Publications & Testimony
Items: 3051 — 3060
Jan 16, 2014
NEW VOICES: Former Texas Governor Calls for Hearing for Edgar Tamayo
In an op-ed in the Austin American-Statesman, former Texas Governor Mark White called for a new hearing for Edgar Tamayo, a Mexican national scheduled for execution on January 22. Foreign nationals charged with crimes in the U.S. are entitled to assistance from their consulate under the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations, but Tamayo was denied that right. White joins U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and the Mexican Foreign…
Read MoreJan 15, 2014
Preliminary Cost Figures Released as Death Penalty Hearings Approach
The Kansas Judicial Council, an advisory body to the legislature, released preliminary findings on the cost of the death penalty in preparation for legislative hearings on a repeal measure. The council found that state Supreme Court Justices spend 20 times more hours on death penalty appeals than on non-capital appeals; the Department of Corrections spends than twice as much ($49,380 versus $24,690) to house a death-row inmate per year…
Read MoreJan 14, 2014
NEW VOICES: Retired Judges Support Finding of Racial Bias in North Carolina Death Penalty
Six retired judges in North Carolina urged the the state Supreme Court to uphold the rulings of a lower court that found racial bias in the use of the death peanlty. Former chief justices James Exum and Henry Frye, along with former judges Willis Whichard, Melzer Morgan, Wade Barber and Russell Walker filed a brief in support of inmates whose death sentences were reduced to life without parole in 2012 under the state’s Racial Justice Act. The Act allowed death row…
Read MoreJan 13, 2014
EDITORIAL: “Proposal to Speed Up Death Penalty Appeals Troubling”
A recent editorial in the Montgomery Advertiser criticized a proposal by Alabama Attorney General Luther Strange to speed up death penalty appeals. His proposed legislation would require two parts of the appeal process to essentially run concurrently. The editorial cautioned that lack of adequate representation for death penalty defendants would make the accelerated process more problematic. The paper concluded,“Anything that…
Read MoreJan 10, 2014
Federal Court Reviewing Ohio’s Untried Lethal Injection Procedure
On January 10, U.S. District Court Judge Gregory Frost will consider a challenge to an execution procedure in Ohio that has never been used before in the country. Dennis McGuire is scheduled for execution on January 16, and his attorneys are arguing the new drugs could cause a very painful death, saying,“McGuire will experience the agony and terror of air hunger as he struggles to breathe for five minutes after [executioners]…
Read MoreJan 09, 2014
NEW VOICES: Victims’ Family Members Show Opposition to Death Penalty at Colorado Trial
Family members of murder victims gathered outside a courthouse in Castle Rock, Colorado, in support of Robert Autobee, whose son was murdered, but who opposes the death penalty for the perpetrator. Inside the courthouse, jury selection was underway in the trial of Edward Montour, who is accused of murdering correctional officer Eric Autobee (pictured), Robert’s son. Montour originally pleaded guilty and was sentenced to death,…
Read MoreJan 08, 2014
Boston Bar Association Announces Opposition to Use of Federal Death Penalty
On January 7, the Boston Bar Association, representing more than 10,000 lawyers, released a statement opposing the use of the federal death penalty. The Association already had a longstanding position against the death penalty in state cases. Paul T. Dacier (pictured), the President of the Boston Bar, said,“Without equivocation, the death penalty has no place in the fair administration of justice and makes no sense on a practical level.” The…
Read MoreJan 07, 2014
Two Defendants from the Same Case Illustrate Inequities in Florida’s Death Penalty
In a recent article in the Atlantic, Marc Bookman compared the path through the justice system of two co-defendants sentenced to death in Florida after committing murder in 1977. Beauford White was electrocuted in 1987, despite his trial jury voting 12 – 0 for a life sentence. The trial judge overrode that recommendation and imposed death. White’s co-defendant, John Ferguson, lived for another 26 years before…
Read MoreJan 06, 2014
NEW VOICES: Former California Chief Justice Questions Arbitrariness in Death Sentencing
Ronald George is a former Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court, who regularly upheld death sentences. However, in his recent book, Chief: The Quest for Justice in California, he questioned the geographical disparities in the application of the death penalty in the state. In his chapter,“Reforming the Judicial System,” he wrote,“You could have the exact same crime, let’s say a straightforward street robbery homicide,…
Read MoreJan 03, 2014
Missouri Obtaining Lethal Injection Drug From Pharmacy Unlicensed in State
An investigation by St. Louis Public Radio and the St. Louis Beacon found that the source of Missouri’s lethal injection drug, pentobarbital, is a compounding pharmacy in Oklahoma, not licensed to sell drugs in Missouri. Until very recently, compounding pharmacies have been regulated only by state pharmacy boards, not by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Thus, a pharmacy in Oklahoma may be held to different…
Read More