Publications & Testimony
Items: 2741 — 2750
Feb 19, 2015
BOOKS: One Woman’s Journey After Her Sister’s Murder
Jeanne Bishop has written a new book about her life and spiritual journey after her sister was murdered in Illinois in 1990. Change of Heart: Justice, Mercy, and Making Peace with My Sister’s Killer tells Bishop’s personal story of grief, loss, and of her eventual efforts to confront and reconcile with her sister’s killer. She also addresses larger issues of capital punishment, life sentences for juvenile offenders, and restorative justice. Former Illinois Governor…
Read MoreFeb 18, 2015
Eric Holder Advocates for a Hold on Executions
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder recommended that all executions be put on hold while the Supreme Court is considering Glossip v. Gross, a case involving Oklahoma’s lethal injection procedure. Speaking for himself, rather than the administration, at a press luncheon on February 17, Holder said, “I think a moratorium until the Supreme Court makes that decision would be appropriate.” Holder has previously criticized state…
Read MoreFeb 17, 2015
UPCOMING EXECUTION: New Evidence Raises Doubts About Texas Inmate’s Guilt
Attorneys for Rodney Reed, a death row inmate in Texas, have filed a petition in a county court with new evidence supporting an alternate theory of the crime that led to Reed’s conviction. Reed is scheduled to be executed on March 5 for the murder of Stacy…
Read MoreFeb 16, 2015
LAW REVIEW: Lethal Injection Secrecy and Due Process
A recent article by Prof. Eric Berger of the University of Nebraska College of Law argued that defendants facing execution have a fundamental right to know important information about the lethal injection drugs they will be given. Berger wrote, “Judicial recognition of this due process right would both protect Eighth Amendment values and also encourage states to make their execution procedures more transparent and less dangerous.” After discussing the history…
Read MoreFeb 13, 2015
Pennsylvania Governor Announces Moratorium on Executions
On February 13, 2015 Governor Tom Wolf of Pennsylvania announced a moratorium on all executions in the state. He said no executions will take place at least until he has “received and reviewed the forthcoming report of the Pennsylvania Task Force and Advisory Commission on Capital Punishment, established under Senate Resolution 6 of 2011, and there is an opportunity to address all concerns satisfactorily.” The legislature…
Read MoreFeb 12, 2015
STUDIES: Lynchings in America Related to Racial Bias in Death Penalty
A new report from the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI) of Alabama has documented more lynchings in American history than previously reported, particularly of African Americans in the South, and has drawn parallels between this practice and the modern death…
Read MoreFeb 12, 2015
Brennan Center for Justice Report: What Caused the Crime Decline?
In February 2015, the Brennan Center for Justice released a report examining potential explanations for the dramatic drop in crime in the U.S. in the 1990s and 2000s. The death penalty was one of the possible contributing causes the researchers evaluated. The report’s conclusion: the death penalty had no effect on the decline in crime. The authors explained: “Empirically, capital punishment is too infrequent to have a measureable effect on the crime drop. Criminologically, the existence and…
Read MoreFeb 11, 2015
American Bar Association Calls for Unanimous Juries and Greater Transparency in Execution Process
On February 9, the House of Delegates of the American Bar Association unanimously passed two resolutions calling for unanimous juries in capital sentencing and greater transparency in lethal injection procedures. Resolution 108A stated: “Before a court can impose a sentence of death, a jury must unanimously recommend or vote to impose that sentence,” and, “The jury in such cases must also unanimously agree on the existence of any fact that is a prerequisite for eligibility…
Read MoreFeb 10, 2015
PUBLIC OPINION: American Ambivalence on the Death Penalty
A new Rasmussen poll found that 57% of American adults support the death penalty, down from 63% in the organization’s polls dating from 2009. The poll found 26% of respondents opposed the death penalty, with 17% undecided. Respondents were also asked whether they favored the death penalty for James Holmes if he is convicted of the mass shooting at a movie theater in Aurora, Colorado. Just 55% said they believed Holmes should be sentenced to…
Read MoreFeb 09, 2015
BOOKS: “Examining Wrongful Convictions”
A new book, Examining Wrongful Convictions: Stepping Back, Moving Forward, explores the causes and related issues behind the many wrongful convictions in the U.S. Compiled and edited by four criminal justice professors from the State University of New York, the text draws from U.S. and international sources. Prof. Dan Simon of the University of Southern California said, ”This book offers the most comprehensive and insightful treatment of wrongful convictions to…
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