Publications & Testimony

Items: 2131 — 2140


Jan 03, 2017

Washington Governor Issues Reprieve, Calls for Abolition of Death Penalty

Citing seri­ous con­cerns about the use of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in the state of Washington,” Governor Jay Inslee (pic­tured) grant­ed a reprieve to Clark Richard Elmore, whom the state’s Department of Corrections had sched­uled for exe­cu­tion on January 19, 2017, and urged the state leg­is­la­ture to abol­ish cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in the state. The December 29, 2016 war­rant of reprieve was the first reprieve order issued under a mora­to­ri­um

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Dec 31, 2016

NEW VOICES: Regretting Execution, Murder Victim’s Family Urges Governor to Commute Missouri’s Death Row

When Missouri exe­cut­ed Jeff Ferguson in 2014 for the rape and mur­der of Kelli Hall, her father said the Hall fam­i­ly believed the myth that Ferguson’s exe­cu­tion would close our emo­tion­al wounds.” At that time, Jim Hall told reporters It’s over, thank God.” But, he now says, it was­n’t. In an op-ed in the Columbia Daily Tribune, Mr. Hall writes that his fam­i­ly has come to deeply regret [Ferguson’s] exe­cu­tion” and…

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Dec 29, 2016

First-Degree Murder Charges Dropped Against Two Former Pennsylvania Death Row Prisoners With Innocence Claims

On December 22, 2016, Pennsylvania pros­e­cu­tors dropped first-degree mur­der charges against two for­mer Pennsylvania death row pris­on­ers who have assert­ed their inno­cence for decades. In court­rooms 100 miles apart, Tyrone Moore and James Dennis entered no-con­test pleas to charges of third-degree mur­der, avoid­ing retri­als on the charges that had ini­tial­ly sent the men to death row and paving the way for their…

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Dec 27, 2016

United Nations Overwhelmingly Adopts Resolution Calling for Global Moratorium on the Death Penalty

The United Nations General Assembly vot­ed over­whelm­ing­ly on December 20 to adopt a res­o­lu­tion co-spon­sored by 89 coun­tries urg­ing a world­wide mora­to­ri­um on the death penal­ty. 117 nations vot­ed in sup­port of the world body’s sixth res­o­lu­tion on the sub­ject, equal­ing the record num­ber of coun­tries who sup­port­ed a UN mora­to­ri­um res­o­lu­tion in 2014. 40 mem­ber nations, includ­ing the United States, vot­ed against the mea­sure, while 31 abstained. The res­o­lu­tion also called upon all…

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Dec 23, 2016

REPORT: Two-Thirds of Oregon’s Death Row Have Mental Impairments, History of Severe Trauma, or Were Under 21 at Offense

Most of the pris­on­ers on Oregons death row suf­fer from sig­nif­i­cant men­tal impair­ments, accord­ing a study released on December 20, 2016 by the Fair Punishment Project at Harvard University. The Project’s analy­sis of case records, media reports, and opin­ions of Oregon legal experts found that two-thirds of the 35 peo­ple on the state’s death row pos­sess signs of seri­ous men­tal ill­ness or intel­lec­tu­al impair­ment, endured dev­as­tat­ing­ly severe child­hood trauma,…

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Dec 22, 2016

Florida Supreme Court: More Than 200 Prisoners Unconstitutionally Sentenced to Death May Get New Sentencing Hearing

More than 200 Florida death row pris­on­ers may have their death sen­tences over­turned, while more than 150 oth­ers who may have been uncon­sti­tu­tion­al­ly sen­tenced to death will not, as a result of two lengthy opin­ions issued by the Florida Supreme Court on December 22. The rul­ings in the cas­es of Asay v. State and Mosley v. State would enti­tle death row pris­on­ers whose uncon­sti­tu­tion­al death sen­tences became final” in or after 2002 to have…

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