Publications & Testimony
Items: 2111 — 2120
Jun 23, 2017
Lawyers for Seriously Mentally Ill Virginia Death-Row Prisoner Ask Governor for Clemency
Lawyers for William Morva (pictured), a seriously mentally ill death-row prisoner suffering from a delusional disorder that leaves him unable to distinguish his delusions from reality, has petitioned Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe seeking clemency from his scheduled July 6, 2017…
Read MoreJun 22, 2017
Decisions Not to Seek Death in Two New Orleans Cases Highlights Louisiana’s Trend Away From Capital Punishment
The New Orleans District Attorney’s office has decided not to pursue the death penalty in two high-profile murder cases, highlighting a trend in Louisiana away from the use of capital punishment. In a one-week period, Leon Cannizzaro (pictured), the District Attorney for Orleans Parish, announced that his office would not seek the death penalty against Travis Boys, charged with fatally shooting a New Orleans police officer,…
Read MoreJun 21, 2017
BOOKS: “The History of the Death Penalty in Colorado”
When University of Colorado Boulder sociology professor Michael Radelet began doing research on the death penalty in the 1970s, the noted death-penalty scholar tells Colorado Public Radio, he didn’t have an opinion about capital punishment and “didn’t know anything about it.” After researching issues of race, innocence, and the death penalty, he came to have grave…
Read MoreJun 20, 2017
Nevada Death-Row Prisoner Released on Plea Deal After Medical Evidence Suggests No Crime Occurred
Ha’im Al Matin Sharif (pictured), formerly known as Charles Robins, has been released from Nevada’s death row, nearly 30 years after he was convicted of killing his girlfriend’s 11-month-old daughter, after medical evidence revealed that the baby died from infantile scurvy, rather than from physical abuse. Prosecutors agreed to amend the charges against Sharif and release him on time served after a prosecution doctor confirmed that Brittany Smith actually…
Read MoreJun 19, 2017
U.S. Supreme Court Rules in Favor of Alabama Death-Row Prisoner in McWilliams v. Dunn
In a 5 – 4 decision released June 19, 2017, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Alabama had unconstitutionally denied death-row prisoner James McWilliams (pictured) the assistance of an independent mental health…
Read MoreJun 16, 2017
Former Governor Bill Richardson: Death Penalty Is Bad for Business, Out of Step With World’s Views
In a Washington Post op-ed, former New Mexico Governor and United Nations Ambassador Bill Richardson (pictured) — who in 2009 signed a bill to abolish his state’s death penalty — urged that capital punishment be abolished in the United States, saying “[t]he practice is wrong and I hope it isn’t long for this…
Read MoreJun 15, 2017
NEW VOICES: A Psychologist — a War Veteran with Schizophrenia — Urges Adoption of a Death Penalty Exemption for Severe Mental Illness
In a recent commentary article in Medium, psychologist Dr. Frederick J. Frese, III (pictured) — a Marine Corps veteran who has himself been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia — argues that Congress and state legislatures should pass laws exempting people with severe mental illness from the death penalty. “Supporters and opponents of the death penalty agree that it should only be reserved for the most culpable and deliberate of criminals who commit heinous crimes,” Frese writes. He…
Read MoreJun 14, 2017
Intellectually Disabled Ex-Death Row Prisoner Released from Texas Prison After Decades Without a Valid Conviction
, an intellectually disabled prisoner whose conviction and death sentence was overturned in 1980, was freed from prison in Texas on June 12, 2017, having spent 35 years in jail without a valid conviction and without being retried. Hartfield, whose IQ is in the 50s or 60s, was convicted and sentenced to death in 1977 on charges that he had murdered a bus station worker. Hartfield confessed to the crime, but has long asserted his innocence and that his…
Read MoreJun 13, 2017
Supporting Data for 2017 DPIC Study of Murder Rates and Killings of Police
We wanted to find out what homicide numbers and trends would tell us about whether the death penalty deterred murders and, more specifically, what kind of impact — if any — it had in deterring killings of law enforcement in the line of…
Read MoreJun 13, 2017
Arizona Makes Key Concessions, Reaches Deal With Prisoners to Settle Lethal-Injection Lawsuit
Death-row prisoners and the state of Arizona have reached a tentative settlement to address the state’s lethal-injection…
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