Publications & Testimony
Items: 2651 — 2660
Jul 20, 2015
STUDY: Missouri Study Finds Significant Racial and Geographic Disparities in Application of Death Penalty
A new study by Professor Frank Baumgartner of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill finds stark racial and geographic disparities in the application of the death penalty in…
Read MoreJul 17, 2015
94.5% of Elected Prosecutors in Death Penalty States Are White
According to a study by the Women Donors Network, 95% of elected prosecutors in the U.S. are white and 79% are white men. An analysis by DPIC of the study’s data further shows that, in states that have the death penalty, 94.5% of elected prosecutors are white. In 9 death penalty states (Colorado, Delaware, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, South Dakota, Tennessee, Washington, and Wyoming), 100% of elected prosecutors are white. These numbers reveal that there has been…
Read MoreJul 16, 2015
STUDIES: “Untrustworthy” Faces Increase Likelihood of Death Sentence
Two new studies suggest that a defendant’s facial appearance predicts whether he is sentenced to life or to death, regardless of actual guilt or innocence. A study of Florida inmates published in the July 15 edition of Psychological Science finds that the perceived degree of trustworthiness of a defendant’s face predicted which of the two sentences a defendant who has been convicted of murder ultimately received. A follow-up study also showed that the link…
Read MoreJul 15, 2015
Prosecutor Who Said Louisiana Should “Kill More People” Drops Election Campaign
Citing a backlash from his controversial statements about the death penalty, Dale Cox (pictured), the Interim District Attorney of Caddo Parish, Louisiana, announced on July 14 that he will not run for District…
Read MoreJul 14, 2015
NEW VOICES: Republican and Democratic Legislators Critique Tennessee’s Death Penalty
In two separate guest columns for The Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN), four state legislators urged an end to the death penalty in Tennessee. State Representatives Steve McManus (top left) and Mark White (top right), both Republicans, called capital punishment,“a lousy return on our investment.” Estimating that Tennessee’s death penalty is similar in costs to North Carolina’s $11 million-per-year system, they listed some alternative uses for death penalty funds.
Read MoreJul 13, 2015
Global Trends Point Toward Long-Term Decline of Capital Punishment
A recent article in The Economist highlights continuing long-term international trends away from the death penalty. Since December, three countries — Fiji, Madagascar, and Suriname — have abolished the death penalty, increasing the number of abolitionist countries to above 100. In December, 117 countries voted to support a United Nations resolution for an international moratorium on executions. The article notes a few outlier countries, including the United…
Read MoreJul 10, 2015
Childhood Trauma Prevalent Among Death Row Inmates
A majority of Texas death row prisoners who voluntarily responded to a recent survey by the Texas Observer reported having experienced abuse or other trauma as children. The survey results are consistent with the findings of academic studies that have repeatedly documented high rates of childhood abuse among those sentenced to death. The Texas Observer survey found that 22 of the 41 death…
Read MoreJul 09, 2015
David Keaton, First Death Row Exoneree in Modern Era, Dies at Age 63
David Keaton, the first man exonerated from death row in the modern era of the death penalty (1973-present), died on July 3 at the age of 63. Keaton was convicted and sentenced to death in Florida in 1971 for the murder of an off-duty police officer. His conviction was based on a coerced confession and erroneous eyewitness testimony. In 1973, the actual perpetrator was discovered because of new evidence, and Keaton was…
Read MoreJul 08, 2015
Urban League President Calls for Reconsideration of Death Penalty
Highlighting the recent abolition of the death penalty in Nebraska and concerns about wrongful convictions, National Urban League President Marc H. Morial (pictured) called for an end to executions. In an op-ed for The Philadelphia Tribune, Morial cited declining public support for the death penalty:“56 percent of Americans support the death penalty, this from a high of almost 80 percent in the mid-90s,” he said. He also…
Read MoreJul 07, 2015
Louisiana Executions on Hold Until State Addresses Lethal Injection Issues
A federal judge in Louisiana has delayed five executions until at least July 2016 as state officials struggle to determine how to conduct executions using lethal injection. Christopher Sepulvado, a death row inmate whose execution has been rescheduled several times over the last two years, is challenging the constitutionality of Louisiana’s execution method. The Department of Corrections requested…
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