Publications & Testimony
Items: 3561 — 3570
Feb 10, 2012
BOOKS: “A Murder Case Gone Wrong”
Raymond Bonner’s new book, Anatomy of Injustice: A Murder Case Gone Wrong, is about to be published and was noted earlier by DPIC. An excerpt from the book appeared recently in The Atlantic. Andrew Cohen, also writing in The Atlantic, called it“the book of the century about the death penalty.” Cohen commented that“Bonner’s book comes at a crucial time in the modern history of the death penalty. It comes at a time…
Read MoreFeb 09, 2012
RACE: Historic Hearing Begun in North Carolina Under New Anti-Bias Law
The first hearing under North Carolina’s Racial Justice Act convened at the beginning of February for death row inmate Marcus Robinson. The Racial Justice Act was passed in 2009, allowing death row inmates to use empirical and statistical data to demonstrate racial bias in their conviction or sentencing. Following changes in North Carolina’s legislature in the 2010 elections, there were efforts to repeal the Act. Governor Perdue vetoed…
Read MoreFeb 08, 2012
NEW RESOURCES: Latest DEATH ROW USA Report Now Available
The latest edition of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund’s Death Row USA shows a decrease of 31 inmates between January 1 and July 1, 2011. Over the last decade, the total population of state and federal death rows has decreased significantly, from 3,682 inmates in 2000 to 3,220 inmates in 2011. The percentage of Latino inmates facing execution, however, has steadily increased over the years. In 1991, Latinos made up 6% of the nation’s death…
Read MoreFeb 07, 2012
BOOKS: “Cruel and Unusual: The American Death Penalty and the Founders’ Eighth Amendment”
(Winner: Silver Medal in the U.S. History category in the Independent Publisher Book Awards). A new book by Professor John D. Bessler, titled Cruel and Unusual: The American Death Penalty and the Founders’ Eighth Amendment, challenges the conventional wisdom that the country’s founders were avid death penalty supporters, and explores their various views on capital punishment. Prof. Bessler discusses how the…
Read MoreFeb 06, 2012
MENTAL ILLNESS: Mississippi Inmate With Severe Mental Illness Faces Imminent Execution
Edwin Turner (pictured), a death row inmate in Mississippi, is scheduled for execution on February 8. His attorney, Jim Craig, has petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court and Governor Phil Bryant for a reprieve, based in part on Turner’s mental illness. Craig said,“The Supreme Court has not decided the question of whether a prisoner with a severe mental disorder or disability which significantly impairs that person’s ability to…
Read MoreFeb 03, 2012
INTERNATIONAL: New Report on China’s Changing Attitudes Toward the Death Penalty
Roger Hood (pictured), Professor Emeritus of Criminology at the University of Oxford, has published a report on official attitudes towards capital punishment in China. Abolition of the Death Penalty: China in World Perspective outlines the changes over the past decade on this issue within Chinese academic and judicial communities. Hood observed that one of the strongest justifications for the death penalty in China is“the belief that…
Read MoreFeb 02, 2012
RACE: New Video Highlights Stories of Jurors Excluded from Death Penalty Cases
A new video produced by the American Civil Liberties Union features three North Carolina citizens who believe they were excluded from serving on juries in capital cases because of their race. The video was released in conjunction with the first court challenge brought under North Carolina’s Racial Justice Act. The defendant, Marcus Robinson, is asking his death sentence be commuted to life without parole because potential…
Read MoreFeb 01, 2012
EDITORIALS: “Mistakes are made”
A recent editorial in Nebraska’s Journal Star urged support for a bill to replace the death penalty with a sentence of life in prison. Among the reasons cited for its position was the risk of executing an innocent person. The editorial noted that advancements in DNA testing have shown the fallibility of the current system:“Seventeen people who were on death row have been set free after DNA testing proved they were wrongly…
Read MoreJan 31, 2012
Possible Innocence Case Highlights Concerns About Ohio’s Death Penalty
Tyrone Noling (pictured) is an inmate on Ohio’s death row whose guilt has been called into doubt by a lack of physical evidence, recanting witnesses and refusal by the state to conduct a DNA test. Andrew Cohen, writing in a recent issue of The Atlantic, compared Noling’s case to that of Troy Davis, who was executed in Georgia in 2011, despite doubts about his guilt. Noling was convicted of the 1990 murders of an elderly couple in…
Read MoreJan 30, 2012
RESOURCES: Recent Legislative Acitivity on the Death Penalty
DPIC is collecting information on pending legislation related to the death penalty. For example, at least nine states will consider bills to repeal the death penalty in 2012. In California, a coalition called Taxpayers for Justice has been collecting signatures to place a death penalty repeal initiative on the ballot in November. On January 25, the Washington Senate Judiciary Committee held a public hearing on a bill to repeal the…
Read More