Publications & Testimony
Items: 3341 — 3350
Dec 06, 2012
POSSIBLE INNOCENCE: Science Helps Texas Death Row Inmate Win New Trial
On December 5, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals granted (5 – 3) Cathy Lynn Henderson a new trial based on recent scientific developments about the death of a baby who had been in her care. At one point, Henderson had been two days from execution. The appeals court accepted the factual findings of a district judge who ruled earlier this year that no reasonable juror would have convicted Henderson if presented with new scientific…
Read MoreDec 05, 2012
MULTIMEDIA: Nebraska Debate on the Death Penalty
On November 28, the University of Nebraska hosted a dialogue on the death penalty with J. Kirk Brown (left), Nebraska’s Solicitor General, and Professor Michael Radelet (right) of the University of Colorado. Mr. Kirk was the state’s counsel of record for all of its executions since 1978. Prof. Radelet is a well-known death penalty expert, researcher, and the author of several works on innocence and the death penalty. The…
Read MoreDec 04, 2012
ARBITRARINESS: Arizona Inmate to be Executed Dec. 5, Accomplice Was Released in 2011
Richard Stokley (pictured) is scheduled to be executed in Arizona on December 5 for rape and murder. Stokley’s accomplice, Randy Brazeal, was released from prison in 2011, despite DNA testing showing he was likely guilty of the same crime as Stokley. In 1991, Brazeal turned himself in to authorities and claimed that Stokley had held him hostage while committing the crime. However, subsequent DNA testing revealed that Brazeal likely…
Read MoreDec 03, 2012
Former Death Row Inmate Imprisoned for 30 Years in Texas With No Conviction
A former death row inmate with intellectual disabilities has languished in the Texas prison system for over 30 years despite having no valid criminal conviction. Jerry Hartfield, an illiterate man with an IQ of 51, had his capital conviction overturned in 1980 because the jury at his trial had been improperly selected. A Texas appeals court ordered a new trial for Hartfield, but that trial has never happened. In 1983,…
Read MoreNov 30, 2012
INTERNATIONAL: Roman Colosseum Lit to Mark Connecticut’s Abolition of Death Penalty
On November 29, the Colosseum in Rome, Italy, was illuminated in honor of Connecticut’s repeal of the death penalty in April of this year. The event featured former death row inmate Shujaa Graham of California and George Kain of the Connecticut Network to Abolish the Death Penalty. Five states in the past five years have abolished the death penalty: Connecticut, Illinois, New Mexico, New Jersey, and New York. The program also commemorated the 10th World Day of…
Read MoreNov 29, 2012
EDITORIALS: “Oregon’s Life-or-Death Vote”
A recent editorial in The Oregonian, one of the state’s major newspapers, endorsed a bill in the upcoming legislative session that could result in the repeal of the death penalty. The bill, to be introduced by Rep. Mitch Greenlick, would begin the process of amending the state’s constitution through a referendum as early as November 2014. The editors wrote,“5 states — New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Illinois and New Mexico — have abandoned…
Read MoreNov 28, 2012
RECENT LEGISLATIVE ACTIVITY: Bill Introduced in Texas Aims to Restrict Informant Testimony in Death Penalty Cases
Texas Representative Harold Dutton recently filed a bill that would prevent prosecutors in death penalty cases from using testimony from informants or from alleged accomplices of the defendant if the testimony was obtained in exchange for leniency, immunity or other special provisions. If passed, the bill would make Texas among the first states to ban such testimony. Alexandra Natapoff, a professor at Loyola of Los Angeles Law School, said,“The…
Read MoreNov 26, 2012
With Death Penalty Stalled, Maryland May Again Consider Abolition
When Maryland’s legislature again convenes in January, it is likely to consider a bill to repeal the death penalty. Governor Martin O’Malley (pictured) has sponsored such legislation in the past and may do so again. O’Malley has called the death penalty“inherently unjust” and said resources spent on capital punishment could be better used elsewhere. Maryland has not carried out an execution or had a new death sentence since 2005. Executions are…
Read MoreNov 21, 2012
EDITORIAL: “End the Death Penalty in New Hampshire”
A recent editorial in the New York Times called for the end of the death penalty in New Hampshire. The editorial highlighted the case of Michael Addison, who is the only prisoner on the state’s death row. Addison was sentenced to death in 2008 for fatally shooting a police officer. The state Supreme Court recently held hearings for Addison, who is seeking a new trial or sentencing hearing because the…
Read MoreNov 20, 2012
INTERNATIONAL: U.N. Death Penalty Resolution Backed by Record Number of Countries
On November 19, 110 countries voted for a resolution at the United Nations General Assembly calling for a worldwide moratorium on executions as a step towards the abolition of the death penalty. The vote marked record support for the resolution compared to previous years. Among the countries supporting the resolution were the European Union nations, Australia, Brazil, South Africa and Israel. The United States, Japan, China, Iran, India, North…
Read More