Publications & Testimony
Items: 2951 — 2960
Jun 11, 2014
Missouri Juror Describes Pressure to Vote for Death
UPDATE: Winfield’s execution was stayed on June 12 because of state interference with the clemency process. EARLIER: John Winfield is scheduled to be executed in Missouri on June 18 despite an affidavit submitted by one of the jurors at his trial stating she was pressured to switch her sentencing vote from life in prison to death. Kimberly Turner, who served on Winfield’s jury in 1998, recently described the…
Read MoreJun 10, 2014
Department of Justice Review of State Death Penalty Protocols Underway
Following the botched execution of Clayton Lockett in Oklahoma in April, President Obama ordered the Justice Department to review death penalty procedures in the states. Though a timeline for the study has not been released, the department has already reached out to at least one organization, the Constitution Project, which proposed several reforms in its recent report on the death penalty, including the establishing of an…
Read MoreJun 09, 2014
EDITORIALS: Connecticut’s The Day Calls for Retroactive Death Penalty Repeal
When Connecticut abolished the death penalty in 2012, it did so prospectively, leaving its death row population in place. Now, Connecticut newpaper The Day is calling on the state to“have the courage and consistency to outlaw government sanctioned killing in all instances.” The editorial first highlights the paper’s longstanding opposition to capital punishment, saying“It remains our position that…
Read MoreJun 06, 2014
Poll Finds Majority Support for Life in Prison Over Death Penalty
A new poll by ABC News and the Washington Post found a majority (52%) of Americans prefer life without parole as punishment for convicted murderers, with just 42% preferring the death penalty. This is the first time that this poll has found a majority support for life without parole over the death penalty. Without an alternative sentence offered, support for the death penalty was 61%, equaling the lowest level of support in polls going back to the…
Read MoreJun 05, 2014
Ohio Supreme Court to Hear Romell Broom Appeal
The Ohio Supreme Court has agreed to hear an appeal from Romell Broom (pictured), whose execution was halted in 2009 after correctional officers spent two hours trying to insert an IV for a lethal injection. Broom was pricked 18 times during the attempted execution. The court will decide whether further attempts to execute Broom would violate double-jeopardy rules or the Eighth Amendment ban on cruel and unusual punishment.“Romell Broom has…
Read MoreJun 04, 2014
Kentucky Lethal Injection Protocol Under Scrutiny
Executions have been on hold in Kentucky since 2010, when Franklin Circuit Judge Philip Shepherd began a review of the state’s lethal injection protocol. The state revised its protocol in 2012 to call for a one-drug method, with a two-drug method as a backup if specific drugs were not available. Now, that new protocol is also being scrutinized because it calls for the same drugs that caused the botched execution of Dennis McGuire in Ohio.
Read MoreJun 03, 2014
Sabrina Butler, Death Row Exoneree, Tells Her Story
Sabrina Butler (pictured), the only woman among the 144 people exonerated from death row since 1973, recently told her story in…
Read MoreJun 02, 2014
Recent Lethal Injection Developments in Texas, Missouri, and Indiana
As states continue to seek alternative drugs and drug sources for lethal injections, three significant developments occurred last week. Indiana announced recently that they would use Brevital, an anesthetic, as the first drug in its three-drug protocol. On May 27, Par Pharmaceutical, the producer of Brevital, released a statement announcing efforts to prevent the use of their product in executions. The statement said,“The state of Indiana’s proposed…
Read MoreMay 30, 2014
Autopsy Photos from Botched Florida Execution Released
The New Republic has just released autopsy photos taken after the Florida execution of Angel Diaz in 2006. The execution was so badly botched that it prompted then-Governor Jeb Bush to temporarily suspend executions so the state’s lethal injection procedure could be reviewed. The needles that should have been inserted into Diaz’s veins were instead pushed through into the surrounding tissue, causing extensive…
Read MoreMay 29, 2014
Georgia Supreme Court Upholds Lethal Injection Secrecy
In a 5 – 2 ruling issued on May 19, the Georgia Supreme Court upheld the state’s law that hides the source and the identity of the preparer of drugs and equipment used in executions. The court said,“We conclude that Georgia’s execution process is likely made more timely and orderly by the execution-participant confidentiality statute.…” The ruling lifted the stay of execution that was in place for Warren Hill, whose lawyers…
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