Publications & Testimony

Items: 2591 — 2600


Sep 11, 2015

Richard Glossip’s Innocence Claim Draws Growing Attention [UPDATED]

UPDATE: Former Oklahoma Senator Tom Coburn (pic­tured), for­mer Oklahoma Sooners and Dallas Cowboys foot­ball coach Barry Switzer, and John W. Raley, Jr., the for­mer chief fed­er­al pros­e­cu­tor for the Eastern District of Oklahoma, have joined with inno­cence advo­cates Barry Scheck, Co-Director of the Innocence Project, and Samuel Gross, edi­tor of the National Registry of Exonerations, in a letter…

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Sep 09, 2015

Former Judge: Pennsylvania Moratorium is Appropriate” and Reasonable”

Robert Cindrich, a for­mer U.S. District Judge and U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Pennsylvania, recent­ly wrote an op-ed for the Harrisburg Patriot-News call­ing Governor Tom Wolf’s mora­to­ri­um on exe­cu­tions in Pennsylvania appro­pri­ate” and rea­son­able.” Expressing con­cerns about mul­ti­ple, seri­ous prob­lems with the death penal­ty” in Pennsylvania, Judge Cindrich says Governor Wolf was absolute­ly cor­rect” that no executions…

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Sep 08, 2015

Why Missouri is an Outlier in Execution Trends

As nation­al exe­cu­tion num­bers drop to his­toric lows and a grow­ing num­ber of states halt exe­cu­tions or repeal the death penal­ty alto­geth­er, Missouri has recent­ly increased the num­ber of exe­cu­tions it is car­ry­ing out and over­tak­en Texas for the high­est per-capi­ta exe­cu­tion rate. Missouri and Texas have car­ried out all of the last 15 exe­cu­tions in the U.S. and 80% of exe­cu­tions through September 1 of this year. A report by The Marshall Project explores why Missouri is…

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Sep 04, 2015

Federal Judge: Delaware Execution Highlights Profound Failings in Our Judicial Process”

U.S. District Court Judge Gregory M. Sleet has crit­i­cized the lack of judi­cial review pro­vid­ed by the state and fed­er­al courts pri­or to Delawares 2012 exe­cu­tion of Shannon Johnson, say­ing Johnson’s exe­cu­tion high­lights pro­found fail­ings in our judi­cial process.” In an arti­cle in the American Bar Association’s Criminal Justice mag­a­zine, Judge Sleet — who was Chief Judge at the time of the case — called “[t]he Johnson case, and its result,…

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Sep 03, 2015

ANALYSIS: Do Recent Connecticut and U.S. Supreme Court Decisions Portend Downfall of Capital Punishment?

In an op-ed for The New York Times, Pulitzer Prize win­ning legal com­men­ta­tor Linda Greenhouse ana­lyzes the sig­nif­i­cance of and inter­play between the recent Connecticut Supreme Court deci­sion strik­ing down the state’s death penal­ty and Justice Stephen Breyer’s dis­sent in the U.S. Supreme Court case Glossip v. Gross. “[T]he Connecticut Supreme Court not only pro­duced an impor­tant deci­sion for its own juris­dic­tion; but it addressed the United…

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Sep 02, 2015

Major European Pension Fund Divests from Pharmaceutical Company Linked to Executions

The Dutch pub­lic employ­ees’ pen­sion fund, Stichting Pensioenfonds ABP (ABP), has divest­ed from the phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal com­pa­ny Mylan after learn­ing that the Virginia Department of Corrections had sup­plies of one of Mylan’s prod­ucts in stock for use in exe­cu­tions. A spokesman for ABP — which with net assets of $416 bil­lion is the world’s third largest pen­sion fund — said, As the Dutch gov­ern­ment and Dutch soci­ety as a whole renounced the death penal­ty a long time ago, we do not want Dutch pension…

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Sep 01, 2015

Ninth Circuit Hears Arguments on Constitutionality of California Death Penalty

On August 31, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit heard argu­ment in Jones v. Davis, an appeal by California of the 2014 U.S. District Court rul­ing that declared California’s death penal­ty uncon­sti­tu­tion­al. In 2014, U.S. District Court Judge Cormac Carney held that the decades-long delays caused by California’s fail­ure to pro­vide lawyers for near­ly 350 of its death-row pris­on­ers made its death penal­ty sys­tem uncon­sti­tu­tion­al­ly cruel and…

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Aug 31, 2015

STUDIES: Louisiana Study Reports Stark Death-Penalty Disparities Linked to Race and Gender of Victims

A new study by Professor Frank Baumgartner of The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Tim Lyman, a Documentation Specialist in New Orleans, reports stark dis­par­i­ties in Louisiana death sen­tences and exe­cu­tions depend­ing upon the race and gen­der of the homi­cide vic­tim. The study — to be pub­lished in the Loyola University of New Orleans Journal of Public Interest Law — finds that defen­dants accused of killing white vic­tims are near­ly twice as like­ly to be sentenced…

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