Publications & Testimony
Items: 2611 — 2620
Aug 04, 2015
New Study Shows Discrimination in Colorado Prosecutors’ Use of Death Penalty
A new study to be published in the University of Denver Law Review shows that whether prosecutors seek the death penalty in Colorado “depends to an alarming extent on the race and geographic location of the defendant.” The study — based upon 10 years of data collected by attorney Meg Beardsley and University of Denver law professors Sam Kamin and Justin Marceau and sociology professor Scott Phillips — shows…
Read MoreAug 03, 2015
Former Prosecutor Says Texas “Can Live Without the Death Penalty”
Former Texas prosecutor, Tim Cole — described by the Dallas Morning News as “a no-holds-barred lawman” in 4 terms as District Attorney for Archer, Clay, and Montague counties — now says that “Texas should join the 19 U.S. states where the death penalty has been abolished.” In an op-ed in The Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Cole says Texas’ dramatic decline in imposing the death penalty, from a record 49 death sentences in 1994 and 48 in 1999 to…
Read MoreAug 01, 2015
United States Supreme Court Decisions : 2014 – 2015 Term
Cert. granted Jan. 23, 2015Argument April 29, 2015Decided June 29,…
Read MoreAug 01, 2015
Glossip v. Gross Coverage and Commentary Recap
On June 29, the U.S. Supreme Court held (5 – 4) that Oklahoma inmates “failed to establish a likelihood of success on the merits of their claim that the use of midazolam violates the Eighth Amendment.” Three inmates on Oklahoma’s death row had challenged the state’s use of midazolam as the first drug in a three-drug protocol, saying that it “fails to render a person insensate to pain.” In a narrow decision written by Justice Samuel Alito, the Court deferred to…
Read MoreJul 31, 2015
Justice Ginsburg Discusses Glossip Dissent
In an interview at Duke Law School, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg reflected on the past term at the U.S. Supreme Court. She discussed several landmark cases from the past year, including Glossip v. Gross, in which she joined Justice Stephen Breyer in a dissent that questioned the constitutionality of the death penalty. Ginsburg said she had waited to take such a stance on the death penalty because past justices, “took themselves out of…
Read MoreJul 30, 2015
After Prior Jury’s Life Verdict, Washington Prosecutors Drop Death Penalty in “One of the Worst Crimes We’ve Ever Had”
King County (Washington) Prosecutor Dan Satterberg (pictured) announced that his office will no longer seek the death penalty against Michele Anderson after a jury returned a life sentence for her co-defendant, Joseph McEnroe. McEnroe and Anderson were charged with killing six members of Anderson’s family in 2007 in what Satterberg called “one of the worse crimes we’ve ever had in King County.” Satterberg explained his decision in a news conference on July 29, saying, “To…
Read MoreJul 29, 2015
Delaware Prosecutor Suspended for Misconduct in Capital Trial
The Supreme Court of Delaware voted unanimously on July 27 to suspend former Deputy Attorney General R. David Favata as a result of his misconduct during a recent capital trial. With a single dissent as to the length of the suspension, the Court banned Favata from the practice of law for six months and one day for intentional misconduct during the capital trial of Isaiah…
Read MoreJul 28, 2015
Judges, Commentators Critical of Habeas Law That “Keeps People on Death Row Despite Flawed Trials”
A recent article in the The New York Times Magazine examines the effects of the 1996 Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA), which was intended to streamline and shorten capital appeals. Its title summarizes the statute as “The Law That Keeps People on Death Row Despite Flawed…
Read MoreJul 27, 2015
Citing High Cost of Death Penalty Appeals, California Prosecutor Agrees to Reduce Prisoner’s Sentence to Life Without Parole
Citing the high cost of death penalty appeals and difficulty obtaining custody of an out-of-state prisoner, the Kern County, California District Attorney’s office has agreed to reduce the 1989 death sentence imposed upon Clarence Ray (pictured) to a sentence of life without parole. Ray’s lawyers had filed a petition challenging the constitutionality of his California conviction and death sentence. The parties reached agreement that Ray’s death sentence would be reversed in…
Read MoreJul 24, 2015
CNN Legal Analyst Calls “Sanity of the Death Penalty” Into Question
Philip Holloway, a CNN legal analyst who has been both a prosecutor and criminal defense attorney, says in a recent op-ed that “it is hard not to question the rationality — indeed the sanity” of the death penalty. Holloway says “there are several practical reasons why the death penalty just doesn’t make sense any longer, if it ever really did in the first place,” and outlines five reasons why he believes the United States should reconsider capital punishment. First, he says…
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