Publications & Testimony
Items: 3101 — 3110
Oct 09, 2013
EDITORIALS: Wyoming Paper Recommends Life Sentences for Sake of Victims
Wyoming’s Casper Star-Tribune recently pointed out why many families of murder victims favor life-without-parole sentences over the death penalty . “[I]t may be a surprise that many families of murder victims prefer the life without parole sentence, simply because it puts the killer away forever without the decades-long court appeals that can accompany a death sentence,” the paper wrote. The editorial noted that there is only one person on the state’s death row, and…
Read MoreOct 08, 2013
NEW VOICES: Former Attorneys General Agree Virginia’s Death Penalty Needs Change
Former Virginia attorneys general Mark L. Earley Sr. (pictured) and Anthony F. Troy recently called for changes to the state’s death penalty based on a September report from the American Bar Association. Writing in the Washington Post, the past law enforcement leaders called for changes to the restrictive laws governing the sharing of evidence prior to trials, amendments to jury instructions so that jurors in death cases could better…
Read MoreOct 07, 2013
SUPREME COURT: High Court Declines to Review Georgia’s Unusual Burden for Proving Mental Retardation
On the opening day of the U.S. Supreme Court’s new term, the Justices announced they would not review the case of Warren Hill, a death row inmate in Georgia with multiple findings of intellectual disability. Hill petitioned the Court after three mental health experts, who initially said he was not mentally disabled, changed their assessment. The execution of inmates with mental retardation was ruled unconstitutional in 2002, but Georgia has…
Read MoreOct 04, 2013
LETHAL INJECTION: Many States Changing Lethal Injection Process
On October 4, Ohio announced it will be obtaining its execution drug, pentobarbital, from a compounding pharmacy if it is not available from the manufacturer. Texas made a similar announcement a few days earler. In the past, some compounding pharmacies have been implicated in providing contaminated drugs with fatal side effects. These local companies are not regulated by the Food and Drug Administration. Florida…
Read MoreOct 03, 2013
What the Media Is Saying About DPIC’s “The 2% Death Penalty”
Since DPIC released its new report, The 2% Death Penalty, on October 2, both national and international media have been reporting on its findings. The Washington Post noted, “Two percent of the counties in the country were responsible for [most] 685 of 1,320 executions from 1976, when the Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty, to 2012.” The Los Angeles Times, quoted DPIC’s Executive…
Read MoreOct 02, 2013
NEW DPIC REPORT: Only 2% of Counties Responsible for Majority of U.S. Death Penalty
On October 2 the Death Penalty Information Center released a new report, The 2% Death Penalty: How a Minority of Counties Produce Most Death Cases at Enormous Costs to All. The report shows that, contrary to the assumption that the death penalty is widely used in the U.S., only a few jurisdictions employ capital punishment extensively. Only 2% of the counties in the U.S. have been responsible for the majority of cases leading to executions since 1976. Likewise, only…
Read MoreOct 01, 2013
Death Penalty Now Rarely Used in Utah
An analysis of the death penalty in Utah shows how rarely it has been used in recent years. Prosecutors have sought it in only 7 cases in the last 5 years, and none has resulted in a death sentence. Utah has had only 1 execution in the past 13 years. Experts have offered several reasons for the declining use: the alternative sentence of life without parole is now avaialble; the appeal of a death sentence is costly and slow; and many victims’ families wish to see a more timely…
Read MoreOct 01, 2013
The 2% Death Penalty: Press Release
ONLY 2% OF COUNTIES ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR THE MAJORITY OF THE NATION’S DEATH PENALTY, NEW REPORT…
Read MoreSep 30, 2013
EDITORIALS: Boston Globe Recommends No Death Penalty For Marathon Bomber
A recent Boston Globe editorial called on U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder not to seek the death penalty for Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, the man accused of carrying out the bombing at the Boston Marathon. The editors said the lengthy death-penalty process would put the spotlight on the defendant to the detriment of the victims: “Years of proceedings, and their potential culmination in a death sentence, would also give Tsarnaev what he and his brother apparently sought: publicity and…
Read MoreSep 27, 2013
Ohio Panel Recommends Banning Death Penalty for Severely Mentally Ill
On September 26, the Joint Task Force to Review the Administration of Ohio’s Death Penalty voted 15 – 2 to recommend a ban on death sentences for people with severe mental illness. The panel of legal experts was created by the Ohio Supreme Court and the Ohio State Bar Association and includes judges, attorneys, and legislators. Their proposal will be submitted with other recommendations to the governor and the General Assembly in 2014. Terry Russell, executive…
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