaching it as an“amendatory veto” to proposed gun-control legislation has failed. Rather than accede to a plan that would condition stricter gun regulation upon reintroducing the death penalty for murders of police officers and any murder with more than a single victim, the state legislature rewrote the gun-control measure the governor had…
Read MoreJun 07, 2018
“Outlier” Texas Court of Criminal Appeals Upholds Bobby James Moore’s Death Sentence
In a ruling three dissenters criticized as an“outlier,” and after having been rebuked by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2017 for ignoring the medical consensus defining intellectual disability, a sharply divided (5 – 3) Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (CCA) has upheld the death sentence imposed on Bobby James Moore (pictured) 38 years ago. On June 6, 2018, the CCA ruled that Bobby Moore is not intellectually disabled under the most…
Read MoreJun 06, 2018
Federal Appeals Court Hears Argument in Case of Texas Death-Row Prisoner Who Gouged Out His Eyes
A severely mentally ill Texas death-row prisoner who gouged out his eyes and ate one of them has asked a federal appeals court to allow him to appeal a lower court decision that upheld his conviction and death sentence and found that he had been competent…
Read MoreJun 05, 2018
Supreme Court Asked to Review Constitutionality of Death Sentence Grounded in Anti-Gay Stereotypes
A gay man on death row in South Dakota has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to review his case and to rule that it is unconstitutional for jurors to impose the death penalty based upon anti-gay animus and stereotypes. Charles Rhines (pictured) argues that South Dakota’s courts improperly refused to consider evidence — including an affidavit from one of his jurors that the jury“knew that he was a homosexual and thought that he shouldn’t be able…
Read MoreJun 04, 2018
Justice Sotomayor Criticizes Supreme Court For Failing to Intervene in Texas Death-Row Prisoner’s Case
Over a strong dissent by Justice Sonia Sotomayor (pictured), the United States Supreme Court on June 4 declined to review the case of Texas condemned prisoner Carlos Trevino, who had argued that his lawyer was ineffective for failing to investigate and present mitigating evidence of Trevino’s brain damage and developmental delays from his extensive prenatal exposure to alcohol. Having failed to investigate, Trevino’s lawyer…
Read MoreJun 01, 2018
ANALYSIS: Research Supports Assertion that U.S. Death Penalty “Devalues Black Lives”
The Movement for Black Lives has called for abolishing the death penalty in the United States, asserting that capital punishment is a racist legacy of slavery, lynching, and Jim Crow that“devalues Black lives.” A Spring 2018 article in the University of Chicago’s philosophy journal Ethics, co-authored by Michael Cholbi, Professor of Philosophy at California State Polytechnic University and Alex Madva, Assistant…
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