Publications & Testimony
Items: 2071 — 2080
Sep 19, 2017
Orange County Misconduct Scandal Costs Taxpayers $2.5 Million in Failed Capital Prosecution
The failed capital prosecution of Scott Dekraai for the worst mass murder in Orange County, California history has cost taxpayers more than $2.5 million — more than double the average cost of a California death-penalty case — and the pricetag for continuing investigations into official misconduct by the county district attorney’s and sheriff’s offices continues to rise. Unlike most capital cases, the costs were not…
Read MoreSep 18, 2017
STUDY: Worst Crimes Carry Highest Risk of Bad Evidence, Wrongful Convictions
Two professors of sociology and criminology who reviewed more than 1500 cases in which convicted prisoners were later exonerated have found a direct relationship between the seriousness of the crime and miscarriages of justice:“the‘worst of the worst crimes,’” they say,“produce the‘worst of the worst evidence.’ ” In their research — reported in the law review article, The Worst of the Worst: Heinous Crimes and Erroneous Evidence—University of…
Read MoreSep 15, 2017
Prosecutors Accept Life Plea by Severely Mentally Ill Man in Killing of Texas Sheriff’s Deputy
Texas prosecutors have dropped their pursuit of the death penalty against a severely mentally ill capital defendant charged with what they characterized as the“ambush murder” of a Harris County sheriff’s deputy. Special prosecutor Brett Ligon (pictured, left) — the Montgomery County District Attorney who was handling the prosecution because Houston prosecutors had a conflict that prevented them from participating in the case — announced on September 13 that…
Read MoreSep 14, 2017
Human Rights Groups Urge U.S. Government To Sanction Officials Accused Of Torture, Executions Under New Law
A coalition of 23 human rights groups, including Human Rights First, Human Rights Watch, and Reprieve, has urged the United States government to issue sanctions against foreign government officials who they say have used the death penalty to repress political dissent by torturing peaceful protesters into confessing to capital offenses they…
Read MoreSep 13, 2017
Ohio Executes Gary Otte as State and Federal Courts Decline to Review Use of Death Penalty Against Those Under Age 21
Ohio executed Gary Otte on September 13 after both the United States Supreme Court and the Ohio Supreme Court declined to review his challenge to the constitutionality of applying the death penalty against people who were younger than age 21 at the time…
Read MoreSep 12, 2017
NEW PODCAST: DPIC Study Finds No Evidence that Death Penalty Deters Murder or Protects Police
A Death Penalty Information Center analysis of U.S. murder data from 1987 through 2015 has found no evidence that the death penalty deters murder or protects police. Instead, the evidence shows that murder rates, including murders of police officers, are consistently higher in death-penalty states than in states that have abolished the death penalty. And far from experiencing increases in murder rates or open season on law enforcement, the data show that states that…
Read MoreSep 11, 2017
Sixteen Years Later, No Date in Sight for Death-Penalty Trial of Alleged 9/11 Conspirators
Sixteen years later, the alleged perpetrators of the September 11, 2001 hijackings and attacks on the Pentagon and World Trade Center, and the downing of Flight 93, have yet to be tried, and issues relating to the use of evidence obtained by torture, the appropriateness and legality of trials by military commission, and where and how they should be tried raise questions as to whether and when a trial may take place. The five men charged in the attack — alleged…
Read MoreSep 08, 2017
Virginia, Pennsylvania Death Rows Smallest in a Quarter Century as Death Sentences Show Long-Term Decline
Death rows are shrinking nationwide, and the experience in states like Virginia and Pennsylvania helps explain why. Virginia’s death row has fallen from a reported high of 58 in 1995 to four in September 2017, the lowest it has been since 1979. Pennsylvania’s death row of 160 prisoners is its smallest in nearly 25 years — down from 175 last December and from a reported 247 in April…
Read MoreSep 07, 2017
For Second Time in Two Years, Georgia Prepares to Execute Black Prisoner Whom White Juror Called N‑Word
For the second time in as many years, Georgia is preparing to execute an intellectually disabled African-American man, despite evidence that the death verdict in his case may have been tainted by a white juror’s…
Read MoreSep 06, 2017
Federal Appeals Court Sides with Alabama Prisoners on Lethal-Injection Case, Sends Back to District Court
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit has issued a ruling reviving a lawsuit brought by Alabama death-row prisoners that challenged the constitutionality of the state’s three-drug execution protocol using the controversial lethal-injection drug midazolam. The unanimous decision by the three-judge federal appeals panel on September 1 reversed a federal district court ruling against several…
Read More