Publications & Testimony
Items: 2541 — 2550
Dec 11, 2015
Court Decisions Reflect Continuing Ambivalence Towards State Lethal Injection Secrecy Laws
Recent court decisions in cases from Georgia and Arkansas reflect continuing judicial uncertainty regarding lethal injection secrecy. On October 12, an Arkansas trial court overturned the state’s execution secrecy law and ordered the state Department of Corrections to disclose the drugs that it intends to use in executions and the source of those drugs. In a December 3 opinion requiring disclosure by the following…
Read MoreDec 10, 2015
STUDIES: Electoral Pressures Influence Judges’ Decisions in Capital Cases
“[E]lectoral pressures influence judges’ decisions in capital cases,” according to a new report by the Brennan Center for Justice at the New York University School of Law. That report, How Judicial Elections Impact Criminal Cases, surveyed numerous empirical studies that had reviewed the effects of judicial elections on outcomes in criminal cases. The vast majority of criminal defendants — including capital defendants — face elected judges at…
Read MoreDec 09, 2015
Study Shows Trends in Executions, Death Sentences Closely Track Drop in Public Support for the Death Penalty
Historical trends in executions and new death sentences closely track changes in public attitudes about the death penalty and crime in general, according to a comprehensive University of North Carolina analysis of national public opinion surveys on the…
Read MoreDec 08, 2015
Missouri Supreme Court Overturns Conviction of Reginald Clemons
The Missouri Supreme Court ruled 4 – 3 on November 24 to vacate the conviction and death sentence of Reginald (Reggie) Clemons (pictured), who has been on death row for 22 years for the interracial rape and murder of two sisters. The court said that Clemons, did not receive a fair trial because of prosecutorial misconduct. In particular, the court was troubled by what it concluded was a deliberate failure by prosecutiors to provide Clemons’…
Read MoreDec 07, 2015
After 3 Trials and Recanted Testimony, Georgia Set to Execute Man Who May Be Innocent
UPDATE: Terrell was denied clemency on Dec. 7 and executed just before 1:00 a.m. on December 9. The Atlanta Journal Constitution reported that it took a nurse an hour to find a vein for the lethal injection IV and that, as the execution drug was being administered, Terrell mouthed the words:“Didn’t do it.” EARLIER: After three trials, Georgia is set to execute Brian Keith Terrell (pictured) on December 8, unless the…
Read MoreDec 04, 2015
Counties With Highest Rates of Killings by Police Also Among Highest in Death Sentences
The counties in the United States that have the highest per capita rate of killings by police officers also rank among the highest in the country in the number of people sentenced to death. In his criminal justice blog,“The Watch,” for the Washington Post, Radley Balko details the“remarkable correlation” between killings by police and death sentences…
Read MoreDec 03, 2015
Sexually Abused Teen Who Killed His Abuser Faces Execution Despite Inadequate Defense, Judge’s Conflict of Interest
Terry Williams was barely 18 when he killed Amos Norwood, a man who had been sexually abusing him since…
Read MoreDec 02, 2015
Alabama Inmate Dies on Death Row Before Federal Court Can Decide His Innocence Claim
Donnis Musgrove (pictured), an Alabama death row prisoner with a substantial claim of innocence, died of lung cancer on Alabama’s death row on November 25, while his case was pending before a federal judge. Musgrove’s attorneys had asked U.S. District Judge David Proctor to rule quickly because of Musgrove’s medical condition. Musgrove and his co-defendant, David Rogers, who previously died on Alabama’s death row, were sentenced to death in 1988. Rogers’…
Read MoreDec 01, 2015
Ohio Capital Murder Indictments Plummet 77% in Five Years
Capital murder indictments have plummeted and life sentences risen sharply in Ohio over the past five years, according to a report by the Cleveland Plain Dealer. The newspaper’s examination of Ohio prison and other public records revealed that capital indictments in the state have dropped by 77% since 2010, mirroring national trends. Prosecutors are far more likely to seek a sentence of life without parole in cases in which they once would have pursued the…
Read MoreNov 30, 2015
Defendants Begin Systemic Challenges to Constitutionality of Death Penalty
Lawyers for capital defendants and death row inmates across the country have begun to respond to what lawyers in one federal case described as the“clarion call for reconsideration of the constitutionality of the death penalty” issued by Supreme Court Justices Stephen Breyer and Ruth Bader Ginsburg in their dissenting opinion in June in Glossip v.
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