Publications & Testimony
Items: 3181 — 3190
Jul 16, 2013
Ohio Committee Makes Preliminary Recommendations for Death Penalty Reform
A committee empaneled by the Chief Justice of the Ohio Supreme Court made three preliminary recommendations at its June meeting for reforming the state’s death penalty. The panel, which consists of prosecutors, defense attorneys, judges, and academic experts, voted to recommend a reduction in the scope of crimes eligible for the death penalty, the creation of a statewide panel to decide on seeking a death sentence, and the enactment of…
Read MoreJul 15, 2013
The Writ of Habeas Corpus and the Warren Hill Case
UPDATE: Warren Hill was granted a stay of execution by a Georgia court just hours before his scheduled execution on July 15. A hearing is scheduled for July 18 to consider challenges to a new state law that shields the identity of the lethal injection drug’s manufacturer and the prescribing physician from the public. (Atlanta Journal-Constitution, July 15, 2013). As a petition on behalf of Georgia death row inmate…
Read MoreJul 12, 2013
LETHAL INJECTION: California Abandons Defense of Its Execution Procedures
On June 10, California announced it would no longer try to defend its current lethal injection protocol. In May, a court ruling invalidated the state’s three-drug lethal injection protocol because state officials failed to follow administrative rules in adopting the protocol. Governor Jerry Brown and other officials will instead proceed with developing a single-drug lethal injection protocol similar to those adopted recently in states like…
Read MoreJul 11, 2013
NEW VOICES: Arkansas Attorney General Says State Death Penalty “Completely Broken”
Arkansas Attorney General Dustin McDaniel recently said the state’s death penalty system was “completely broken” and recommended it be abolished if the state’s execution method isn’t changed. McDaniel said,“It’s time for the policy makers of Arkansas to say,‘Do we continue with a broken system and throwing money and resources at essentially pointless litigation, or do we modify the system?’ And there’s only really two…
Read MoreJul 10, 2013
EXECUTIONS: As of Mid-Year 2013, Pace of Executions Continues to Decline
In the first half of 2013, six states carried out 18 executions. In the same period last year, there were 23 executions in 8 states. The annual number of executions has declined significantly from its peak in 1999, when 98 people were put to death. There were 43 executions in 2011 and 2012. Sixteen of this year’s executions (89%) have been in the South, with nearly half in Texas (8). Eight of the defendants executed so far this year were black, and ten…
Read MoreJul 09, 2013
LAW REVIEWS: Yale Law Journal Commemorates 50th Anniversary of Gideon v. Wainwright
The latest edition of the Yale Law Journal features essays commemorating the 50th anniversary of Gideon v. Wainwright, the landmark 1963 U.S. Supreme Court decision guaranteeing all criminal defendants a right to an attorney. The collection of essays from leading legal experts includes an article by Stephen Bright and Sia Sanneh, titled“Fifty Years of Defiance and Resistance After Gideon v. Wainwright,”…
Read MoreJul 08, 2013
NEW VOICES: Ohio Prosecutor Now Seeks Clemency for Death Row Inmate
Timothy McGinty, the Chief Prosecutor of Cuyahoga County, Ohio, is encouraging the Ohio Parole Board to recommend clemency for death row inmate Billy Slagle (pictured). Slagle was sentenced to death in 1988 for the murder of his neighbor, Mari Ann Pope. At the time of the murder, Slagle was only 18 years old, which, along with Slagle’s problems of substance abuse and his record of good behavior in prison, has now…
Read MoreJul 05, 2013
RESOURCES: New ABA Report on Criminal Justice and the Death Penalty
The American Bar Association recently released its annual report, The State of Criminal Justice-2013, including a chapter on developments in capital punishment in the United States. In that chapter, author Ronald Tabak focuses on the continuing decline in death sentences and executions, recent innocence cases, and new voices who have spoken out about the death penalty. The chapter highlights recent research on capital punishment,…
Read MoreJul 03, 2013
NEW VOICES: UN Secretary General Urges Members to Abolish the Death Penalty
At a recent event sponsored by the High Commissioner for Human Rights, United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon encouraged member nations to work towards ending capital punishment. Mr. Ban particularly focused on the risk of wrongful executions, saying,“We have a duty to prevent innocent people from paying the ultimate price for miscarriages of justice. The most sensible way is to end the death penalty.” The event – “Moving away from the…
Read MoreJul 02, 2013
Supreme Court Agrees to Hear Kentucky Case on Death Penalty Jury Instructions
On June 27, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear arguments in White v. Woodall, a death penalty case from Kentucky, to be heard during the Court’s next term. Robert Woodall pleaded guilty to capital murder and chose not to testify in the sentencing phase of his trial. His attorneys requested that the judge instruct the jury not to draw any adverse inferences from Woodall’s decision not to testify on his own behalf, but the request was denied because…
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