Publications & Testimony
Items: 11 — 20
Nov 22, 2024
New Resource: In Era of Secrecy, States Increasingly Restrict Media Access to Executions
On December 18, Joseph Corcoran is scheduled to be the first person executed by Indiana officials in 15 years. For the first time, the state will use a single drug, pentobarbital, which comes from an unknown source and has been known to cause prisoners “excruciating” pain during executions. But no media witnesses will be present to relay what happens to the public. Indiana is an outlier in its policy decision to completely exclude the press from witnessing executions in the state. But a…
Read MoreNov 21, 2024
Alabama is Set to Execute Carey Grayson in its Third Nitrogen Gas Execution in 2024
Alabama is scheduled to execute Carey Grayson by nitrogen hypoxia on November 21, 2024, for his involvement with three other teens in the death of a hitchhiker in 1994, when he was 19 years old. Mr. Grayson’ execution would be Alabama’s sixth execution in 2024, and the third by nitrogen hypoxia. The state acknowledged Mr. Grayson was not the most culpable of the group, yet he is the only one of the four teens to face an execution. Mr. Grayson, and three others, were convicted of capital…
Read MoreNov 20, 2024
Texas Supreme Court Rules that a New Execution Date Can be Set for Robert Roberson
In a November 15, 2024, ruling, the Texas Supreme Court cleared the way for the state to reschedule the execution of Robert Roberson, despite compelling evidence of his innocence and widespread support for a new trial. Mr. Roberson was scheduled to be executed October 17, but on October 16 the Texas House Committee on Criminal Jurisprudence issued a subpoena for Mr. Roberson to testify on a day after his execution was to occur. A district court temporarily halted the execution so that…
Read MoreNov 19, 2024
Death Penalty Information Center (DPI) Launches Updated Website and New Logo
On Tuesday, November 19, 2024, the Death Penalty Information Center (DPI) announces the launch of its updated website and new visual identity. The refreshed, more intuitive navigation bar is the first phase of improvements that will make it easier for visitors to access DPI’s data, reports, analysis, and resources. Visitors will also find DPI’s new logo and other changes to update the organization’s visual brand and…
Read MoreNov 18, 2024
NEW POLL: Overall Support for the Death Penalty Remains at Five-Decade Low as Opposition to the Death Penalty Grows Among Younger Generations
According to October 2024 polling produced by Gallup, support for capital punishment remains at a five-decade low in the United States. Overall, Gallup found 53% of Americans in favor of the death penalty, but that number masks considerable differences between older and younger Americans. More than half of young adults aged 18 to 43 now oppose the death penalty. Among those expressing a political affiliation, support for the death penalty fell markedly in all groups and in all generations,…
Read MoreNov 15, 2024
Trial Judge Declares Melissa Lucio to be “Actually Innocent,” Recommends Texas CCA Overturn Conviction and Death Sentence
Texas death-sentenced prisoner Melissa Lucio is “actually innocent; she did not kill her [two-year-old] daughter,” explained Judge Arturo Nelson in his October 16th decision, which was made public on November 14, 2024. Judge Nelson’s Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law now go to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (TCCA), which will make the final decision about whether to overturn Ms. Lucio’s conviction and 2008 death sentence. This decision marks the latest dramatic development for Ms.
Read MoreNov 14, 2024
New DPI Report Connects Modern Use of Federal Death Penalty to its Racially Biased History
On Thursday, the Death Penalty Information Center (“DPI”) released a new report detailing the troubling racial history of the federal death penalty. Fool’s Gold: How the Federal Death Penalty Has Perpetuated Racially Discriminatory Practices Throughout History documents how racial discrimination has been a throughline in the application of the federal death penalty since the 1800s. The report explains that, despite often being mischaracterized as the…
Read MoreNov 13, 2024
Despite Military Judge’s Approval of 9/11 Plea Deal, Defense Secretary and Prosecutors Continue to Push Back
U.S. military judge Colonel Matthew N. McCall is moving ahead cautiously with scheduling the plea hearings in the case of Khalid Shaikh Mohammed and his codefendants, accused of plotting the September 11 terror attacks. On November 10, 2024, Col. McCall instructed counsel to agree on dates in either December 2024 or early January 2025 to hold plea hearings for Mr. Mohammed and his codefendants, Walid bin Attash and Mustafa al-Hawsawi. Lead prosecutor Clayton G. Trivett, Jr. had asked Col.
Read MoreNov 12, 2024
New Trial Granted for Texas Death-Sentenced Prisoner Because of Trial Judge’s Antisemitic Bias
On November 6, 2024, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (TCCA) voted 6 – 3 to grant death-sentenced prisoner Randy Halprin a new trial. The TCCA decided that the original trial judge, Vickers Cunningham, “was actually biased against him at the time of trial because Halprin is Jewish.” The Court wrote in its ruling that the “uncontradicted evidence,” including testimony from friends and family of Judge Cunningham regarding his use of derogatory and racial slurs both generally and specifically…
Read MoreNov 08, 2024
The Role of Trauma and Mitigation in Capital Punishment
In the early 1990s, the case of Erik and Lyle Menendez captivated the American public, not only because of the brutality of their crime but also because of the defense they presented. The brothers, age 18 and 21 at the time of the crime, were charged with first-degree murder with special circumstances for killing their parents, Jose and Kitty Menendez. These special circumstances made the crime a death-eligible offense. Prosecutors alleged they were privileged young men acting out of greed,…
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