Publications & Testimony

Items: 1941 — 1950


Feb 15, 2018

Washington State Senate Passes Death Penalty Abolition Bill

A bipar­ti­san bill to abol­ish the death penal­ty in Washington passed the state Senate on February 14 on a 26 – 22 vote. SB 6052 now moves to the House of Representatives, where the chair­woman of the House Judiciary Committee has said it will be giv­en a hear­ing. Today, the Washington State Senate took an his­toric, bipar­ti­san vote, pass­ing Attorney General-request­ed leg­is­la­tion to elim­i­nate the death penal­ty and replace it with life in prison without possibility…

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Feb 14, 2018

Pentagon Fires War Court Official Who Was Attempting to Negotiate End to Guantánamo Death-Penalty Trial

The sud­den fir­ing by U.S. Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis (left) of the Pentagon offi­cial who over­saw mil­i­tary com­mis­sion tri­als at Guantánamo Bay has raised con­cerns of polit­i­cal inter­fer­ence in the already tumul­tuous legal pro­ceed­ings in the death-penal­ty tri­als of the five men charged with plot­ting the 9/​11 attacks on the United…

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Feb 13, 2018

As Support for Death Penalty Falls in Utah, New Study Again Says Life Without Parole Costs Less

An analy­sis by the Utah Commission on Criminal and Juvenile Justice of the cost of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment has found that cas­es in which pros­e­cu­tors seek the death penal­ty are more cost­ly than cas­es in which life with­out parole was the max­i­mum sen­tence. The Commission’s Death Penalty Working Group reviewed recent stud­ies of death-penal­ty costs in Utah and across the coun­try and found that, while there was dis­agree­ment about the mag­ni­tude of the cost dif­fer­ence, there was consensus…

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Feb 12, 2018

Pennsylvania Death-Row Prisoners File Lawsuit Challenging Automatic, Permanent Solitary Confinement

Five pris­on­ers on death row in Pennsylvania have filed a class-action law­suit chal­leng­ing the Commonwealth’s pol­i­cy man­dat­ing soli­tary con­fine­ment for all con­demned pris­on­ers. The five named plain­tiffs have been held in soli­tary con­fine­ment between 16 and 27 years each, kept in cells the size of a park­ing space, allowed out for a max­i­mum of two hours per day for exer­cise, and denied human con­tact with fam­i­ly mem­bers dur­ing prison vis­its. The pris­on­ers, rep­re­sent­ed by the…

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Feb 09, 2018

Ohio Governor Grants Reprieve to Raymond Tibbetts Following Juror’s Call for Mercy

Ohio Governor John Kasich (pic­tured, left) has grant­ed a reprieve to Raymond Tibbetts (pic­tured, right), tem­porar­i­ly halt­ing his exe­cu­tion to per­mit the Ohio Parole Board to con­sid­er a juror’s plea for mer­cy in the case. In a February 8 let­ter to parole board Chairman Andre Imbrogno, the Governor request­ed that the Board con­vene a hear­ing to con­sid­er con­cerns about the case raised by Ross Geiger, one of the Tibbetts jurors. To facil­i­tate that review, Kasich…

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Feb 08, 2018

American Bar Association Resolution: Ban Death Penalty for Offenders Age 21 or Younger

On February 5, the American Bar Association (ABA) House of Delegates vot­ed over­whelm­ing­ly to adopt a res­o­lu­tion call­ing for an end to the death penal­ty for offend­ers who were 21 or younger at the time of the crime. According to a report accom­pa­ny­ing the res­o­lu­tion, there is a grow­ing med­ical con­sen­sus that key areas of the brain rel­e­vant to deci­sion-mak­ing and judg­ment con­tin­ue to devel­op into the ear­ly twen­ties.” The ABA first opposed apply­ing the death penal­ty against defendants younger…

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Feb 07, 2018

Nevada Prisoner Whose Case Confirmed Unconstitutionality of Mandatory Death Sentences Dies 

Raymond Wallace Shuman (pic­tured), whose case led to a 1987 U.S. Supreme Court deci­sion affirm­ing the uncon­sti­tu­tion­al­i­ty of manda­to­ry death sen­tences, has died in a Nevada prison at age 83. Shuman, one of the longest-incar­cer­at­ed pris­on­ers in Nevada his­to­ry, was serv­ing a life sen­tence for a 1958 mur­der when he was con­vict­ed of killing a fel­low pris­on­er in 1973. At that time, Nevada law man­dat­ed the death penal­ty for life-sentenced prisoners…

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Feb 06, 2018

New Mexico Bill to Restore Death Penalty Dies in Committee

The lat­est effort by death-penal­ty pro­po­nents to rein­state the death penal­ty in New Mexico has died in a House com­mit­tee. House Bill 155, which would have brought back the death penal­ty for mur­ders of chil­dren, police offi­cers, and cor­rec­tions employ­ees, was tabled by the House Consumer and Public Affairs Committee by a 3 – 2 vote fol­low­ing a Saturday hear­ing on the bill on February 3, 2018. The bill, intro­duced by Albuquerque Rep. Monica C. Youngblood, was the…

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Feb 05, 2018

Ohio Juror Asks Governor to Commute Death Sentence of Raymond Tibbetts

A juror who served on the cap­i­tal mur­der tri­al of Raymond Tibbetts (pic­tured) and vot­ed to sen­tence Tibbetts to death has writ­ten to Ohio Governor John Kasich ask­ing Kasich to halt Tibbetts’s sched­uled February 13 exe­cu­tion and com­mute his sen­tence to life with­out parole. In a January 30 let­ter to Governor Kasich, juror Ross Geiger — who, at the time of tri­al, described him­self as a con­ser­v­a­tive Republican — said after learn­ing the tru­ly…

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Feb 02, 2018

BOOK: Death-Row Exoneree Anthony Ray Hinton Publishes Heart-Wrenching Yet Ultimately Hopeful” Memoir

Anthony Ray Hinton spent thir­ty years con­fined on Alabamas death row for mur­ders he did not com­mit. Three years after his exon­er­a­tion and release, he has pub­lished a mem­oir of his life, The Sun Does Shine: How I Found Life and Freedom on Death Row, that recounts sto­ries from his child­hood, the cir­cum­stances of his arrest, the trav­es­ty of his tri­al, how he sur­vived and grew on death row, and how he won his free­dom. The book,…

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