Publications & Testimony
Items: 2081 — 2090
Aug 03, 2017
Political Analysis: Is Conservative Support the Future of Death-Penalty Abolition?
In a forthcoming article in the Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, released online in July, Ben Jones argues that, despite the popular conception of death-penalty abolition as a politically progressive cause, its future success may well depend upon building support among Republicans and political conservatives. In The Republican Party, Conservatives, and the Future of Capital Punishment, Jones — the Assistant Director of Rock Ethics Institute at Pennsylvania…
Read MoreAug 02, 2017
Taken Off Death Row in 2014, Intellectually Disabled South Carolina Man Now Gets New Trial
South Carolina prosecutors announced on July 25 that they would not appeal a trial court ruling, granting a new, non-capital trial to former death-row prisoner Kenneth Simmons (pictured). Finding that prosecutors had presented false DNA testimony that “severely deprived” Simmons of his due process rights, a Dorchester County Circuit Judge overturned Simmons’s…
Read MoreAug 01, 2017
NEW RESOURCES: Capital Punishment and the State of Criminal Justice 2017
The American Bar Association has released a new publication, The State of Criminal Justice 2017, an annual report examining major issues, trends, and significant changes in America’s criminal justice system. In a chapter devoted to capital punishment, Ronald J. Tabak, chair of the Death Penalty Committee of the ABA’s Section of Individual Rights and Responsibilities, describes significant death penalty cases and developments over the past year. Tabak…
Read MoreAug 01, 2017
United States Supreme Court Decisions: 2016 – 2017 Term
Cert. granted: January 13, 2017 Argument: April 24, 2017 (Read the Transcript)Decided: June 26, 2017…
Read MoreJul 31, 2017
Nebraska Death Penalty Challenge Unresolved, as Defendant Fires Lawyers, Pleads Guilty
A Nebraska trial judge has permitted Patrick Schroeder (pictured) — whose lawyers from the Nebraska Commission on Public Advocacy had challenged the constitutionality of the state’s death penalty — to fire his lawyers, withdraw the challenge, and plead guilty to first-degree murder. The court deferred until August 22 whether to also permit Schroeder to waive his right to have a jury decide whether aggravating circumstance exist that could make him eligible for…
Read MoreJul 28, 2017
Jury Vote Spares Death Penalty for Mississippi Man With History of “Chronic and Severe” Mental Illness
A Jackson County, Mississippi judge has sentenced Scotty Lakeith Street (pictured), a capital defendant suffering from chronic paranoid schizophrenia, to life without possibility of parole after his capital sentencing jury did not reach a unanimous sentencing verdict. The sentence is another in a series of notable cases in which jurors presented with evidence of mental illness have spared severely mentally ill defendants the death penalty. Street was…
Read MoreJul 27, 2017
Oklahoma Prisoners Argue State’s Application of the Death Penalty Is Racially Biased, Unconstitutional
Newly available evidence shows that Oklahoma’s death penalty unconstitutionally discriminates on the basis of race, according to petitions filed by lawyers seeking to overturn the death sentences imposed on two African-American defendants, Julius Darius Jones (pictured) and Tremane Wood. Jones — a high school athlete and honor student who did not fit the description of the shooter and who has continuously maintained his innocence — and Wood were…
Read MoreJul 26, 2017
Ohio Executes Ronald Phillips, Resumes Executions After 3½-Year Pause
After a hiatus of 3½ years, Ohio resumed executions on July 26, putting Ronald Phillips (pictured) to death with a three-drug combination of the sedative midazolam, the paralytic drug rocuronium bromide, and the heart-stopping drug potassium chloride. Phillips was pronounced dead at 10:43 a.m. It was the state’s first execution since the botched execution of Dennis McGuire on January 16, 2014, and the 15th in the U.S. in…
Read MoreJul 25, 2017
In Lawsuit Settlement, Arizona to End Automatic Solitary Confinement for Death-Row Prisoners
Arizona will soon end its policy of automatically and indefinitely incarcerating death-row prisoners in solitary confinement, joining a growing number of states to ease draconian conditions on their state death rows. Arizona’s action is part of a settlement of a federal lawsuit filed against the Department of Corrections (DOC) by death-row prisoner Scott Nordstrom (pictured), which argued that the state’s death-row conditions were unconstitutionally…
Read MoreJul 24, 2017
Pennsylvania Prosecutors Give Up Death Penalty in Murder of 4 to Learn Location of Missing Victim
Bucks County, Pennsylvania prosecutors have agreed not to seek the death penalty for defendant Cosmo DiNardo (pictured), in exchange for his confession to a quadruple murder, information implicating an accomplice, and information permitting authorities to recover the body of one of the victims. The deal was made quickly — just one week after the beginning of the investigation into the disappearance of the four young men and the discovery of three of the…
Read More