Publications & Testimony
Items: 2961 — 2970
May 28, 2014
BOOKS: “I Am Troy Davis”
I Am Troy Davis is a recent book by Jen Marlowe and Troy Davis’ sister, Martina Davis-Correia, that tells the story of a possibly innocent man who was executed in Georgia in 2011. Troy Davis was sentenced to death for the murder of a police officer in Savannah. Years later evidence casting doubts about his guilt emerged, including recantations from several of the witnesses who had testified against him. Pope…
Read MoreMay 27, 2014
Supreme Court Strikes Down Florida’s Strict IQ Cutoff for Death Penalty
On May 27, the U.S. Supreme Court held in Hall v. Florida that Florida’s strict IQ cutoff for determining intellectual disability in capital cases is unconstitutional. The Court concluded,“Florida’s law contravenes our Nation’s commitment to dignity and its duty to teach human decency as the mark of a civilized…
Read MoreMay 23, 2014
Tennessee Governor Signs Forced Electrocution Bill
On May 22, Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam signed into law a bill that will allow the state to use the electric chair in executions if lethal injection drugs are not available. While seven states, including Tennessee, allow inmates to choose the electric chair as their method of execution, no other state forces inmates to be executed by that method. Defense attorney David Raybin, who helped draft Tennessee’s death penalty law in the 1970s, said that…
Read MoreMay 22, 2014
NEW RESOURCES: BJS Releases “Capital Punishment, 2012”
The Bureau of Justice Statistics recently issued a new report,“Capital Punishment, 2012,” analyzing the use of the death penalty in that year and revealing overall trends since the death penalty was reinstated. The report noted that 2012 was“the twelfth consecutive year in which the number of inmates under sentence of death decreased.” Among the statistics not reported elsewhere, BJS noted that the time between sentencing and execution in 2012 was…
Read MoreMay 21, 2014
Execution of Inmate with Unique Medical Condition Stayed by Supreme Court
UPDATE: The U.S. Supreme Court issued a stay of execution, pending the outcome of a review by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit. The Court further noted:“We leave for further consideration in the lower courts whether an evidentiary…
Read MoreMay 20, 2014
Ohio Residents Support Life Sentences Over Death Penalty
A recent poll by Quinnipiac University found that Ohioans support life sentences over the death penalty for people convicted of murder. A total of 49% of respondents chose sentences of life without parole (40%) or life with parole (9%), compared to just 43% who chose the death penalty. The survey also showed a 4‑point drop in death penalty support in just the last three months. In February, 47% of respondents said they preferred the death penalty. Death…
Read MoreMay 19, 2014
News Organizations File Suit to Obtain Execution Drug Information
On May 15, the Associated Press and four other media organizations filed suit against the state of Missouri, asking a state court to order the Department of Corrections (DOC) to release information about the source of its lethal injection drugs. Under Missouri law, the identity of the“execution team” is secret, and the DOC has interpreted the drug supplier to be a part of that team. The other four news organizations are the…
Read MoreMay 16, 2014
NEW VOICES: Oliver North — Long-Time Opponent of the Death Penalty
Oliver North, a former Marine and noted conservative leader, has opposed the death penalty for many years. In a recent interview, he said,“I’m a‘law and order’ guy. Don’t get me wrong. Individuals need to be held accountable…but I have always felt… and always said that there are very serious questions about the justice of the death penalty. Just a few months ago, a man (Glenn Ford) who was on death row for thirty years was found to be…
Read MoreMay 15, 2014
BOOKS: “Gruesome Spectacles” Reveals the History of Botched Executions
A new book, Gruesome Spectacles: Botched Executions and America’s Death Penalty, describes the history of flawed executions in the U.S. from 1890 to 2010. During that period, 8,776 people were executed and 276 of those executions went wrong in some way. Of all the methods used, lethal injection had the highest rate of botched executions – about 7%. Austin Sarat, the author of the book and a professor of jurisprudence and political…
Read MoreMay 14, 2014
Texas Execution Stayed Over Intellectual Disability Claim
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit stayed the execution of Robert Campbell just hours before he was scheduled to be executed in Texas on May 13, granting him permission to file a new petition on his claim of mental retardation. If Campbell is intellectually disabled, he is barred from execution by the Supreme Court’s 2002 ruling in Atkins v. Virginia. The unanimous three-judge panel noted that…
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