Publications & Testimony
Items: 2961 — 2970
May 02, 2014
CLEMENCY: Ohio Governor Commutes Death Sentence, Citing ‘Troubling Irregularities’
On April 30 Ohio Governor John Kasich commuted the death sentence of Arthur Tyler to life in prison without the possibility of parole. The decision followed a recommendation for clemency from Cuyahoga County prosecutor Tim McGinty. Following a hearing on the case, the Ohio Parole Board recommended commutation of Tyler’s sentence to life with parole: six of the eleven members recommended immediate parole eligibility for Tyler, and the…
Read MoreMay 01, 2014
NEW VOICES: Former Oklahoma Warden Says Death Penalty Fails on Many Fronts
Randy Workman (pictured) is a former warden of the Oklahoma State Penitentiary, where he oversaw 32 executions. In a recent interview, he was critical of many aspects of capital punishment. He said the death penalty failed the victims’ families and wasted money: “We spend millions of dollars on these cases and going through the process and the end result is the family, do they feel vindicated? I’d say 90% of the time the…
Read MoreApr 30, 2014
Oklahoma Botches Execution of Clayton Lockett
On April 29, Oklahoma inmate Clayton Lockett died of a heart attack approximately 40 minutes after the state began administering a new lethal injection…
Read MoreApr 29, 2014
NEW VOICES: Another Oregon Chief Justice Questions the Death Penalty
Three former Chief Justices of the Oregon Supreme Court have recently called for an end to the death penalty in their state. Retired Chief Justice Wallace P. Carson, Jr. (l.), was the most recent Justice to call for a change: “In my opinion, the exceptional cost of death penalty cases and the seemingly haphazard selection of which cases deserve the death penalty outweigh any perceived public benefit of this sanction,” Carson said. “The fairly recent addition…
Read MoreApr 28, 2014
STUDIES: The Problem of Innocence Is Worse Than Was Thought
On April 28 a study published in the prestigous Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences indicated that far more innocent people have been sentenced to death than those found through the legal process. According to the study, many innocent defendants are probably not being identified because they were taken off death row and given a lesser sentence. The rate of exonerations for those sentenced to death would be over twice as high if all cases were given the…
Read MoreApr 25, 2014
Supreme Court: Kentucky Death Sentence May Be Flawed, But Not ‘Unreasonable’
On April 23 the U.S. Supreme Court reinstated the death sentence of Kentucky inmate Robert Woodall, reversing an earlier ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. At Woodall’s trial, his attorney asked the judge to instruct the jury not to draw any negative inference from the fact that Woodall had not testified in the sentencing phase. The judge refused to give the instruction. The 6th Circuit held that the failure to instruct the jury was a…
Read MoreApr 24, 2014
NEW VOICES: Ohio Prosecutor Calls for Clemency for Death Row Inmate
In a petition to the Ohio Parole Board, Cuyahoga County prosecutor Tim McGinty (pictured) requested the death sentence of Arthur Tyler be reduced to life in prison without parole. McGinty said, “At the time of Tyler’s trial, Ohio law did not allow for the possibility of a sentence of life without parole for an aggravated murder conviction.…In light of the limited sentencing options, the absence of the option of a sentence…
Read MoreApr 23, 2014
Executions Stayed As Secrecy Issue Is Considered by Oklahoma Supreme Court
UPDATE: On April 23, the Oklahoma Supreme Court held that the inmates facing execution do not have a right to be informed of the source of the drugs that will be used in their executions. The Court lifted the stays of execution, which means they could occur on April 29. ‑Earlier: On April 21, the Oklahoma Supreme Court indefinitely stayed the executions of Clayton Lockett and Charles Warner so it could resolve the constitutionality of a state…
Read MoreApr 22, 2014
REPRESENTATION: Georgia Inmate With Drunk Lawyer Facing Execution
The Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles will soon consider the clemency petition of Robert Holsey describing a near complete failure in the judicial process that sent him to death row in 1997. As Marc Bookman described in the latest edition of Mother Jones, Holsey was assigned a lawyer, Andy Prince, who consumed a quart of vodka every night of the trial. While preparing Holsey’s case, he was arrested in an incident after pointing a gun at a black…
Read MoreApr 21, 2014
On Eve of Execution, Oklahoma Courts Can’t Agree on Who Has Power to Stay
UPDATE: (4/21). The Oklahoma Supreme Court (5 – 4) has stayed the executions of Lockett and Warner. Earlier:In a 3 – 2 decision on April 18, the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals (OCCA) said it could not grant a stay of execution to two death row inmates facing imminent execution because they had not filed a proper motion. Earlier, the Oklahoma Supreme Court said the OCCA should be the court to grant a stay, especially since there were unsettled questions about…
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