Publications & Testimony
Items: 2521 — 2530
Jan 06, 2016
Report Finds ‘Failure of Leadership’ by Orange County District Attorney’s Office in Jailhouse Informant Scandal
A new report by a special committee created by Orange County, California District Attorney Tony Rackauckas (pictured) cites a“failure of leadership” as the root cause of a multi-decade history of prosecutorial misconduct involving jailhouse informants. Documents obtained by defense lawyers and The Orange County Register had revealed what the paper called“a secret and well-organized network of snitches” that had been hidden from defense…
Read MoreJan 05, 2016
Prosecutor Says Change Needed if Wyoming Wants to Keep the Death Penalty
Natrona County, Wyoming District Attorney Mike Blonigen (pictured) recently called for a reconsideration of the state’s death penalty after a federal judge overturned the death sentence of Dale Wayne Eaton, a decade after Blonigen obtained it in 2004. At the time U.S. District Judge Alan B. Johnson reversed Eaton’s sentence in 2014, Eaton was the only person on Wyoming’s…
Read MoreJan 04, 2016
EDITORIALS: Newspapers Stress Findings from DPIC’s 2015 Year End Report
Several newspapers across the country featured themes from DPIC’s 2015 Year End Report in editorials and opinion pieces at the…
Read MoreDec 31, 2015
Innocents Lost: Remembering The Wrongfully Condemned Who Died in 2015
Dec 31, 2015
Case Summaries of Executed Women
Velma Barfield in North Carolina on November 2, 1984 — She was in a relationship with Stuart Taylor who was a widower. She forged checks on Taylor’s account to pay for her addiction. Fearing that she had been found out, she mixed an arsenic based rat poison into his beer and tea. Taylor became very ill. As his condition worsened, she took him to the hospital where he died a few days later. There was an autopsy which found that the cause of Taylor’s death was…
Read MoreDec 31, 2015
Women Executed in the US: 1900 – 2021
(source: M. Watt Espy and John Ortiz Smylka,“Executions in the U.S. 1608 – 1987: The Espy File.” (Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research, 1994) with recent…
Read MoreDec 31, 2015
State Execution Rates (through 2024)
Per Capita State Execution Rates — — — — — — — — — — — - *Death penalty abolished. Population based on 2024 US Census Estimate Data. Executions: Total since resumption of the death penalty in the U.S. in 1972 after the U.S. Supreme Court declared existing statutes unconstitutional through 2024. Executions per Death Sentence — — — — — — — — — – Executions based on DPI Execution Database. Death Sentences from Bureau of Justice Statistics, Capital Punishment…
Read MoreDec 31, 2015
Likely Innocent But Died on Death Row
Donnis MusgroveAlabama: Conviction, 1988; Died on Death Row, 2015David RogersAlabama: Conviction, 1988; Died on Death…
Read MoreDec 30, 2015
Missouri Juror Who Voted for Death Says New Evidence Would Have Changed Sentencing Decision
In 1997, a St. Louis County, Missouri jury unanimously voted to sentence David Barnett to death. Eighteen years later, after learning horrific details of the physical and sexual abuse to which Barnett had been subjected as a small child, Andrew Dazey — the jury foreman in Barnett’s trial — says “[t]here’s no way” he would have voted for death. At trial, Barnett’s lawyer presented some evidence of his client’s abuse, mental illness, and suicide…
Read MoreDec 29, 2015
NEW VOICES: Why Prosecutors in Texas, Pennsylvania Are Seeking Death Penalty Less Often
Prosecutors across the country are seeking the death penalty less frequently and in recent interviews two district attorneys, one from Texas and one from Pennsylvania, have given some of their reasons why. Randall County, Texas District Attorney James Farren (pictured) told KFDA-TV in Amarillo that his experience handling one particularly lengthy and costly capital case has changed how he will make decisions in future…
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