Publications & Testimony
Items: 2041 — 2050
Oct 31, 2017
Mississippi, Pennsylvania Courts Grant New Trials to Wrongly Condemned Prisoners
Appeals courts in Mississippi and Pennsylvania have granted new trials to two men who have long asserted their innocence of charges that had sent them to their…
Read MoreOct 30, 2017
STUDY: In Oklahoma, Race and Gender of Victim Significantly Affect Death Penalty
A new study of more than two decades of murders in Oklahoma has found that defendants charged with killing a white woman have odds of being sentenced to death in the Sooner State that are nearly ten times greater than if they had been charged with killing a man who is a racial…
Read MoreOct 27, 2017
New Report Documents “Dramatic Rise” in Republican Support for Death-Penalty Repeal
“The death penalty is dying in the United States, and Republicans are contributing to its demise,” concludes a new report, The Right Way, released on October 25 by the advocacy group Conservatives Concerned About the Death…
Read MoreOct 26, 2017
GALLUP POLL: Support for Death Penalty in U.S. Falls to a 45-Year Low
“Americans’ support for the death penalty has dipped to a level not seen in 45 years,” according to the results of the 2017 Gallup poll released on October 26. Gallup reported that, in a nationwide survey of 1,028 adults polled October 5 – 11, 2017, 55% of Americans said they are“in favor of the death penalty for a person convicted of murder,” down from a reported 60% in October 2016. The five percentage-point decline represented an 8% decrease in the…
Read MoreOct 25, 2017
Federal Court Rules to Protect the Interest of Incompetent North Carolina Death-Row Exoneree
A federal judge has voided a contract that had provided Orlando-based attorney Patrick Megaro hundreds of thousands of dollars of compensation at the expense of Henry McCollum (pictured left, with his brother Leon Brown), an intellectually disabled former death-row prisoner who was exonerated in 2014 after DNA testing by the North Carolina Innocence Inquiry Commission showed that he had not committed the brutal rape and murder…
Read MoreOct 24, 2017
False or Flawed Forensic Evidence Raises Questions About Two Texas Capital Convictions
Two recent appellate decisions by the Texas courts have thrust into the national spotlight the continuing controversy over the use of false or flawed forensic testimony to secure convictions in death…
Read MoreOct 23, 2017
DPIC Analysis: Execution Trends Continue to Decline in 2017
The long-term decline in executions in the United States will continue in 2017, according to an analysis of execution data by the Death Penalty Information Center. Although the number of executions in the United States in 2017 will surpass the 20 executions carried out last year — which had been a 25-year low — the data reflects that long-term, mid-term, and short-term execution trends in the United States will…
Read MoreOct 20, 2017
Witnesses — Alabama Prisoner Still Moving 20 Minutes Into Execution With Controversial Drug
Alabama executed Torrey McNabb (pictured) on October 19, amid questions of state interference in the judicial process, resulting in another apparent failure by the drug midazolam to render a prisoner insensate during an execution. Alabama prison officials defended the execution — which took 35 minutes — as conforming with state protocol, most of which has been withheld from the public. Montgomery…
Read MoreOct 19, 2017
Supreme Court Directs Florida to Reconsider Intellectual Disability Decision in Death Penalty Case
The United States Supreme Court has ordered the Florida Supreme Court to reconsider a decision that had denied a death-row prisoner’s claim that he was ineligible for the death penalty because he has Intellectual Disability. On October 16, the Court reversed and remanded the case of Tavares Wright (pictured, left), directing the Florida courts to reconsider his intellectual-disability claim in light of the…
Read MoreOct 18, 2017
Death-Penalty Prosecutions Create Million-Dollar Budget Burden for South Dakota County
County Commissioners in Pennington County, South Dakota have approved budget increases of a half-million dollars each for the county’s courts and its public defender office for 2018, largely as a result of two high-profile death-penalty prosecutions. Taxpayers will shoulder most of the financial burden resulting from the capital prosecutions of Rapid City defendants Jonathon Klinetobe and Richard Hirth,…
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