Publications & Testimony
Items: 2361 — 2370
Jul 18, 2016
40 Years After Key Supreme Court Decision, Constitutional and Practical Problems Plague Death Penalty
The execution of John Conner on July 15 ended a two-month period without executions in the United States, the longest such period in the country since 2007 – 2008. A range of state-specific issues have contributed to this stoppage, including questions about the constitutionality of state death penalty practices, problems relating to lethal injection drugs and state execution protocols, and the fallout from botched…
Read MoreJul 15, 2016
Court Hearing Under Way on Constitutionality of Federal Death Penalty
A court hearing is under way in the capital trial of Donald Fell in a Vermont federal district court challenging the constitutionality of the federal death penalty. This week, death penalty experts testified for the defense about systemic problems Fell’s lawyers say may render the federal death penalty unconstitutional. Fell was sentenced to death in 2006, but was granted a new trial because of juror misconduct. The hearing began on July 11 and is scheduled…
Read MoreJul 14, 2016
Georgia Prepares to Execute John Conner Despite Evidence of Intellectual Impairment, Traumatic Upbringing
Georgia is continuing with preparations to execute John Conner (pictured) on July 14 after the state’s Board of Pardons and Paroles denied his clemency petition and the Georgia Supreme Court denied him a stay of…
Read MoreJul 13, 2016
BOOKS: “Race and the Death Penalty: The Legacy of McCleskey v. Kemp”
In a landmark ruling in McCleskey v. Kemp in 1987, a bitterly divided U.S. Supreme Court voted 5 – 4 vote that statistical evidence of racial discrimination in the application of the death penalty was insufficient to overturn an individual death sentence. A new book, Race and the Death Penalty: The Legacy of McCleskey v. Kemp, edited by David P. Keys, associate professor of criminal justice at New Mexico State University and R.J. Maratea of the Youth Research…
Read MoreJul 12, 2016
NEW VOICES: Former FBI Agent Now Opposes Death Penalty, Seeks Exoneration of California Death Row Prisoner Kevin Cooper
During his 45 years in law enforcement, including 24 years with the Federal Bureau of Investigation, homicide investigator Tom Parker (pictured) changed his view on the death penalty. “There were times during my career when I would gladly have pushed the button on a murderer,” he said. “Today, my position would be, life without parole.” Parker says that seeing corrupt homicide investigations convinced him that innocent people could be executed. As result, he now opposes…
Read MoreJul 11, 2016
Nebraska Exonerees Awarded $28 Million, Prosecutor Says Case Made Him Oppose Death Penalty
A federal court jury has awarded six Nebraska exonerees (pictured, at their exoneration) $28 million in damages for official misconduct that led to their wrongful convictions in the 1985 rape and murder of Helen…
Read MoreJul 08, 2016
ABA Criminal Justice Report Covers Key Death Penalty Trends
In a chapter from the recently released American Bar Association publication, The State of Criminal Justice 2016, Ronald J. Tabak, chair of the Death Penalty Committee of the ABA’s Section of Individual Rights and Responsibilities, describes significant trends and recent cases related to capital punishment. Tabak highlights the ongoing declines in death sentences and executions across the United States, as well as the increasing concentration of the death penalty in a small number of…
Read MoreJul 07, 2016
Status of Arkansas Death Penalty Uncertain Following Expiration of Lethal Injection Drugs
Just days after a split Arkansas Supreme Court upheld the state’s execution protocol, Arkansas’ supply of vecuronium bromide — a paralytic agent used in the state’s three-drug lethal injection protocol — expired, leaving the status of future executions unclear. At that time, Governor Asa Hutchinson said that he wanted the Department of Correction to obtain a new supply of the drug rather than change the state’s method of execution. In 2015, the state spent $25,000 for lethal…
Read MoreJul 06, 2016
Decline in “Resource-Draining” Death Penalty Trials in Amarillo Texas Mirrors Trends in State, Nation
Forty years after Gregg v. Georgia ushered in the modern era of capital punishment in the United States, the death penalty is in decline across the country and in Texas. The Lone Star State continues to lead the nation in executions — with nearly half of all executions in the U.S. this year — but the Amarillo Globe-News reports that fewer Texas prosecutors are seeking death sentences and fewer juries are imposing them. According to the…
Read MoreJul 05, 2016
Arizona Lethal Injection Challenge Proceeds As State Refuses to Rule Out Future Use of Controversial Execution Drug
A federal judge has rebuffed an attempt by Arizona to dismiss a lawsuit filed by the state’s death row prisoners challenging the state’s execution practices. The state argued at a hearing in the case in U.S. District Court on June 29, that the prisoners’ lawsuit should be declared moot because Arizona’s supply of midazolam — the first drug in one of the state’s four execution protocols — had expired and that the state has been unable to obtain a new supply of…
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