Publications & Testimony
Items: 3361 — 3370
Sep 28, 2012
Philadelphia Judge Cites Withheld Evidence in Granting New Sentencing Trial to Terrance Williams
On September 28, Philadelphia Judge M. Teresa Sarmina granted a stay of execution and a new sentencing hearing to Terrance Williams because the prosecutors suppressed important mitigating evidence. The evidence, which could have been presented at trial, indicated the prosecutors knew that Amos Norwood, Williams’s victim, had been a pedophile who sexually abused Williams. The judge’s decision came a day after the Board of Pardons agreed to reconsider Williams’s clemency plea.
Read MoreSep 27, 2012
FEDERAL DEATH PENALTY: Juries in Puerto Rico Continue to Reject Death Penalty
On September 27, a federal jury in Puerto Rico rejected the death penalty for Edison Burgos Montes, who was convicted in August of the murder of his girlfriend in 2005. The jury deliberated for two days before sentencing Montes to life in prison for this drug-related crime. Puerto Rico’s constitution forbids capital punishment, but U.S. prosecutors can seek the death penalty under federal law. This is the fourth capital case tried by U.S. authorities since the federal death…
Read MoreSep 27, 2012
Maker of anesthetic blamed for Michael Jackson’s death latest to block drug for execution use
September 27,…
Read MoreSep 26, 2012
MENTAL ILLNESS: Evangelical Leaders Call for Mercy for Condemned Inmate
On September 26, Florida Governor Rick Scott (pictured) agreed to temporarily stay the pending execution of John Errol Ferguson in order to allow time for a panel of psychiatrists to determine whether Ferguson is mentally competent. The day before, evangelical leaders, including Dr. Joel C. Hunter, Senior Pastor of the 15,000-member Northland Church in Central Florida, sent a letter to the governor urging that Ferguson be allowed to live. They wrote, “The…
Read MoreSep 25, 2012
NEW VOICES: Victims and Relatives Support Life Sentence in Alabama Mass Shooting
On September 24, a jury in Alabama found that Amy Bishop was indeed guilty of capital murder, a crime for which she had already pled guilty on September 11. Because of this finding and plea, she will be spared the death penalty for killing three members and wounding three others of the University of Alabama’s biology faculty in 2010 after some of them voted against granting her tenure. Madison County District Attorney Rob Broussard agreed to…
Read MoreSep 25, 2012
INNOCENCE: Award-Winning Play About Former Death Row Inmates Returns
This Fall the Culture Project is hosting a limited engagement of its award-winning production, The Exonerated. The play is a groundbreaking dramatization of the real-life stories of six death row inmates who were freed after being cleared of their capital charge. The production, which premiered a decade ago and traveled the country, is culled from interviews, letters, transcripts, case files, and court records. Former U.S. Attorney General…
Read MoreSep 24, 2012
LAW REVIEWS: Should Mentally Incompetent Death Row Inmates be Forcibly Medicated?
A recent article by Professors Brian D. Shannon (pictured) of Texas Tech and Victor R. Scarano of the University of Houston examines the ethical implications of forcibly medicating mentally incompetent death-row inmates in order to prepare them for execution. According to the authors, this issue, particulary in Texas, pits “the ethical duties of the medical and legal professions in opposition and casts a shadow over the legitimate and appropriate intentions and professional…
Read MoreSep 21, 2012
STUDIES: Reasons Behind the Abolition of the Death Penalty in Illinois
A new report by Rob Warden (pictured), Executive Director of the Center on Wrongful Convictions, explores the conditions that led to the end of Illinois’s death penalty in 2011. Warden says abolition came about because of a series of fortuitous circumstances, but also because of the work of countless attorneys, academics, journalists and activists who took advantage of these developments. The cavalcade of exonerations from death row, including the high-profile…
Read MoreSep 20, 2012
INNOCENCE: Wrongful Convictions Demonstrate Risk with California Death Penalty
Several cases in California illustrate the inherent risk with the death penalty that an innocent person could be executed. Lee Farmer was freed from death row in 1999 after winning a new trial based on newly discovered evidence that an accomplice admitted to the crime for which he faced execution. Farmer was acquitted of murder at his retrial. Troy Lee Jones (pictured) was sentenced to death even though there were no eyewitnesses to the…
Read MoreSep 19, 2012
NEW VOICES: Conservatives Seek to Repeal the Death Penalty in Montana
In Montana, a conservative political group is calling for an end to the death penalty after a recent court ruling held the state’s execution protocol unconstitutional. Former Republican state Senator Roy Brown said, “Conservatives dislike waste and inefficiency. That is why we should cast a critical eye when the state is involved with the business of executing people…. When it takes over 20 years and hundreds of thousands of tax payer dollars for extra legal…
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