Publications & Testimony
Items: 2091 — 2100
Jul 20, 2017
Diverse Coalition Urges Ohio Governor to Halt Resumption of Executions
The Chairman of a state task force to reform Ohio’s death penalty and two former state Attorney Generals have joined a diverse coalition of public officials, death-row exonerees, family members of murder victims, former corrections officials, and religious leaders urging Ohio Governor John Kasich to halt the state’s planned resumption of executions. Citing legislative inaction on critical reforms, the high risk of error, and botched executions, the groups held a press…
Read MoreJul 19, 2017
New Generation of Prosecutors May Signal Shift in Death Penalty Policies
A new generation of prosecutors, elected across the country on a platform of criminal justice reform, are taking a different approach to criminal justice policies than their predecessors, including a reduction in the use of capital punishment. A Christian Science Monitor profile of these prosecutors — focusing on Mark Gonzalez (pictured), the Nueces County, Texas, district attorney — says “[f]rom Texas to Florida to Illinois, many of these young prosecutors are eschewing the death…
Read MoreJul 18, 2017
Lawyers Say Utah Is Underfunding Death-Penalty Appellate Defense
Utah is not providing sufficient funding to competently represent death-row prisoners during their appeals, according to a motion filed on behalf of Douglas Lovell, the man most recently sentenced to death in the state. Because of that, Lovell’s lawyer Samuel Newton says, Lovell’s death sentence should be vacated and he should be resentenced to life in…
Read MoreJul 17, 2017
Report Finds High Levels of Misconduct in Four Top Death Sentencing Counties
Four counties that rank among the most aggressive users of capital punishment in the United States have prolonged patterns of prosecutorial misconduct, according to a new report by the Harvard-based Fair Punishment Project. The report, “The Recidivists: Four Prosecutors Who Repeatedly Violate the Constitution,” examined state appellate court decisions in California, Louisiana, Missouri, and Tennessee from 2010 – 2015, and found that prosecutors in Orange County, CA;…
Read MoreJul 14, 2017
Pioneers in Efforts to Defend Death-Penalty Cases, End Capital Punishment Remembered in New Book, Obituary
The legacies of Scharlette Holdman (pictured) and Marie Deans—two women who changed the landscape of capital punishment in the United States — are memorialized in a recent story in the Marshall Project and a new book scheduled for release in…
Read MoreJul 13, 2017
Florida Death-Row Population Drops to 12-Year Low As Jury Unanimity Ruling Takes Effect
The number of prisoners on Florida’s death row is now lower than it was on June 30, 2005, as the pace of death sentencing slows and courts reverse the unconstitutional non-unanimous death sentences by which numerous capital defendants had been condemned. Applying the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2014 ruling in Hurst v. Florida and subsequent Florida Supreme Court decisions in Hurst v. State and Perry v. State, state courts…
Read MoreJul 12, 2017
Federal Appeals Court Grants Texas Prisoner’s Request for Evaluation of Competency to Be Executed
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has reversed a ruling by a Texas federal district court that had denied Scott Panetti (pictured), a severely mentally ill death-row prisoner, the appointment of counsel and funding for a mental health expert and investigator to evaluate his competency to be executed. In a 2 – 1 ruling issued July 11, 2017, the Fifth Circuit, noting that “a decade has now passed since the last determination of whether this…
Read MoreJul 11, 2017
Journal of Psychiatrist Who Presided Over 14 Texas Executions Reveals Mental Toll That May Have Contributed to Suicide
As a psychiatrist in the Wayne Unit of Texas’ Huntsville prison from 1960 to 1963, Dr. Lee Hartman presided over 14 electric-chair executions. When his grandson, Ben Hartman, a journalist, began investigating Dr. Hartman’s life, he discovered journals that chronicle those executions and the psychological toll they took, possibly contributing to Dr. Hartman’s suicide in 1964. Dr. Hartman’s journals contain basic data on the men who were executed, including their names, race, a summary of the…
Read MoreJul 10, 2017
Independent Pathologist Says Autopsy Reveals Problems With Virginia’s Execution of Ricky Gray
Something went wrong during the execution of Ricky Gray (pictured), who was put to death in Virginia on January 18, 2017, according to an independent expert who reviewed the official autopsy report of Gray’s death. Dr. Mark Edgar, associate director of bone and soft tissue pathology at the Emory University School of Medicine, reviewed the official autopsy report, which Gray’s family obtained from the Virginia medical examiner’s office. Dr. Edgar says Gray…
Read MoreJul 07, 2017
Resentencing of Intellectually Disabled Prisoner Highlights Death Penalty Decline in South Carolina and Nationwide
In 1989, William Henry Bell, Jr. was convicted of murdering an elementary school principal. Nearly 30 years later, South Carolina’s Free Times reports that the reversal of his death sentence because of intellectual disability provides evidence of the death penalty’s continuing decline in the state and across the country. At the time of the murder, Bell maintained that he was innocent, but after four days in jail, he confessed to the murder. Prior appeals — including one alleging a…
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