Publications & Testimony
Items: 2851 — 2860
Oct 28, 2014
NEW VOICES: Doubts About the Death Penalty Among American Founders
In a recent op-ed in the National Law Journal, historian John Bessler described the ambivalence among American founders toward the death penalty. He noted,“Although early U.S. laws authorized executions, the founders greatly admired a now little-known Italian writer, Cesare Beccaria, who fervently opposed capital punishment. They also were fascinated by the penitentiary system’s potential to eliminate cruel…
Read MoreOct 27, 2014
NEW VOICES: Judges Call for Appellate Review Before Impending Execution
A group of 15 former state and federal judges, including a former Chief Justice of the Missouri Supreme Court, has filed an amicus brief with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit in support of a stay of execution for Mark Christeson in Missouri. Christeson is scheduled to be executed on October 29, but the judges said he has not received“any meaningful federal review of his death sentence.” In their brief, organized by the…
Read MoreOct 24, 2014
NEW VOICES: Pope Francis Calls for Abolition of Death Penalty
Pope Francis called for an end to capital punishment in an address on October 23 to the International Association on Penal Law.“It is impossible to imagine that states today cannot make use of another means than capital punishment to defend peoples’ lives from an unjust aggressor,” the Catholic leader said. He cited the Catechism of the Catholic Church, which says that the death penalty can be used only if it is the“only possible way of effectively…
Read MoreOct 23, 2014
Death Penalty Support Remains Near 40-Year Low
In a Gallup poll released on October 23, support for the death penalty was 63%, remaining within the margin of error of a 40-year low of 60% last year. These results represent a dramatic shift in Americans’ views on the death penalty since the 1990’s, when support for the death penalty peaked at 80%. Opposition to the death penalty has grown significantly among Democrats, more than doubling over the last 20 years, from 22% in 1994 to 46% today. When offered…
Read MoreOct 22, 2014
Former Death-Row Prisoners Freed In North Carolina
On September 2, 2014, Leon Brown (above) and Henry McCollum (below) were exonerated and released from prison in…
Read MoreOct 22, 2014
International Events Highlight Death Penalty Concerns
Two recent international gatherings emphasized concerns about the death penalty in the U.S. and around the world. On October 14, the Organization of American States hosted an address by the President of the International Institute of Human Rights, Jean-Paul Costa, focusing on the relatively few countries still practicing capital punishment in North and South America. On October 21, the Delegation of the European Union to the U.S. presented a panel discussion…
Read MoreOct 21, 2014
Supreme Court to Review Impact of Eliminating Black and Hispanic Jurors in Capital Case
On October 20, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear Chappell v. Ayala (No. 13 – 1428), a death penalty case from California in which all the black and Hispanic potential jurors were struck from the defendant’s trial. Hector Ayala was convicted in 1989 of three murders in San Diego. At his trial, Ayala’s attorneys argued that the prosecutor was improperly striking jurors on the basis of race. The judge reviewed the prosecutor’s…
Read MoreOct 20, 2014
North Carolina Innocence Commission Frees Another Inmate, 38 Years Late
The same Commission that freed former death row inmates Henry McCollum and Leon Brown in September exonerated another man who had been convicted of murder, Willie Womble (l.). The North Carolina Innocence Inquiry Commission freed Womble on October 17, dismissing his 1976 first-degree murder conviction and life sentence. Womble had been convicted of acting as a lookout while another man, Joseph Perry, robbed…
Read MoreOct 17, 2014
Florida’s Troubled History With the Death Penalty
A recent retrospective in the Fort Myers Florida Weekly on the state’s death penalty traced some of the problems that have arisen since Florida resumed executions in 1979. During the execution of Jesse Tafero in 1990, six-inch flames shot from the prisoner’s head, and three separate jolts of electricity were required to kill him. Prison officials attributed it to“inadvertent human error.” In the execution of Pedro Medina in 1997, flames and…
Read MoreOct 16, 2014
NEW RESOURCES: Podcast Series on Each State’s Death Penalty
DPIC has recently added four podcasts to our new series on important facts about the death penalty in each state. Seven state podcasts are now available: Michigan, Wisconsin, Maine, Minnesota, North Dakota, Alaska, and Hawaii. We expect to add new episodes each week, with two more coming tomorow (Oct. 17). The series has begun with states that have abolished the death…
Read More