Publications & Testimony
Items: 2031 — 2040
Nov 14, 2017
Ohio Set to Execute Gravely Ill Prisoner, Alva Campbell
Ohio death-row prisoner Alva Campbell (pictured) is 69, suffers from severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder, is unable to walk without a walker, relies on a colostomy bag that hangs outside his body, requires four breathing treatments each day, may have lung cancer, and is reportedly allergic to midazolam, the controversial first drug in the state’s lethal-injection process. Prison personnel have been unable to find veins…
Read MoreNov 13, 2017
Former Florida Death-Row Doctor: Experience of Veterans Highlights Death Penalty’s Failures
A former Florida death-row doctor says the experience of U.S. military veterans who have been sentenced to death provides a lens through which the public can better understand some of the failures of the state’s death penalty and identify opportunities for meaningful reform of the criminal…
Read MoreNov 10, 2017
Nebraska Proposes Untried Lethal-Injection Combination as Nevada Court Halts Execution With Similar Drugs
As Nebraska announced its intention to use a never-before-tried four-drug execution combination featuring the opiod pain medication fentanyl and the paralytic drug cisatracurium, a Nevada judge issued a stay of execution that put off the nation’s first attempted execution…
Read MoreNov 09, 2017
Anti-Death Penalty District Attorney Elected in Philadelphia, the Nation’s 3rd Largest Death Penalty County
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania—the nation’s third largest death-penalty county—has elected as its new district attorney a candidate who ran on a platform of ending mass incarceration and eschewing use of the death penalty. Democrat Lawrence Krasner (pictured), a longtime civil rights lawyer and opponent of the death penalty, who once joked that he’d“spent a career becoming completely unelectable,”…
Read MoreNov 08, 2017
Court Rulings Raise Questions of What Constitutes Incompetency and How is it Determined
Two recent high court rulings have raised questions of whether death-row prisoners are sufficiently mentally impaired to be deemed incompetent to be executed and who gets to make that determination. On November 7, the Arkansas Supreme Court issued an order staying the execution of death-row prisoner Jack Greene (pictured, left) to resolve whether that state’s mechanism to determine competency — giving the…
Read MoreNov 07, 2017
NEW VOICES: Former Law Enforcement Officials Say Arizona, Kansas Should End Death Penalty
Former high-ranking law enforcement officials from Arizona and Kansas have called on their states to end the death penalty. In separate op-ed stories one week apart, former Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard (pictured, left) and former Kansas Secretary of Corrections Roger Werholtz (pictured, right) conclude that the capital punishment schemes in their states have failed and should be abandoned. In…
Read MoreNov 06, 2017
Texas Set to Execute Mexican National Despite Treaty Violations, Innocence Claim
Texas plans to execute a Mexican national on November 8, despite claims that he is innocent and that Texas violated U.S. international treaty obligations by denying him access to legal assistance from his government. Senior Mexican diplomats called the death sentence imposed on Ruben Ramírez Cárdenas (pictured)“illegal” and a violation of due process. In a news conference in Mexico City on November 6, Carlos Sada, Mexico’s deputy…
Read MoreNov 03, 2017
Arkansas Supreme Court Orders Partial Disclosure of Information on State’s Lethal-Injection Drugs
The Arkansas Supreme Court has ruled that the state’s Freedom of Information Act requires the Arkansas Department of Correction (ADC) to release copies of the pharmaceutical drug and packaging labels for the supply of the drug midazolam that it intends to use in upcoming executions, but that the secrecy provisions of the state’s Methods of Execution Act permit the department to redact the batch and lot numbers that appear…
Read MoreNov 02, 2017
Texas Prosecutors Agree Bobby Moore is Intellectually Disabled, Should Be Resentenced to Life
In a Houston death-penalty case that reached the U.S. Supreme Court and resulted in a decision overturning the Texas courts’ standard for determining Intellectual Disability in capital cases, prosecutors have conceded that Bobby James Moore (pictured) is himself intellectually disabled and ineligible for the death penalty. In a brief filed November 1 in the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, Harris County…
Read MoreNov 01, 2017
Federal Court Finds Intentional Misconduct by Alabama Prosecutor, But Lets Death Penalty Stand
Finding that an Alabama prosecutor with a history of misconduct had“intentionally” made improper comments in the capital trial of Artez Hammonds (pictured)“in flagrant violation” of a pre-trial order warning him not to do so, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit nevertheless denied Hammonds’s appeal and permitted his conviction and death sentence to stand. While the court noted that the prosecutor, District…
Read More