Publications & Testimony
Items: 2561 — 2570
Nov 11, 2015
Battle Scars: Press Release
(Washington, D.C.) More than one million veterans have returned from wars in Vietnam, Afghanistan, and the Middle East with symptoms of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Most veterans go on to live exemplary lives and are rightly honored for bravely serving their country. However, for a small but significant number, their mental wounds contributed to their committing acts of violence and they are now on death row. Many others with similar…
Read MoreNov 10, 2015
DPIC Releases New Report, “Battle Scars: Military Veterans and the Death Penalty”
On November 10, on the eve of Veterans’ Day, the Death Penalty Information Center released a new report, Battle Scars: Military Veterans and the Death Penalty. The report examines the plight of U.S. military veterans who have been sentenced to death, estimating that about 300 veterans are currently on death row. Many of these veterans suffer from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) or other mental disabilities caused or exacerbated by their…
Read MoreNov 09, 2015
United Kingdom Marks 50th Anniversary of Death Penalty Abolition
On November 8, 1965, 50 years ago, the United Kingdom abolished capital punishment. On that date, Parliament transmitted to Queen Elizabeth II for royal assent the Murder (Abolition of Death Penalty) Act of 1965. The Act, which ended capital punishment in England, Wales, and Scotland subject to Parliamentary review after 5 years, took effect on November 9, 1965. When Parliament confirmed the Act in December 1969, the abolition of capital punishment in the United Kingdom…
Read MoreNov 06, 2015
UN Secretary-General: “I Will Never Stop Calling for an End to the Death Penalty”
Calling the punishment“simply wrong,” United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon has vowed to“never stop calling for an end to the death penalty.” Speaking at the launch of a new book by the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights,“Moving Away from the Death Penalty: Arguments, Trends and Perspectives,” the Secretary-General highlighted the worldwide decline of capital punishment, noting that“more and more countries and States are abolishing the death…
Read MoreNov 05, 2015
History of Misconduct Chronicled in Oklahoma County With 41 Executions
Oklahoma County has executed 41 prisoners since 1976, the third highest in the country, and is among the 2% of American counties responsible for 56% of the men and women currently on the nation’s death rows. A ThinkProgress report chronicles the decades-long pattern of misconduct committed under its long-time District Attorney“Cowboy Bob” Macy…
Read MoreNov 04, 2015
Deadliest Prosecutors, Worst Defense Lawyers Linked to High Rates of Death Sentences in Heavy-Use Counties
Prisoners sentenced to death in the small number of U.S. counties that most aggressively pursue the death penalty often suffer the“double whammy” of getting“both the deadliest prosecutors in America and some of the country’s worst capital defense lawyers,” according to an article in Slate by Robert L. Smith. In reviewing the the unusually high numbers of death verdicts from 3 counties that are near the top of the nation in disproportionately…
Read MoreNov 03, 2015
Missouri Scheduled to Execute Man Despite Evidence of Intellectual Disability
Ernest Johnson (pictured) is scheduled to be executed in Missouri on November 3, despite strong evidence that he is intellectually disabled and therefore ineligible…
Read MoreNov 02, 2015
Supreme Court Hears Argument in Georgia Jury Discrimination Case
The U.S. Supreme Court heard oral argument in Foster v. Chatman on November 2. Timothy Foster, an intellectually limited black teenager charged with killing an elderly white woman, was convicted and sentenced to death in 1987 by an all-white jury after Georgia prosecutors struck every black member of the jury pool. Foster argued that prosecutors impermissibly exercised their strikes on the basis of race, in violation of the…
Read MoreOct 30, 2015
STUDIES: FBI Crime Report Shows Murder Rates Remain Higher in Death Penalty States
The U.S. Department of Justice released its annual FBI Uniform Crime Report for 2014, reporting no change in the national murder rate since 2013. In the Northeast, the region with the fewest executions, the murder rate declined 5.7%, from 3.5 to 3.3 per 100,000 population. The murder rate was 1.7 times higher in the South, which carries out the most executions of any region. That region saw a 3.4% increase in the homicide rate, and…
Read MoreOct 29, 2015
Amid Threatening Comments by Current DA, Death Penalty Dominates Caddo Parish Prosecutor Election
Capital punishment is dominating the discussion in the runoff election between James E. Stewart, Sr. and Dhu Thompson to succeed acting Caddo Parish, Louisiana District Attorney Dale Cox. Cox’s controversial statements about the death penalty — including that the state needs to“kill more people” — have focused national attention on the parish, which ranks among the two percent of U.S. counties responsible for 56 percent of the…
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